Thomas Mulcair interviewed by Planet S
Planet S recently interviewed Thomas Mulcair, NDP Leadership 2012 candidate:
 THOMAS MULCAIR
THOMAS MULCAIR
In 2008, Thomas Mulcair became the first NDP
 MP to be elected in Québec. Prior to that, Mulcair, as Québec’s 
Environment Minister with the provincial Liberal government, fought for a
 groundbreaking amendment to the Québec Charter of Human Rights and 
Freedoms that declared a new right: the right to live in a healthy 
environment that respects biodiversity. In this leadership race Mulcair 
has garnered the most endorsements from NDP MPs in Ottawa, and leads all
 candidates in raising donations.
PLANET S: You’ve talked about reaching out beyond the traditional NDP base. What does this entail in your mind?
THOMAS
 MULCAIR: Right now, our party is not connecting with young people the 
way that it used to, but we want to hear the ideas of young people 
because they’re central to our goals. In Québec we saw young people get 
elected, and a lot of young people came out to vote. The next group that
 we should be targeting is ethnic communities and cultural minorities.
PS: How exactly do you plan on attracting more young people to the party?
TM:
 The government has put the largest social and economic debt into the 
backpacks of young people. Your generation is paying $35,000 more (on 
average) to get an undergraduate degree than generations that came 
before you. When are you supposed to buy a house? It’s a matter of 
intergenerational equity. When you come to retirement, you’ll feel the 
effects of the wrong-headed approach of the Conservatives. The loss of 
the manufacturing sector means that your generation will be asked to 
foot the bill for lost pensions. And you’re also being left with the 
bill to clean the soil, the air and the water.
So it’s a certain time in our history, in which one generation is actually going to leave less to the next generation, and that’s something that we need to change.
PS: You’ve been pegged as the candidate who would bring the party to the centre.How do you counter concerns that you might compromise longstanding NDP principles?
TM:
 We’ve gone through four federal elections in a row in Saskatchewan 
without electing a single [NDP] person. I’d quote Einstein’s definition 
of madness: we’ve been trying the same thing and expecting a different 
result. If we repeat the exact same gestures, we will not win any seats 
in Saskatchewan. Other people have said that I’m going to move 
the party to the centre, but I’m not going to move the party to the 
centre; I’m going to move the centre to us.
I want people to 
realize that the progressive goals and values of the NDP are goals and 
values that are shared by the majority of Canadians. We’ve often heard 
the idea that if we form a government it means that we’ve sold out. I 
don’t think so. I don’t think that we need to change our fundamental 
values to form a government. But I do know that if we don’t do things 
differently, we will never form a government.
PS: Why do you think we have a problem getting women involved in politics, and what would you do to change this?
TM:
 In almost every university faculty, we see about 60 per cent women in 
the executive. However, in the boardrooms and in politics, we continue 
to see an underrepresentation. In the 1980s, I was the President of the 
Office des professions du Québec, and we made a 50 per cent rule. Many 
commentators — mostly men — at the time argued that we wouldn’t be able 
to find qualified women for executive positions. But we did.
In Québec [in 2011] the NDP elected about 50 per cent women, and the reason we did this was because we ran
 50 per cent women — women who could win. It’s a Québec model that has 
worked very well. If you look at the Conservative government, the 
numbers are absolutely astonishing – their caucus is about 15 per cent 
women because they’ve made absolutely no effort and haven’t made this a 
priority. There are still government agencies composed entirely of men. 
If we don’t make change from the top down, we will continue to see a 
glass ceiling.
PS: What kind of relationship would you like to see between the federal government, the Department of Aboriginal Affairs, and aboriginal people in Canada?
TM:
 In a country such as Canada it’s unacceptable that we have hundreds of 
thousands of people [who] live in poverty. It’s pitiful for us to allow 
third-world, abject poverty to exist on reserves, and I find it shameful
 that children go hungry. The first step in dealing with these issues is
 approaching First Nations on a nation-to-nation basis.
The very 
name of the Indian Act is an indication that it needs to be changed. And
 it’s the strongest indication that the Act comes from another era. I 
would change our way of dealing with these issues beginning with 
changing the Indian Act, and making sure that it no longer has a title 
like that.
PS: How are you going to address environmental issues without turning economically-minded people off?
TM:
 Opposing the environment and the economy is a 40-year-old fallacy. I 
would point to the Porter hypothesis [the idea that strict environmental
 laws lead to innovation and improve commercial competitiveness], and reality.
There’s
 no contradiction between the environment and the economy. We can’t 
allow the development of the oilsands without sustainable rules. This 
refusal to regulate the oilsands has led to the loss of hundreds of 
thousands of good-paying manufacturing jobs.
It’s called “the 
Dutch syndrome,” because it harkens back to when the Dutch launched 
intensive oil and gas industries and allowed its manufacturing sector to
 be hollowed out. The Conservatives still have not learned the lesson.
When
 Ed Schreyer endorsed my candidacy, he asked that we hold the press 
conference in front of a Canadian Wheat Board (CWB) building in Winnipeg
 because it was symbolic of what was being lost across Canada because of
 Conservative policies.
Like the loss of other manufacturing 
sectors in Ontario and Québec, this one’s going to hurt. A lot of the 
people who voted for the Conservatives will realize that we weren’t 
crying wolf. To quote Joni Mitchell, you don’t know what you got ‘til 
it’s gone.
PS: How would you approach the Conservatives in the next election?
TM:
 The only way to approach the Conservatives is with a tough, structured 
and determined approach.  That is exactly the fight that I would bring 
against Harper. Not only do we need to point out the disaster waiting 
for your generation, we need to offer solutions; we need to not only 
oppose, but of course propose. We are the official opposition, 
but that’s just a numerical fact; we’ve also got to become, in people’s 
minds, the government in waiting, and that’s about proposing new ideas 
in areas such as sustainable development, for example.
PS: What, if anything, do you think the Occupy movement contributed to Canadian politics?
TM:
 It was a wake-up call that the root causes of the crash of ’08 have not
 been addressed, and there are a lot of people in our society who are 
being left behind. The people who brought that crash are still in charge
 and they’re still making the same decisions. I can tell you that a lot 
of the analysis that is being done by leaders of the Occupy movement has
 a foundation in fact, and it’s the first time since the environmental 
movement in the ‘60s that the public has taken such direct action.
But it does seem to have run out of steam. More long term, the answer is going to have to be political.
 
 
 
 
 
 





 
1 comment:
Thank you Tom, and blogger. I'm excited about the leadership Mr. Mulcair will provide as proposals are presented to Canadians that will bring the center to the New Democrats. I know also that Prime Minister Mulcair will be joined by a dedicated and sharp team!
DougL, BC
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