Windsor Star

Ontario Tories take aim at student unions

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Premier Doug Ford accused student unions of getting up to “crazy Marxist nonsense” as he appealed for donations to his Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party in a fundraisin­g email sent Monday. Ford’s claim was made as he highlighte­d his government’s move to make some fees paid by Ontario college and university students optional instead of mandatory. “Students were forced into unions and forced to pay for those unions,” Ford said in the email sent by the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves. “I think we all know what kind of crazy Marxist nonsense student unions get up to.”

The message sparked condemnati­on from students’ groups and opposition politician­s who said the premier’s language confirms what they’ve suspected — that the fee changes announced last month are politicall­y motivated.

The fundraisin­g email — which bore the subject line “How broken was education?” — also mentions the government’s decision to scrap free tuition for low-income students and impose a 10-per-cent across-the-board tuition fee cut. “It’s little things ... but they add up,” Ford said in the email Monday, before asking for a donation to the party.

It’s really just taking away resources from student groups. A lot of these are basic necessitie­s that students need.

When asked about the message, PC party spokesman Marcus Mattinson said the government’s changes to student fees provide greater transparen­cy.

“This is student money, not government money,” he said in a statement. “Ultimately, students deserve the final say in how their money is spent.”

The Canadian Federation of Students said the message suggests the government’s changes to certain student fees were made for political purposes.

“It’s really just taking away resources from student groups,” said Nour Alideeb, chairwoman for the group’s Ontario branch, adding that the fees are used to fund things like food banks and campus women’s centres. “A lot of these are basic necessitie­s that students need to succeed.” Alideeb said student unions are non-partisan, student politician­s have diverse views, and all work to improve life for their classmates. College Student Alliance president Brittany Greig called Ford’s fundraisin­g message disappoint­ing, adding that student unions are democratic­ally elected. “Student leaders hold institutio­ns and government accountabl­e for decisions surroundin­g fee increases, programmin­g, strategic plans and more,” she said. “Students will suffer if they lose their on-campus advocates.”

NDP critic Chris Glover criticized Ford’s message on Monday. “Doug Ford is attacking student unions because he doesn’t want students to be able to organize to fight against not only this round of cuts, but the next round as well,” he said in a statement. Liberal finance critic Mitzie Hunter said Ford’s message shows he doesn’t know what student unions do and doesn’t understand the impact his government’s grant changes will have.

“Doug Ford is wrong on student unions, he is wrong on tuition and he is wrong to de-fund universiti­es and colleges at a time when we should be investing in them,” she said.

The government has said some fees will remain mandatory including for walksafe programs, health and counsellin­g, athletics and recreation and academic support.

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