Saturday, April 23, 2011

Let's Hear it for Proportional Representation

Esther writes:

It is not surprising that one of WAP/PAF's key concerns, and also that of an increasing number of citizens, is a call for a radical change in the way we vote. Women especially, noting that the current system is simply not working for them, are joining Fair Vote's efforts (see link on our website) to get rid of our first-past-the-post FPTP system of voting and adopt a form of proportional representation or PR.

The article below is clear that we are on the right track. Unless Canadians realize that this is our biggest hope to initiate change and stop dragging their feet on the issue, connect the erosion of our democratic space to the unfairness, even undemocratic way we vote, and push for electoral reform, we will continue to be at the mercy of the partisan politics that is destroying our voices at a very fast pace.

The article by By Ian MacLeod, The Ottawa Citizen April 23, 2011, is a good reminder.

Proportional representation seen as a way to make more votes count by critics of first-past-the-post


By Ian MacLeod, The Ottawa Citizen April 23, 2011



The Conservatives could win 69 fewer seats if an election were held today and Canada used proportional representation (PR) rather than the existing first-past-the-post (FPP) electoral system, according to an analysis of the latest poll results.

That's reason enough not to expect any federal government to switch to what many believe is a fairer system that rewards almost all votes, not just those that go to winning candidates.

Under the current winner-takeall system, "there are legitimate points of view which are not being heard in the legislature when public policy and legislation are being discussed," says Phil Elder, co-chair of the Alberta-based Democratic Renewal Project. "That's absolutely unacceptable because it closes the door to the democratic participation of a group which has acquired a voting base."

Please read the rest of the article:

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Call+reform+gets+louder/4663550/story.html


Some form of PR is used by most of the world’s major democracies, including:

  • Germany
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • Belgium
  • Denmark
  • Holland
  • Greece
  • Spain
  • Austria
  • Australia
  • Mexico
  • Portugal
  • Japan
  • Russia
  • Italy
  • Ireland
  • Israel
  • Poland
  • Hungary
  • New Zealand
  • Iceland
  • Brazil
  • Nicaragua
  • Norway
  • Finland
  • Venezuela
    and more



Thursday, April 21, 2011

BC Bound?

Esther and I were at a Dialogue for Democracy meeting earlier in the week and the man sitting beside me came up with a startling idea. We were talking about the election, of course, what else, and he said that he wished with all his heart, that Elizabeth May wins the seat in Saanich. He said if Esther and I really want to make a difference, that we should go to the west coast and help Elizabeth win.

What a sterling idea!

What more would encourage a voter to vote Green than two women from another federal party based in Ottawa and who live in Ottawa, traveling to the coast to essentially bring Elizabeth back with them.

Knock, knock in Sidney, BC, it's Esther and Shannon from Ottawa and we need Elizabeth May there so please consider voting Green on May 2.

We'll see if we can swing the plane fare.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Some Harperesque Tidbits of Enjoyment

Canadian Women's Favourite Pick-up Line



Did you enjoy the video? We did. Lots.

At the same time, we acknowledge that it is not just women who have suffered directly from Mr. Harper's unilateral decisions to cut funding, but everything and everyone linked to women: men, children, First Nations who need clean drinking water, the poor who receive help, the sick who receive medication, the elders who are parked in homes with inadequate care, the homeless, the mentally ill people who roam our streets, the young who come out of jail and have no support, the immigrants, their families, their job opportunities, their children who need to learn English.

Are we exaggerating? Not so. Click here to view a really interesting comic strip that SAYS IT ALL!

http://compellingcomics.justsomeguy.com/CanadaVotes2011/Canada.html

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Senator Tommy Banks Speaks Out

Senator Tommy Banks Speaks Out

by Mark Eisenman on Friday, April 15, 2011 at 12:03pm

A letter from Tom Banks

It's worth noting that Tom was a Conservative when he was appointed to the Senate. If you agree with this food for thought please feel free to send it to your friends of whatever political stripe. The bigger message here is how we want our government to behave, no matter who forms that government. Here's Tom's missive:

"There is only one thing about the outcome of the May 2nd election on which Mr. Ignatieff and Mr. Harper agree. It is that one of them will be the Prime Minister of Canada. Mr. Layton, Mr. Duceppe and Ms. May are not in the running to form a government. They can't. It will be either Mr. Ignatieff or Mr. Harper.

That is the choice, and it is a very clear – in fact, stark choice. We will choose between openness or secrecy. Between listening or refusing to listen. Between someone who respects Parliament or someone who disdains it. Between things we can and will do now or things that, (provided of course that everything goes well), we might do in five or six years. Between someone who answers all questions from Canadians, or someone who won't accept any.

Between Mr. Harper who said “It’s past time the feds scrapped the Canada Health Act”, or Mr. Ignatieff who said “ . . . we don't want user fees. We want universal, accessible, free-at-the-point-of-service health care, paid out of general revenue. That’s just bottom line. Otherwise we get two-tiered”.

