At the time this article was published
Michel Sarra-Bournet was a parliamentary intern at the House of Commons. This
article is based on a presentation to the54th Congress of the Association
canadienne, française pour 1'avancement des sciences in Montreal on April 16,
1986.
In September 1984, the New Democratic Party,
which many had predicted would be erased from the political map, withstood the
Conservative onslaught and captured essentially the same number of votes and
seats as in the previous election. NDP members elected to the House of Commons
represented areas which had traditionally supported the party, namely Western
Canada and Ontario. The NDP failed to return any members east of Ottawa. In
Quebec, they won about 9 per cent of the popular vote, less than half of the
national average. Since it was founded in 1961, the NDP has never been able to
improve its 1965 performance in Quebec when, under the leadership of Robert
Cliche, it garnered about eleven per cent of the popular vote.
Canadian history has shown clearly that a
federal political party cannot hope to govern without a certain number of seats
in Quebec. If the NDP aspires to be more than just a mere pressure group, it
must work to broaden its base in Quebec. Not everyone in the party shares this
ambition. Some party members and even some MPs would be uncomfortable with the
prospect of one day holding power. Most leaders of the party are, however,
growing impatient. They are aware of the stakes that Quebec represents.
In a recent book, Crisis of Clarity1,
Michael Bradley, a former NDP party member, blames the party's failure to gain
power partly on its working class ideology which is difficult to reconcile with
the complex Canadian reality. He advocates a back to basics approach, humanism
infused with the religious values of the CCF. His analysis might explain why
NDP support in English Canada has levelled off, but it in no way explains the
weakness of the social democratic movement in Quebec. Indeed, when Woodsworth
and Coldwell were at the helm of the CCF, their voices fell on deaf ears in
French Canada.
The CCF (1932-1961)
In the early 1930s, in the midst of the
Great Depression, labour MPs and representatives of Prairie and Ontario farmers
had been elected to the Commons. The leader of this group, J.S. Woodsworth,
proposed establishment of a co-operative federation. Thus, various labour and
farmer organizations gathered in Calgary in 1932 to found the Co-operative
Commonwealth Federation, the CCF. A few delegates from Quebec were in
attendance, mainly union representatives from the Canadian Congress of Labour
and English-speaking members of the academic community representing the League
for Social Reconstruction. In 1933, the Federation adopted a fourteen point
manifesto. Known as the Regina Manifesto, this document set out the basic
tenets of the CCF program. Twelve of the fourteen clauses were drafted by a
committee headed by Frank Scott of Montreal, a distinguished member of the
League for Social Reconstruction. As historian Andrée Lévesque noted, the first
CCF members in Quebec were intellectuals rather than members of the urban
working class, as was the case in British Columbia, or farmers as was true in
the Prairies.2 The noble intention of party founders to recruit
Francophone workers from Montreal fell by the wayside. Nor did the CCF find a
voice to speak for French Canada.
The party was slow to produce translations
of literature and speeches originally drafted in English. Worse still, the
fledgling movement was viewed with contempt by the powerful Catholic Church.
Father Georges-Henri Lévesque had the following to say about the party in
L'Action nationale: "This new political, and frankly, socialist party ...
is the true incarnation of socialism in Canada. A pity, really. True socialism
is nothing more than latent communism. Without really intending to be most of
the time, socialism is the surest precursor to communism. The experience of
other countries amply demonstrates this".3
The CCF was also denounced by the Archbishop
of Montreal and by Cardinal Villeneuve. Conciliatory efforts on the part of CCF
leaders proved unsuccessful. It was not until the 1950s that the Church adopted
a neutral attitude toward the CCF. Even after the open denouncements of the
Church ceased to be a problem, the philosophy of the CCF continued to go
unheeded in Quebec, since it ran counter to the prevailing Catholic
spiritualism which focussed on happiness in the hereafter rather than on a
better life here on earth.
