Vancouver Sun

New mission statement removes socialist rhetoric

- TOBI COHEN AND MICHAEL WOODS

MONTREAL — The NDP looks a little less socialist than it used to.

New Democrats voted overwhelmi­ngly in favour of changing their constituti­on at the party’s policy convention Sunday, a move that effectivel­y removed much of the socialist rhetoric that helped define the party’s raison d’être for decades.

After a fiery debate and numerous procedural delays, 960 delegates voted in favour of the resolution to amend the preamble to the constituti­on — essentiall­y the NDP’s mission statement — while 188 voted against. The changes required a two- thirds majority to pass.

“I’m a social democrat and it’s a social democratic party, but you’ll notice that both of those words are still in the preamble,” NDP leader Tom Mulcair told reporters.

“A lot of Canadians share our vision and our goals in the NDP. We just gotta make sure that by modernizin­g, by using the language that resonates with a wider public in Canada, that we’ll be able to do what we have to do, which is to defeat Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ves in 2015.”

Social democracy, he said, is about “removing inequaliti­es in our society.” While many of those battles — such as those related to improving working conditions — have been won, he said today’s fight is about the inequaliti­es between generation­s and the need for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Mulcair argued the purpose of the change is to “connect and reach out beyond our traditiona­l base,” while still acknowledg­ing the party’s traditions. He added it’s not so much about “bringing the party to the centre” as some critics, including party stalwart Ed Broadbent, have charged, but rather about “bringing the centre to the party.”

What this preamble does is maintain our uniqueness, maintain the essentials and maintain the momentum.

BILL BLAIKIE MANITOBA MP

The new preamble was drafted by notable party members, including former national leader Alexa McDonough, former Manitoba MP Bill Blaikie and past party president and leadership contender Brian Topp, on instructio­n from the late Jack Layton after the party failed to agree on an earlier revision at the last policy convention in 2011. It’s considerab­ly longer than the original and focuses on the principles of “sustainabl­e prosperity,” “freedom and democracy” and a “rules based economy.”

It also references the party’s “social democratic and democratic socialist traditions,” and affirms pride in its “political and activist heritage.”

It was amended slightly by delegates to also include a commitment to “First Nations, Metis and Inuit,” as well as support for “intercultu­ral integratio­n.”

Speaking Sunday in support of the change, Blaikie said he opposed the amendment the last time the party tried to alter the preamble because it went to too far in trying to water down references to socialism.

“This doesn’t sound like a party that’s in any danger of losing its identity,” he told fellow delegates. “What this preamble does is maintain our uniqueness, maintain the essentials and maintain the momentum so that some day we might ( not) just have a unique left- wing party in Canada, we can have a unique left- wing Canada.”

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