The Canadian Labour Congress, or CLC is a national trade union centre, the central labour body in English Canada to which most Canadian labour unions are affiliated.
ROBERT FIFE AND LAURA STONE
OTTAWA — The
Globe and Mail
Published Monday,
Apr. 04, 2016
Canadian Labour Congress president Hassan Yussuff says Tom Mulcair
does not deserve another term as NDP Leader and predicts he will win less than
60 per cent in Sunday’s leadership review vote.
“I have told Tom that. I met Tom and had dinner with him, and I
basically told him I don’t have an argument as to why you should remain as
leader of the party, much less leading the party in terms of the 2019
election,” Mr. Yussuff told The Globe and Mail.
The CLC leader, whose organization represents 3.3 million workers,
said Mr. Mulcair must be held responsible for allowing the Liberals to outflank
the New Democrats with more progressive policies in last year’s election. He
said he does not believe Mr. Mulcair has the personality or ideological makeup
to challenge the much younger and left-leaning Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
“Some union leaders, of course, have said they would like him to
stay. Some want to see a review in 2018. The fact is the party is at 11 per
cent in the polls, we lost the largest number of seats under Tom’s leadership
and we lost the opportunity to form government,” he said. “This was the best
moment we had to form a national government and we lost it.”
Mr. Yussuff said he has had wide-ranging
discussions with NDP grassroots activists across the country and he is hearing
a lot of ridings are divided, with many members disillusioned about the NDP
Leader. Even among Mr. Mulcair’s supporters, there is little enthusiasm, he
said.
“Maybe he’ll get 50 per cent, but the bigger
question is how much more than 50 per cent does he get,” Mr. Yussuff said. “I
think he has to get 60-per-cent-plus to hold on to his leadership.”
Mr. Yussuff acknowledges five union leaders
representing Unifor, the United Steelworkers, the International Association of
Machinists and Aerospace Workers, United Food and Commercial Workers and the
Canadian Union of Public Employees believe the NDP Leader should have another
chance to prove himself – until at least the next leadership review in 2018.
The Globe called riding associations across the
country and found many members are divided and unsure about giving Mr. Mulcair
another chance.
“I think it’s 50-50 when I talk to people,” said
Ed Stecewicz, the riding president for Timmins-James Bay, which is held by NDP
Charlie Angus. “Some people are saying Tom doesn’t seem to be the builder that
we need. Some people are saying there is another leadership review in two
years, so let’s put him on probation.”
James Kosowan, chief executive officer of the
Edmonton Strathcona riding association, says the 33 delegates attending the
convention are split. The riding is the home to Alberta’s only NDP MP, Linda
Duncan, and many in Alberta expected more New Democrats to win.
“There’s people on both sides. I’m hearing some
that are very supportive, some that don’t want a leadership race right now and
so on. And others that think it’s time for a renewal, and there were mistakes
that were made during the election and these need to be addressed, and maybe
that means new leadership,” he said.
Mr. Kosowan said he will make up his mind when
he hears from Mr. Mulcair at the convention.
“I’m kind of on the fence,” he said.
All three delegates in Toronto’s York
South-Weston riding, which was held by the NDP’s Mike Sullivan until he was
defeated in the election, are voting against Mr. Mulcair. “There is still a lot
of anger and a lot of concern. I would say all of our delegates will not be
voting to support Mr. Mulcair,” said a riding official who asked not to be
named.
Gord Landriault, financial agent of the Churchill-Keewatinook
Aski riding association in Manitoba, is undecided and waiting to hear Mr.
Mulcair’s plans for rebuilding the party. Mr. Landriault, who also works for MP
Niki Ashton, said he would support his boss if she ran for the leadership.
“If there is a challenge and she decides to run,
she’s got my support. That’s up to the convention to decide,” he said.
Gilles Demers of the
Rimouski-Neigette-Témiscouata-Les Basques riding association, home to Quebec MP
Guy Caron, says he and another delegate are supporting Mr. Mulcair.
“The feeling in Quebec, more or less, is that if
we want to change the leader, we have to find [a] candidate,” he said. “And up
to now, it’s not clear from the Quebec side we’ll have another candidate who
can challenge Thomas Mulcair.”
Nicholas Stein, the riding president in Windsor
West, which is represented by veteran NDP MP Brian Masse, said there is “no
groundswell of opposition” to Mr. Mulcair in his area and he is confident all
the delegates will support the leader.
The convention is much more popular than
anticipated: Party officials expected about 800 people to sign up. Now, 1,500
delegates are going.
National director Karl Bélanger says it is a
sign that people are interested in the future of the NDP.
“It’s very good news for the party that people
are engaged and looking forward to debate the path forward,” he said. “It is
beyond our expectations and so we’re quite happy about that.”
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