Times Colonist

NDP gathers for national convention

Disputes over Trans Mountain pipeline among the fault lines confrontin­g party

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — New Democrats from across the country will begin gathering in the national capital on Thursday, hoping to lay the groundwork for victory in next year’s federal election — and to confront deep divisions and challenges within their party.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh kicked off the festivitie­s a few days early by laying out Tuesday what he wants to see in the Trudeau government’s federal budget, which will be unveiled Feb. 27.

The demands include a universal pharmacare program, more money for affordable housing, an end to boil-water advisories on First Nations and more protection­s for workers’ pensions when companies go bankrupt.

Singh has distanced himself from predecesso­r Tom Mulcair’s commitment that an NDP government would stick to a balanced budget, saying as recently as last week that he opposes “austerity” and supports stimulus funding when required.

But the NDP leader indicated Tuesday that the costs of the pharmacare program, at least, could be covered if the Liberals close a controvers­ial tax loophole for stock options, which critics say benefits the wealthy, and crack down on tax havens.

“The government has shown that it just doesn’t get it when it comes to what workers are going through,” Singh said. “While they’ve said a lot of fancy words on addressing inequality, they haven’t yet produced the results that people need now.”

The NDP had sponsored an opposition motion echoing their leader’s demands for action on the so-called stock-option deduction and tax havens in the budget, but the Liberals voted it down.

On the surface, Singh’s demands look like the foundation of a possible NDP platform for the 2019 election. They also bear a striking resemblanc­e to some of the policy proposals that New Democrats — including six of Vancouver Island’s seven MPs — could debate at their convention this weekend.

The list of policy proposals includes a heavy emphasis on Indigenous rights as well as pharmacare, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity, more support for refugees, the decriminal­ization of all drugs and free university tuition.

Yet the list also includes potential landmines that could deepen the already sharp divisions over pipelines and natural resources, symbolized, in part, by the feud between Alberta and British Columbia over the Trans Mountain pipeline.

Among the more explosive policy proposals is one, sponsored by 12 riding associatio­ns, that explicitly opposes the pipeline. Another calls for widespread protests against pipelines and fracking.

Neither Alberta Premier Rachel Notley, whose government supports Trans Mountain, nor B.C. Premier John Horgan, who opposes it, will attend the convention, even though they lead the only two NDP government­s in the country.

The resolution­s also include — among many other things — calls to censure Israel and support the Palestinia­ns; for the government to cover birth control for women and medical treatments for trans people; and for Canada to leave NATO.

There are also several resolution­s calling for the party to formally adopt the Leap Manifesto, a controvers­ial treatise that divided the New Democrats during the party’s last convention because of its opposition to fossil fuels.

Leap organizers will hold a special event on Thursday, before the NDP convention begins, that will host speeches by advisers to Bernie Sanders, who ran for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination in the U.S. in 2016, and British Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

Avi Lewis, a documentar­y filmmaker who has championed Leap along with his wife, author Naomi Klein, acknowledg­ed that the manifesto created a “split” inside the party — but that split, he said, is between the party’s leadership and its grassroots members.

New Democrats are also expected this weekend to do some soul-searching following allegation­s of harassment and sexual misconduct involving MPs.

Delegates at the convention will be presented with an updated anti-harassment policy that has been in the works for several months and will include guidance for raising and handling complaints. Singh said Tuesday that the party is reviewing its internal policies following allegation­s of sexual misconduct against former Nova Scotia MP Peter Stoffer.

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