Between buying jets or helping vets. Between real early childhood learning and care or Saturday-night babysitting. Between respect for our great institutions or contempt for them. Between helping families or helping big corporations. Between the Canada that we think we have, or the way in which Mr. Harper has already changed it.

Over the past few years Mr. Harper’s government has quietly engineered so many changes that there are some ways in which our country is barely recognizable. Many of us don't yet realize the extent of those changes, because many of them have been brought about very carefully and gradually – almost imperceptibly in some cases.

This is diabolically clever. If these things had all been done at once, there would have been loud protests and reactions. But moving just one little brick at a time doesn't cause much fuss – until you realize that the whole house has been renovated. And we've hardly noticed.

These are changes that are at the very heart of who and what Canadians are. They are changes to the protections that used to exist against the tyranny of the majority – or against a single-minded my-way-or-the-highway autocrat. These changes are losses to our very Canadian-ness. Let me remind you of some of them:

The Law Commission of Canada was created by an Act of Parliament in 1997. It worked very well. It kept an eye in a sort-of avuncular way, on necessary reforms of the law, including election law. The Commission couldn't actually change law; but it was very good at letting governments and everybody else know when changes needed to be made and why. It was our legal Jiminy Cricket, and it performed a valuable service for Canada. The Commission was created by an Act of Parliament, and any government wanting to shut it down should have been up-front about it. It should have come to Parliament with a Bill to rescind The Law Commission of Canada Act. That’s what any of our 21 previous Prime Ministers would have done.

But to Mr. Harper, Parliament is an inconvenience. Somebody might ask “Why are you doing this?” But he didn't want to go through all that Parliamentary trouble; so, rather than proposing the abolition of the Commission (a proposal about which there would have been pretty fierce debate on all sides), they just eliminated all funding for it in the federal budget. Governments can do that. Poof – no Law Commission.

Nice and quiet. Just one little brick. Hardly noticed.

Then there was the Court Challenges Programme, set up in 1994, which was the means by which a bit of legal help could be provided to a private individual or small organization who didn't have a lot of money, and who was taking on, or being taken on by, the Government of Canada. It leveled the legal playing field a bit. It was a perfect example of fundamental Canadian fairness.

By convincing a tough panel of judges of the reasonableness of your cause, you could get a little help in paying for some lawyers to go up against the phalanx of legal beagles that could always, and forever, and at public expense, be brought to bear against you by the State. In other words, if you weren't rich, and if you were taking on or being taken on by the Feds, you might have had a chance. But Mr. Harper doesn't like being questioned, let alone challenged. It’s so inconvenient! Solution? Quietly announce that the Court Challenges Programme is being, er, discontinued. Poof – no Court Challenges Programme – no court challenges.

Hardly noticed.

The Coordination of Access to Information Request System (CAIRS) was created (by a Progressive-Conservative government) in 1989 so that departments of government could harmonize their responses to access-to-information requests that might need multi-departmental responses. It was efficient; it made sure that in most cases the left hand knew what the right hand was doing, or at least what they were saying; and it helped keep government open and accountable. Well, if you’re running a closed-door government, that’s not a good idea, is it? So, as a Treasury Board official explained to the Canadian Press, CAIRS was killed by the Harper government because “extensive” consultations showed it wasn't valued by government departments. I guess that means that the extensive consultations were all with government departments.

Wait! Wasn't there anybody else with whom to extensively consult? Wasn't there some other purpose and use for CAIRS? Didn't it have something to do with openness and accountability? I guess not. Robert Makichuk, speaking for Mr. Harper’s government, explained that “valuable resources currently being used to maintain CAIRS would be better used in the collection and analysis of improved statistical reporting”.

Right. In other words, CAIRS was an inconvenience to the government. So poof – it’s disappeared. And, except for investigative reporters and other people who might (horrors!) ask questions, its loss is hardly noticed.

And the bridge too far for me: Cutting the already-utterly-inadequate funding for the exposure of Canadian art and artists in other countries. That funding was, by any comparison, already laughably minuscule. Mr. Harper says that “ordinary” Canadians don't support the arts. He’s wrong. And his is now the only government of any significant country in the world that clearly just doesn't get it.

All these changes were done quietly, cleverly, and under the radar. No fuss. No outcry. Just one little brick at a time. But in these and other ways, our Canadian house is no longer the kind of place it once was. Nobody minds good renovations. Nobody even minds tearing something down, as long as we put up something better in its place. That’s not what has happened.

Mr. Harper fired the head of the Canadian Wheat Board because he was doing his job properly. He removed the head of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission because she wanted to make sure that the Chalk River nuclear reactor was safe.

Hardly noticed.

There are many more things that were hardly noticed: Cuts to funding for the Status of Women, Adult Learning and Literacy, Environmental Programs, museums funding, and more. All quietly, just one brick at a time.

Hardly noticed.

