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Week one of the election
campaign
Source: Canadian Labour Congress
Published: September 14th 2008

An election campaign is no time to discuss serious
issues: that famous line from the 1993 federal
election seemed, to a large extent, the main truth
of the first week of the 2008 federal election
campaign. Watching the reports from the hustings,
Canadian working families are, with reason, asking
themselves the most political question of all:
what’s in it for us?
Most of the week was consumed about who would be
allowed to participate in the national televised
debates and on whether the party ads were in good
taste or honest: not about what needs to be debated
or what advertised promises would respond to our
needs.
When finally, toward the end of the week, the media
got it right and jobs, the economy and the price of
gasoline merited some coverage, some of the fog
started to lift . . .
On a day when Ford announced another 500 layoffs in
the auto industry, incumbent Prime Minister Harper
shrugged his shoulders and announced the government
couldn't guarantee workers their jobs and the
finance minister didn't back down from his earlier
statements that business should not invest in
Ontario until its government dropped its corporate
tax rate to 10%.
What is the Conservative plan to create jobs? More
tax cuts that benefit the rich and the big
corporations. Change to immigration rules to bring
more skilled labour from abroad – probably more
temporary foreign workers who receive little
protection under our laws thus get treated as
expendable by their employers. They offer no plan so
far to improve EI rules so those losing their jobs
now can have decent income support for retraining.
And no changes to the temporary foreign worker
program to halt the abuse of foreign-trained workers
who are only welcome to remain in Canada at the whim
of their employer.
The Liberals would spend $1 billion to promote
targeted investments in innovative manufacturing.
In contrast, the NDP announced clear goals and
targets. They propose to create 40,000 new
manufacturing jobs by cancelling $8 billion in
corporate tax cuts, and create a green jobs training
fund to retrain laid off workers.
Working families want to hear more. So much of our
future, of our children’s future, hinges on the
outcome of this debate.
Workers need to know who's on their side.
Who
stands up and represents Canadian workers' interests in the house of
parliament? Well our MP's voted on many issues this past session and now
it's time to find out who voted for workers and who voted against!
Click here...
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