Friday, March 16, 2007

Pickets Prepare for Dion's Niagara Visit

St. Catharines Standard (ON)Local, Friday, March 16, 2007, p. A3

Pickets prepare for Dion's Niagara visit

GRANT LaFLECHE

Federal Liberal Leader Stephane Dion will be in St. Catharines this weekend, but he won't be making any public appearances in the Garden City.

Dion will attend a Liberal fundraiser at Club Roma Saturday at 12:45 p.m. Only those with a ticket will be allowed to attend.

Elizabeth Whiting, a spokeswoman in Dion's Ottawa office, said the leader of the opposition will not be making any policy announcements during his talk.

The fundraiser will be Dion's second Niagara stop on Saturday.

At 11 a.m., he will give a speech in French, open to the public, at Club Social in Welland.

Though the Club Roma appearance is a closed-door affair, members of the St. Catharines and District Labour Council will be outside protesting the Liberals' plan to withdraw support for proposed anti-scab legislation in Bill C-257.

"In B.C. and Quebec, where anti-scab legislation exists, the length of labour disputes is reduced, as are the incidents of violence on picket lines," said Larry Savage, a professor of labour relations and political science at Brock University.

Savage, who is helping the council organize Saturday's picket, said the Liberals supported the bill during its second reading in October, but have recently decided to back away from the bill over concerns it does not exclude essential services.

"Essential services are already protected in the Canada Labour Code," Savage said. "So that is a red herring. Anti-scab legislation is about restoring fairness and balance to labour relations in Canada."

Dion's weekend stops in Niagara are part of his Canada-wide tour.

3 comments:

sarah said...

Thank you Ken Georgetti! At least you've stopped using the "working families" rhetoric. :) Sarah

susansmith said...

Sarah is not a working family member I guess.

Dissidence said...

Jan, what Sarah means is that Ken Georgetti of the CLC and Jack Layton routinely use phrases to the effect of 'improving working families' or 'standing up for working families.' This, of course, removes the class element from the equation. The proper phrase would be 'working class families' or simply 'the working class.' Forgetting the class element, or simply ignoring it, is dangerous and perhaps suggestive of the NDP's move away from class absed initiatives. While they do indeed support anti-scab legislation, they don't make the linkage to a larger class struggle.

Proofs, you've suggested that passing Bill c-257 will restore balance to labour relations in Canada....when is it that they were fair in the first place???