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November 2000
Party
Profiles Other Parties Party
Policy The
official Liberal Party response to the CLC Election 2000 questionnaire
states that "the Liberal Party supports a woman's right to choose."
This is the first time that the party has stated this to be its official
position, although pro-life Liberals say that its Chretien's policy,
not theirs. The
Liberals were responsible for the legalization of abortion in 1969
and for the exclusion of preborn children from the Charter of Rights
and Freedoms in 1982. Since taking office in 1993, Chretien has repeatedly
refused to open the abortion debate to change the status quo, which
is abortion on demand. The
party has introduced several pieces of legislation in the past seven
years which advance the rights of persons living a homosexual lifestyle
at the expense of the traditional definitions of "spouse"
and "marriage", although most Liberal MPs voted in favour
of the motion supporting the traditional definition of marriage. Through
its Status of Women Secretariat, the party promotes feminist policies.
It also funds the Court Challenges Program, which gives taxpayer dollars
to primarily feminist activists and homosexual activists to challenge
government policy. The
party passed a pro-euthanasia resolution at its national convention
in Ottawa in 1997. The party has been a leading - and some would say fanatical - supporter of the anti-family, anti-life agenda at the United Nations. Election
Platform A
Liberal government will double "maternity and parental benefits
from six months to one full year." It will contribute "$2.2 billion over five years" to the Early Childhood Development Initiative which was launched in September of this year by the federal, provincial and territorial governments. Track
Record The
Liberal government has supported the testing in Canada of the abortion
drug RU-486. As
the government, the Liberals introduced "hate crimes" legislation,
Bill C-41, in 1995 so that judges could increase a person's sentence
if they were found guilty of a crime and "sexual orientation"
was determined to be a motive behind the crime. They
introduced Bill C-33 in 1996 to add "sexual orientation"
to the Canadian Human Rights Act as a category of people protected
against "discrimination." The
Liberals also introduced Bill C-23 in 1999 granting all the benefits
of common-law couples to same-sex partners and, thereby, effectively
redefining marriage. In
November 1999, Yvon Charbonneau, then Parliamentary Secretary to the
Health Minister, spoke on behalf of the government against Bill C-207.
The private member's bill would have protected health care workers
who refused to participate in abortions from employment and education
discrimination. "[Day]'s
kind of like a political opponent's dream come true ... The whole
picture," including "his Neanderthal views on social policy,"
such as abortion and homosexuality. Warren Kinsella, Chrétien
strategist and longtime Liberal consultant (Ottawa Citizen, Aug. 31,
2000)
The party continues to look for support among the provinces to implement
a national daycare strategy which critics argue discriminates against
families which choose not to use paid daycare services. Party
Policy The party defines marriage as "the union of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others." "We
recognize there are issues so important to Canadians that direct public
input is desirable. Therefore, we will introduce measures that allow
citizens to initiate binding referenda. In addition, we will also
seek the consensus of all Canadians through judicious use of national
referenda, both on issues having significant implications for Canadian
society and on proposed changes to the country's Constitution."
The party wants to eliminate tax discrimination against single-income
earning families. It also supports the rights of parents to raise,
nurture and discipline their own children without state interference
except in cases of abuse or neglect. The party supports Parliamentary accountability in the consideration of international treaties. Election
Platform "We
will end the discrimination in the tax system against families where
one spouse stays home .... We plan to increase the Spousal Exemption
amount from $6,140 to $10,000. This will allow families with stay-at-home
spouses to earn the same tax-free amount as families with two incomes."
The party says "the tax system shouldn't discriminate [in favour
of] parents who pay for outside care." Therefore, it promises
to introduce "a $3,000 per year, per child tax deduction ....
Every parent of a child under 16 will receive this tax deduction ..." "All
families want their children to receive a quality education. Most
parents choose to send their children to publicly funded schools,
but some pay large amounts to choose other options for their children.
A Canadian Alliance government will bring forward tax reform measures
to allow parents in this situation to keep more of their income to
provide for their children's education, while respecting provincial
jurisdiction." "We
will make Canada's governing institutions more democratic: allow free
votes in the House of Commons, on everything except budget votes and
non-confidence motions; allow Canadians to bring forward citizen-initiated
referendums ...; allow constituents to recall MPs who fail to serve
and represent the people of their riding; ... allow full Parliamentary
review of important government appointments like presidents of crown
corporations, Supreme Court justices, and the Governor of the Bank
of Canada ..." "We will preserve and protect the family unit. We will protect the institution of marriage as the exclusive union of one man and one woman. We will encourage counselling in any uncontested divorce where there are children involved. We will follow the unanimous recommendations of the Special Joint Committee on Child Custody and Access to ensure that shared parenting is the norm in the aftermath of divorce." Track
Record
In June of last year, the Alliance's predecessor, the Reform Party,
introduced a motion for debate in the House of Commons in defense
of the historic heterosexual definition of marriage. It passed with
the backing of a large majority of MPs. Party
Policy Track
Record Party
Policy
He also said they don't have an official policy on same-sex issues,
although they believe in "equality for all" and oppose "discrimination
based on sexual orientation." Policy language surrounding economic policy and tax relief tends to focus on individuals and businesses, rather than families. Election
Platform
Increase the married and equivalent spouse amount to $12,000 by 2005.
