Welcome and all that -- and you being among the Rick Mercer
cognoscenti ... ah no, I was about to ask were you one of us, but I see you're next door. ;)
(Your weather as atrocious as ours these days?)
I'll put my gold star to work for you, and do a search for "alliance" and "conservative" for the last couple of weeks, and then you can read what some of us think of it all, and the related things that tend to come up.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=102&topic_id=316237"Senior Canadian mulls party defection" (Copps to NDP)
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=102&topic_id=313441 Alliance MP will run as Liberal - CBC confirms - Keith Martin leaves CPC
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=102&topic_id=323778Broadbent wins NDP nomination (Ottawa Centre)
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=102&topic_id=322652 "Belinda Stronach makes it official" (Canadian Conservative leadership)
Me, I just don't know what it is about somebody being, ahem, blonde, and wearing a load o' makeup, that makes anybody drool over her on a discussion board ... let alone vote for her, of course. Peroxide and paint aside, her fame and fortune derive from her daddy's union-bashing corp, whose board members include the human-bashing ex-Premier of Ontario Mike Harris ... but I suppose there's no accounting for taste.
The youngsters probably haven't heard much about the Stronach empire and how it has played dirty with the unions for so long. (Think "Walmart".) The Canadian Auto Workers union can tell all about it. I'm sure a Michiganer will share the concern. ;)
http://www.caw.ca/news/factsfromthefringe/issue14.aspConsider the circumstances of democracy, Magna-style. Only
one side in the vote has access to the voter's list. With no
spending limit, it can mail reams of material to each voter's
home —at times even using courier services. The other side
doesn't know for sure how many voters there are, let alone
where they live. Anti-union advertizing is prevalent, but
pro-union hats or buttons can be banned as a "safety hazard."
The polling site is patrolled by private police. Anti-union
"focus groups" are held during working hours, with
compulsory attendance. Electronic signs flash "Vote No"
messages right through each shift. Enlarged sample ballots,
with a prominent X in the desired spot, are posted
prominently.
This sounds more like an election in North Korea (where they
also use secret ballots), than a true expression of democracy.
Most importantly, the voters are repeatedly threatened,
implicitly or explicitly, that their jobs will disappear if they
vote for the union. For example, the plant manager wrote to all
employees before the vote, wondering aloud why
DaimlerChrysler would continue to buy Magna's seats if the
company's non-union advantage was eroded. (To its credit,
DaimlerChrysler issued a letter clarifying that its business with
Magna would be unaffected by the vote, and this was probably
important to the final outcome.)
http://www.caw.ca/news/allCAWnewsletters/atthetable/atthetable2000feb.aspIt seems Frank Stronach's dislike for unions (and anything that
looks like them) is truly international - even in his native country
Workers at Magna plants in AUSTRIA have battled with the
Canadian-based company throughout 1999 over management's
opposition to government-mandated "works councils." (Works
councils are a type of democratic representation, but without full
union rights.) Magna has been refusing to allow the councils,
pushing instead its own corporate code called the "Magna Charter."
The conflict came to a head over the dismissal in the year of a
worker who had favoured the creation of a works council at a plant
in Styria. A government grant to Magna was suspended as a result,
but re-issued after company threats to move work to Germany and
Hungary.
Ah, Stronach family values.
.