The Great Depression should have helped the
socialists' cause. Instead, two factors combined to hinder it. The first was
felt on a national scale. Economic conditions revived regional interests. What
was perceived as provincialism in English Canada became a quest for
independence in Quebec. The centralist solutions of the CCF clashed with these
aspirations. The second factor pertains to the unique nature of the working
class in Quebec. Its members, who hail poured into the cities on the wave of
industrialization and urbanization, still clung to traditional values and were
not inclined to display class solidarity.
Other characteristics of the CCF party also
clashed with the political habits of Quebeckers. As one author pointed out,
"the CCF did appear odd: it actually sold membership cards and expected
its members to raise money for the party. No rewards were promised or
forthcoming at election time".4 Furthermore, the methods of the
CCF and its speeches, which were reminiscent of those delivered by
fundamentalist preachers in Western Canada and which were given during public
meetings in English, held little attraction for Quebeckers.
The origins of the party, its platform, its
methods and its speeches all conspired to put French Canadians ill at ease. The
party's foreign, even hostile image was further exacerbated by unpopular stands
and misguided statements, Following the invasion of Poland, a divided CCF
supported Canada's limited participation in World War II. It also spoke out
against bilingual bank notes and provincial taxes. Some of its leaders were
disdainful of French Canadians. Woodsworth referred to Quebec as the happy
hunting ground of English Canadian capitalists. H. H. Haydon, a member of the
first CCF council of Montreal, described French Canadians as an illiterate
class, more likely to be governed by their emotions and to bow to the will of
the authorities. During the 1950s, statements with regard to Quebec made by CCF
MPs like Harold Winch, Erhart Regier, Hazen Argue, Angus MacInnis and later
Douglas Fisher roused the consternation of Quebeckers. Despite the apologies of
party leaders, many Francophone rank and file members abandoned ship.
The CCF's unfamiliar image was softened a
little by the presence of Thérèse Casgrain, provincial party leader from 1953
to 1957. Her greatest contribution, aside from securing more funding for the
Quebec wing of the CCF and more autonomy for Quebec within the Federation, was
to attract several young intellectuals who were searching for a niche in a
society where the Church dominated society's institutions. Individuals such as
Gérard Pelletier, Pierre Juneau, Maurice Sauvé, Guy Rocher, Maurice Lamontagne,
Jean-Charles Falardeau and Pierre Trudeau scorned Duplessis and flirted with
the idea of joining the party but soon looked elsewhere because of the lack of
opportunities available to them. Some went on to found Cité Libre, a magazine
which focussed primarily on provincial politics. Other disappeared into the
neutral territory of the academic community or went on to lend their talents to
the federal public service or become active in the labour movement. Despite her
good intentions and support, Casgrain, who was born to a wealthy family, was
unable to make inroads in labour circles. In 1957, she was replaced by Michel
Chartrand.
The intellectual upheaval of the late 1950s
benefitted the Liberal Party of Jean Lesage. It was in a better position to
push the Union Nationale out of office. At no time did membership in the CCF
exceed 900 in Quebec and only a quarter of the members were Francophones. By
comparison party membership in Ontario rarely dipped below the 4, 000 figure.
The CCF was more of a political movement than an actual political party in
Quebec.
Professor Walter Young put his finger on the
CCFs problems when he said, "There was nothing in the CCF as a political
movement that was really consistent with attitudes that prevailed in Quebec. It
was a foreign element, it was opposed by the Catholic Church, it preached
centralism, and it had in it English Canadians who frankly demonstrated great
ignorance and prejudice where Quebec and French-Canadian rights were concerned.
Throughout its sickly career in that province, the CCF spoke to Quebec with an
English accent. It made no difference that Lewis and Scott were fluently
bilingual; the CCF simply had no roots in Quebec and was unable to demonstrate
effectively any reason why there should be any".5
The NDP (1961-1984)
At the end of the 1950s, renewed recession,
increasingly repressive labour legislation in a number of provinces including
Quebec, disenchantment with the traditional parties, awareness of the eroding
support for the CCF and the need to enlarge its base, triggered a movement in favour
of a New Party. This time the Fédération des travailleurs du Québec (FTQ) sent
a strong Quebec contingent to the founding convention of the New Democratic
Party in late summer, 1961. Quebec's social democrats were characterized by
their nationalism, a reflection of the social movement that was gaining support
among them in the early 1960s. They were determined to get off on the right
foot and to make sure that the New Party did not repeat the mistakes of the CCF
They had the Party's National Council renamed the Federal Council; obtained
recognition for Canada's binational character; and insisted that one of the
five Party vice-presidents be a francophone.