When this change is fully implemented, a single earner family would
not pay income tax until their income reached $24,000 per year.
Introduce a child tax amount of $1,176 to assist Canadian families.
This will create a tax cut of $200 per child for families with children. A party official told The Interim proudly that many open homosexuals are running as candidates for the party in the current election. Track
Record The Tories also approved the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, without reservations and despite Alberta's rejection of the treaty, regardless of the objections raised by pro-family forces about the threats posed in the document to the role of parents in the raising of their children. Party
Policy
The party opposes "discrimination" on the basis of "sexual
orientation," and supports the "right" of same-sex
couples to "marry." It supports a national government-regulated and funded daycare strategy. Election
Platform
It also promises "amendments to the [Canadian] Human Rights Act
to recognize same-sex marriages."
The party plans to double the child tax credit to $4,200 per year
and "extend the benefit to all low-income families with children."
The NDP will "work with provincial and territorial governments
to create a national plan for child care and early childhood education.
The National Early Years Fund will be fully funded at $3.5 billion
a year by 2004 and be based on five principles: comprehensive, integrated,
accessible, quality, non-profit."
For people with disabilities: "Make disability and medical expense
tax credits fully refundable to all Canadians with disabilities";
"ensure that all future policies and practices of federal government
departments, agencies and programs are viewed through a disability
lens"; "top up pensions for those whose only source of income
is Canada Pension Plan disability pension ..."; "improve
access to employment training for persons with disabilities." "Strengthen
the central role of the UN in maintaining peace and security and protection
of international human rights." "Give the House of Commons authority to ratify international agreements." Party
Policy "We
favor the elimination of all public funding of organizations that
advocate or perform abortion." "Government
efforts should be directed toward encouraging families to provide
home care for the sick and elderly. Proper codes for medical, palliative
and hospice care will include facilitating the alleviation of suffering
and preventing the taking of human life." "Forms
of reproductive technology and methods of birth control leading to
abortion, non-therapeutic experimentation, and assaults on the fidelity
of the husband/wife relationship, are contrary to our principles." "Marriage
is a divinely ordained and permanent institution which requires the
government's protection." "We
affirm that the family is a God-ordained institution and the fundamental,
indispensable basis of human society ... We affirm that heterosexual,
monogamous marriage is God-ordained as the foundation of the family,
and that any other form of union whatsoever is Biblically prohibited." "We
assert that government efforts should be directed primarily towards
so ordering the economy that mothers will not find it necessary to
supplement family income by work outside the home." "Parents
- and not the state - are responsible for the raising and educating
of their children." "The
International Court of Justice in the Hague must not become more than
a court of arbitration for international disputes. Overtures to strengthen
the World Court by investing it with powers of compulsory jurisdiction
which make its decisions binding on all states, should be dismissed
as another intrusion into national sovereignty and a direct move toward
world government. 'International Law' must not take precedence over
legislation prepared by the duly-elected representatives of sovereign
states." The CHP supports capital punishment. Election
Platform "The family is the building-block of the nation, so that's where the CHP will start national restoration .... The CHP's 'Family-Friendly Tax Credit' would strengthen families by providing $1,000 a month if one parent stays home to raise their own children. What would be the results? Families would be strengthened. We'd get better care for children: parent care is almost always better than daycare ..." Track
Record Several other officially recognized parties will be running candidates. They are the Canadian Action Party (CAP), led by Paul Hellyer, the Communist Party (Miguel Figuera), the Green Party (Joan Russow), the Marijuana Party (Marc-Boris St-Maurice), the Marxist-Leninist Party, (Sandra Smith), the Natural Law Party (Dr. Neil Paterson and Dr. Ashley Deans), and the Rest of Canada Party (ROC) (Ace Cetinski). CAP says it is "above all, a pro-Canadian party dedicated to the principle that Canada can best serve its citizens and the world by re-claiming and maintaining its sovereignty as an independent country." The Communist Party is ideologically committed to the implementation of socialism in Canada: " We offer a clear and consistent vision of a Socialist Canada." The Marxist-Leninist Party is similar. The Marijuana Party wants to decriminalize the cannabis industry. The Green Party's focus is protecting the environment. Natural health care, organic farming, "yogic flying" and renewable energy promotion seem to be leading issues for the Natural Law Party. The Rest of Canada Party says that its main focus is achieving national unity by radically decentralizing confederation.
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