As to campaign promises, everybody in sight on every side is guilty of breaking those. Except the Federal NDP of course, who haven't yet had the opportunity. (It’s very easy to make promises that you know you will not likely have to keep).

But the government promised to end wait times in health care. They didn't. They promised to end, once and for all, the whining of some provinces about the non-existent “fiscal imbalance”. They didn't. They said they had brought final resolution to the softwood lumber problem with the U.S. They haven't. They promised to create thousands of new child-care spaces in Canada. They haven't. They promised not to tax income trusts (“We will NEVER do that!” they said). They taxed them. They promised to lower your income tax.

They raised it.

They said they had a good “made-in-Canada” plan to meet our obligations on climate change. They don't. Mr. Harper has said plainly that whatever the Americans do is what we'll do too.

They campaign on a platform of transparency and accountability; but they’re now trying to discredit the Parliamentary Budget Officer that they created, because he’s trying to do the job that they gave him. Mr. Harper said that our form of government, evolved over centuries from the 900-year-old British Westminster tradition, was all wrong. We had to have fixed election dates, because otherwise, democratic principles would be trampled. ”Fixed election dates”, he said, “stop leaders from trying to manipulate the calendar. They level the playing field for all parties”.

So Parliament (remember them?) at Mr. Harper’s insistence, passed a law requiring fixed election dates, which Mr. Harper promptly broke.

Somebody once said that we get the kind of government we deserve. What did we do to deserve Mr. Harper? He once said that we should all “Stand Up for Canada”. Well, let’s do that. We just have to decide whether the present version of Canada is the one that we'll stand up for. Or stand for.

Thank you
Tommy Banks (an Alberta Senator.)"

http ://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=U1ARTU0000193

Monday, April 18, 2011

A Eulogy for Loraine


Esther wrote this eulogy for Loraine.

Loraine dreamed many dreams, for herself and for others. She breathed life into our lives and into our new party. She was among the Women's Alliance Party's first supporters. She believed in the ideals and saw clearly how to transform a dream into reality. Loraine dared to dream and her dreams were not just Loraine's dreams but all of ours. She made sure that we all had a place and a role to play. No matter what she did, her participation was full of joy and wisdom.

She had big ideas and was an inveterate collector of information, including photos, news items, brochures, letters, it all went into her many binders. She had a binder dedicated to WAP/PAF information and was our chosen archivist.

Loraine required careful listening to in order to catch the true depth of her thoughts and experiences. But more than all the sympathy and heart, the care and tenderness she brought to those who knew her, it was her ability to translate everything into action that was remarkable. Yes, Loraine was one of those rare women who walked the talk. She embodied our here and now, and always challenged our ideals to be grounded in reality, in the present.

We miss her sorely and will not be the same without her inspiration. We are grieved that she has left us. We can only hope that her legacy will inspire women, young and old, to focus on the needs of our society and the individuals among us who suffer.

She would want that.
--------------

Here is a poem that we will be reading tomorrow at Loraine's funeral.

Epitaph by Don Blanding 1894 -1957


Do not carve on stone or wood,
"She was honest" or " She was good."
Write in smoke on a passing breeze
Seven words… and the words are these,
Telling all that a volume could,
"She lived, she laughed and… she understood."

Sunday, April 17, 2011

A Sad Day for the Women's Alliance Party

The Women's Alliance Party lost a true-blue friend and mentor this past week when Loraine Whillans-Redford succumbed to a rogue aneurysm which snatched her from life on Tuesday afternoon.

Loraine was an early adopter of all things social justice and when WAP/PAF was announced in January, she immediately signed herself and her daughter, Tracey, as members. If you've seen a copy of our brochure, it is Loraine's hand in that of another women, joined in solidarity, that is shown.

Tirelessly at work in her various communities, here on Ottawa and in Gracefield with her partner, Paul, she brought light and joy wherever she traveled.

Whenever asked how she was doing, Fabulous! was her inevitable answer. Loraine was not one to shrink from adversity, her own of that of others; she seized bad luck like a rug that needed shaking and she prevailed until she beat it or made the best of it.

She truly had a way of making things better as she stood up for other people's rights and comforts. Working in a restaurant on one of Ottawa's main streets, she had her finger on the pulse of what was right in the community and what wasn't quite working out. To this end, she started an organization called Loraine's Dream because it was her vision of how the world should be fair and just to everyone and about how if people were given a little hand up, most would steady themselves and be good on their own. Sometimes, it just took her finger gently wagging for them to right themselves; at other times, a fingertip slightly prodding.

In recent years, since retiring from working at the restaurant, she was spending more time in Gracefield with Paul where they continued to build on their acreage. It was another dream of Loraine's to open a tea house and she had been collecting tea pots and paraphernalia for years. She wanted to offer hospitality to wayfarers, along with family and friends.

Loraine was WAP's Archivist as she loved keeping binders of photos and information. It was natural for her to assume this role.

Esther and I are very sorry that Loraine is no longer here to guide us with her attention to detail and her indefatigable good cheer and energy.