BC Coalition of Women's
Centres
Home
Action!
Archives
Info
Media
Site Map
|
|
What's the Election Really About?
by Debra Critchley
|
|
|
April 21, 2005
The upcoming provincial election is
likely one of the most important in recent history. Simply going to
polls will not be enough on May 17th. Voters have a
responsibility to carefully wade through the rhetoric and engage in
serious critical thinking when making this decision.
I believe for the most part voters are
not fooled by the BC Liberals’ spending frenzy we have seen in the
last few months. Giving back a small portion of what was taken
does not make up for the hurt and damage done. There are endless
examples of that thanks to cutbacks, downsizing, and dismantling.
Lower welfare rates, increased user
fees, de-listed prescription drugs, costly homecare and low paying
no-benefit jobs have left many of us struggling. The question I am
left with is how is this good for our economy? How is this good for
small business? We know the smaller the disposable income a person
has the more likely they are to spend it locally and when that is
taken away, whose left to spend locally? We also know that people
making $6 - 8 an hour don’t buy new cars or homes.
The answers keep coming to me in the
form of high-priced BC Liberal ads and empty spending announcements:
the BC Liberals are not here for you or I; they are not committed to
ensuring working people have what we need, or in protecting human
rights or workers’ rights. They are here to privatize and sell off
BC to the highest bidder, and sometimes the lowest bidder if they are
their friends, and the rest of us are stuck trying to survive on
what’s left.
And let’s not forget about when, not
that long ago, the economy under the Liberals was tanking. They
blamed it on SARS in Toronto, forest fires throughout the province,
and of course the NDP. Now that we are seeing an upswing in the
economy the Liberals attribute that to "our plan is working." Give me a
break. Has anyone asked out loud how many of those "new
jobs" created pay $6 - 8 dollars an hour or are part-time jobs? How
many of those jobs come with benefits? How many are really
family-supporting jobs? I know women who are working three jobs just to
get
by. Where’s the promise for a better future in that? Is that
economically considered a success? And I won’t even get started on
childcare.
Women, families, seniors, students,
people in poverty, patients, aboriginal communities, workers and
people with disabilities have all felt the cruelty of the BC Liberals,
and we are still waiting for the "pay-off."
Having said all of
this, I have to add that my biggest fear and biggest concern is how
through this endless attack we have normalized so much pain and
suffering. We seem to have come to a point in BC where we have lost
our way and lost our identity. That happens to people when we
continually compromise our values or make tradeoffs.
In democracies it is said that a
government reflects the electorate. I cannot believe that as a
province, as people in our communities caring for our families and
our neighbours, that our values are represented in the BC Liberals.
That’s why this election is so critical. It is bigger than policy
and legislation. For me and many of the people I talk with it is
about who we are as a province and what we care about at the end of
the day when we go home to our families.
I don’t know about you, but at night
I worry about whether we will be able to financially help my daughter
go to university next year. I worry about my aging mother in-law and
whether the services she needs will be there. I worry about my
nephew who is hoping to be a welder and how the changes to the
apprenticeship program will affect him. While I care about the
provincial debt (especially since it is the highest it has been in
BC’s history) it doesn’t keep me up at night. It’s concern
for the people in my life that are my priority.
So on May 17th my hope is
that we get our identity back and that we bring those core values of
caring with us into the voting booth.
Debra Critchley is a Coordinator at the Vernon
and District Women's Centre, and she works with the Steering Committee
and the Media Committee of the BC Coalition of Women's Centres.
|
If you
have questions/comments for BCCWC, please e-mail us at bcwomen@telus.net For other
contact information, please go to our
Information
Page
BC
Coalition of Women's Centres
•
British Columbia, Canada
100 Mile House • Campbell
River • Chetwynd • Comox
Valley • Cranbrook •
Fernie • Fort Nelson • Fort St. John • Golden • Grand Forks • Howe
Sound • Kamloops • Kelowna • Kitimat • North Shore •
Penticton • Port Coquitlam • Queen Charlotte Islands • Quesnel •
Richmond • Ridge Meadows • Sunshine Coast • South Surrey/White Rock •
Surrey • Terrace • Vancouver • Vernon • Westcoast • West Kootenay • Williams Lake
This page last
updated: April 26, 2005 | created
by Doodlebug | No Budget
Productions
|