But these concessions in principle, accepted
reluctantly by the Western delegates to avoid splitting the newly-formed Party,
did not really alter the plainly federalist stance of the New Party. This was
to cause problems for the NDP as Quebec's demands became more pressing.
In 1962, while the New Democratic troops in
Quebec were mustering, a statement by federal Party leader Tommy Douglas on
provincial powers revived the debate. The Quebec members protested, and
prudently distanced themselves. The federal Party called for a wide-ranging
inquiry into bilingualism and biculturalism in Canada.
During the June 1962 election the NDP took
4.4% of the Quebec vote as opposed to 13.4% nation-wide. In the election of
April 1963 its share of the Quebec vote had climbed to 7.1% while overall
results remained virtually the same. The provincial NDP was still being directed
by a provisional council, which held a policy convention in June 1963. Two
subjects were discussed: the relationship between the provincial wing and the
federal party, and that between Quebec and Canada. The resulting schism
produced the Nouveau Parti Démocratique-Québec (NDP-Québec), which leaned
toward federalism, and a Parti Socialiste du Québec, which was intended to be
active provincially and contested the 1966 provincial elections.
Permanent NPD-Québec structures were set up
in March 1965. The election of Robert Cliche as leader was enthusiastically
received both in English Canada and in Quebec. In the 1965 elections, the Party
won almost 12% of the vote in Quebec and 18% in Montreal, almost the Canadian
average. New recruits joined the Party whose constitutional stance was veering
more toward autonomy for Quebec. At its 1967 convention even the Federal
Council, faced with the success of the NPD-Québec, accepted the idea of special
status for Quebec. Enthusiasm reached unprecedented heights.
In the federal election of June 25, 1968,
although support for the NDP stayed at 17% nation-wide, it fell by 5 points in
Quebec to just over 7%. Trudeaumania was too strong for Robert Cliche, who
resigned the presidency of the NPD-Québec. A venture into the provincial arena
in 1970 proved disastrous: the Parti Québécois by then claimed to represent
nationalists and labour alike. The FTQ, battle-weary, gradually withdrew its
formal support from the NDP.
At a federal convention in Ottawa in 1971,
the Quebec delegation wanted to obtain recognition for Quebec's right to
self-determination. They were supported by the Party's radical wing, the Waffle
Group. The resolution was rejected by a vote of 2 to 1, and the Party
reaffirmed its faith in a united Canada. The new leader, David Lewis, said that
the NPD-Québec and the Waffle would have to accept Party policy as decided by
the convention.
The NPD-Québec included self-determination
in its platform during the 1972 federal elections, and was repudiated by the
federal Party. The results of the 1972 and 1974 elections confirmed the NDP's
stagnation in Quebec. A renewed venture on the provincial scene failed in 1976
when the FTQ supported the Parti Québécois, which won the election.
In 1977, resolutions from a number of local
and provincial NDP groups in different parts of Canada recommended that
Quebec's right to self-determination be recognized, but the resolution was
defeated at the convention. Instead, another resolution was passed affirming
that the people of Quebec had a right to make their choice without constraint.
Ed Broadbent asserted that this did not mean that Quebec could be sole judge of
the terms of its independence. The Quebec wing interpreted the vote as a
recognition of Quebec's right to self-determination. Despite this ambiguous
resolution, the federal Party worked for the "No" committee during
the referendum campaign, and its caucus, with two exceptions, supported passage
of the Constitution Act, 1982, even without Quebec's assent.
