Montreal Gazette

Activists divided over legacy of student protests

Tuition rates haven’t eased as much as ‘Maple Spring’ demonstrat­ors had hoped

- MORGAN LOWRIE

Five years after seas of angry students took to Montreal streets to protest against planned university tuition-fee hikes, activists remain divided over the legacy of the socalled “Maple Spring.”

For several months, images of blockaded government offices, clashes between demonstrat­ors and police, and the ubiquitous red square that came to symbolize the protest movement made headlines around the world.

At issue was the provincial Liberal government’s plan to nearly double tuition fees over five years to $3,800 per year, which, it said, would still leave the province with some of the lowest fees in Canada.

Reacting angrily, tens of thousands of students voted to strike and walked out of their classes.

The students declared victory after the fall provincial election when Pauline Marois’s Parti Québécois government ousted Jean Charest’s Liberals and immediatel­y promised to reverse the tuition hikes.

Martine Desjardins, the former president of Quebec’s largest student federation, still remembers getting the phone call from a Marois staffer announcing the cancellati­on.

“It was the moment where I said to myself, ‘we won,’ ” she said in a phone interview.

But while Desjardins sees the protests as an undeniable victory for the students, others have mixed feelings.

Some were disappoint­ed the Marois government chose to allow tuition rates to rise gradually with the rate of inflation instead of reinstatin­g a complete freeze.

And while the protests began with the narrow objective of reversing tuition hikes, for many they quickly expanded to include such issues as free education and reducing social inequality, according to a college teacher who marched with the students.

“It (wasn’t) just, ‘we don’t want to pay more,’ it’s a vision of a society where education is important enough that we find the money to make it free for everybody,” said Collège de Maisonneuv­e professor Julien Villeneuve, who became known as “Anarchopan­da” after donning a black-and-white bear costume during the protests.

Villeneuve believes that message was partly lost because of media coverage that focused on the violence.

Neverthele­ss, he thinks if there was a victory, it was introducin­g formerly “radical” ideas such as universal free education, socialism and anti-capitalism back into mainstream public discourse.

“In the strikes we did before, (free education) was always the goal, but before 2012 we never dared to say it,” he said.

Katie Nelson, a Concordia University student who attended hundreds of protests, expressed a similar sentiment.

Nelson, now 24, says she was disappoint­ed the PQ decided to allow tuition to rise with the cost of inflation, rather than reinstatin­g a total freeze.

“A lot of the campaign promises that were made weren’t kept,” she said in a recent interview.

“But at the same time there were many victories, in that we mobilized an entire generation of students to organize and we popularize­d themes of anti-capitalism, anti-austerity — these taboo topics that you don’t grow up thinking are possible.”

The strikes were the product of years of meticulous preparatio­n on the part of student leaders that dated back to 2009.

But how they came to exceed even those organizers’ expectatio­ns is still a matter of debate.

Desjardins believes the government’s refusal to sit down with the students played a part, as did a controvers­ial emergency law to crack down on protests that many saw as an infringeme­nt on civil rights.

Student leaders tried to hold a new series of walkouts protesting against austerity in 2015, but those never gained momentum.

Nelson and Villeneuve suggest this may be because protesters are still dealing with the physical, emotional and legal fallout of 2012.

Villeneuve says the protests spawned dozens of lawsuits, including class-actions against authoritie­s for the mass arrest of protesters.

Other demonstrat­ors have alleged they were injured by police who responded to their civil disobedien­ce with disproport­ionate force.

These include Nelson, who says she was arrested multiple times and given more than $7,000 in fines, though she was never charged.

She has also brought legal action against the Montreal police for alleged abuse of authority and assault during subsequent protests.

“I think people are tired still,” said Nelson. “We all came off this strike and returned to school.”

 ?? DAVE SIDAWAY ?? Students from across the province of Quebec take to the streets of Montreal in March 2012 to demonstrat­e against rising tuition fees. What they accomplish­ed remains a matter for debate.
DAVE SIDAWAY Students from across the province of Quebec take to the streets of Montreal in March 2012 to demonstrat­e against rising tuition fees. What they accomplish­ed remains a matter for debate.

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