Support for the NDP in Quebec remained
stable in the 1979 and 1980 elections despite the Party's severely reduced
provincial organization. Throughout the 1970s, the political arena was
dominated by the Pierre Trudeau-René Lévesque duel over federalism versus
sovereignty. The New Democratic party, a small party without any high profile
supporters in Quebec, was not very visible.
The Present and the Future
Of the obstacles that littered the CCF's
path before 1960, some have disappeared; others have remained. Counting on a
more militant working class, in a society freed from the grip of the Church,
the social democratic movement in Quebec thought the time had come for an
advance. But the New Democratic Party was unable to shake off the mistrust
engendered by its Anglo-Canadian origins, the reaction against its centralist
solutions and the indifference resulting from a lack of well-known faces in the
Party's ranks.
Despite the presence of Robert Cliche
between 1965 and 1968, it would seem that Quebec's workers did not have
confidence in the NDP's ability to bring about social reforms. The Party's best
ideas were put into application nationally by the federal Liberals and
provincially by the Liberal Party under Jean Lesage and the Parti Québécois
under René Lévesque. Generally the unions preferred not to alienate the major
parties at election time, and concentrated their efforts in union action. Their
members preferred to support the traditional parties.
The referendum of 1980, the Constitution
Act, 1982, the economic crisis at the beginning of the decade, Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau's retirement, labour's dissatisfaction with the second Lévesque
administration, and Quebecker's apparent indifference to the constitutional
debates gave new hope to the NDP's leaders. They appeared willing to soften the
Party's constitutional stance, as they had at the time of the Party's founding
in 1961 and again when Robert Cliche gave it momentum in 1968. Once again they
believed that circumstances favoured the NDP. A political vacuum appeared to be
developing in Quebec, both federally and provincially, and the NDP leadership
talked more and more about the right to self-determination, and opting-out with
financial compensation..
An effort was made to revitalize the Quebec wing
of the NDP John Harney, a former NDP Member of Parliament from Ontario, was
entrusted with the responsibility of rebuilding the Party. He hastily set up
riding organizations for the September, 1984 federal election.
The NPD-Québec also re-entered provincial
politics with the hope of making gains at the expense of the PQ. It flung its
faithful into the December 1985 election (fielding ninety) candidates but only
won 2.5% of the vote.
In 1986 some polls have put the NDP in
second place in Quebec federally with 27% of the decided vote. It plans to hold
its next convention in Montreal in the spring of 1987, and looks forward
optimistically to the elections of 1988, in which it expects NDP candidates to
be elected from every region of Canada. But many questions will have to be
answered before this can happen. Does this 27% represent disenchantment with
other parties or genuine support? Can the NDP capitalize on this to attract
prominent candidates? Is the Party ready to invest the amounts needed to set up
a competitive electoral machine even if the seats to be won from Quebec are
marginal? Would it make concessions in its constitutional stance that will
rally its Quebec wing and attract a solid segment of Quebec's voters? Would
such concessions affect the NDP's traditional bases of support in the West? Can
it become as effective a presence at the provincial level in Quebec as it has
in several other provinces, given that Quebec has a tendency to support parties
that are either unique to Quebec or are independent of their federal
counterpart? In short, history has pointed out the obstacles to be overcome if
the NDP is to become a viable force in Quebec politics. It remains to be seen
if the lessons can be used to attain electoral success.
Notes
1. Michael Bradley, Crisis of Clarity,
the New Democratic and the Quest for the Holy Grail, Toronto, Summerhill
Press Ltd., 1985, p. 224.
2. Andrée Lévesque, Virage à gauche
interdit. Les communistes, les socialistes et leur ennemis au Québec, 1929-1939,
Montreal, Boréal Express, 1984, p. 72.
3. See George-Henri Lévesque,
"Socialisme canadien", L'Action Nationale, Vol. II (October
1933), p. 92.
4. Susan Mann-Trofimenkoff, "Thérèse
Casgrain and the CCF in Quebec," Canadian Historical Review, Vol.
66 (no. 2, 1985), p. 137.
5. Walter D. Young, The Anatomy of a
Party: The National CCF, 1932-61, Toronto, University of Toronto Press,
1969, p. 215.