Close X
Saturday, January 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Liberals Have Qualms About Trudeau's Plan To Transform Party Into Open Movement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 May, 2016 11:47 AM
    WINNIPEG — The firmness of Justin Trudeau's grip on the reins of the ruling party will be put to the test today as grassroots Liberals decide whether to embrace his vision for transforming the party from an exclusive club into a modern political movement.
     
    The prime minister is the driving force behind a proposed new, streamlined constitution for the party which would, among other things, do away entirely with the concept of paid membership.
     
    Instead, anyone willing to register for free as a Liberal would in future be entitled to vote in leadership and nomination contests, attend conventions and take part in policy development.
     
    While the proposal is being touted as a way to throw open the doors of the party, it has raised hackles among rank and file Liberals who suspect it will actually turn the party into a different kind of exclusive club, one in which the leader and his cronies run the party as they see fit.
     
    Delegates to the party's first convention since last fall's election victory are to vote on the proposed constitution today. It will require support from two-thirds of the delegates to pass.
     
    Liberal MPs, instructed to lobby delegates from their ridings, have been pushing hard for support, as have party staffers. But the high-pressure tactics have backfired, with some delegates complaining that they feel intimidated and bullied.
     
    That manifested itself Friday in an attempt to change the rules to allow a secret ballot vote on the proposed constitution, where delegates wouldn't feel "pressured one way or the other," as one Liberal put it. That idea was overwhelmingly rejected.
     
    But even advocates of the proposal still aren't sure it will pass, especially after a special question-and-answer session Friday on the new constitution attracted hundreds of delegates, none of them happy about it.
     
    "It should pass but that's a sizable group of concerned people," Toronto MP Adam Vaughan said outside the closed-door session.
     
     
    According to Liberals who attended, the main complaints were about the lack of consultation, the heavy-handed tactics used to sell it and the amount of discretion the proposed constitution would give to the leader and the party's national board to devise bylaws governing all manner of party operations, including registration of Liberals, policy development, riding associations and the party's provincial wings and various commissions.
     
    Proponents contend that flexibility is needed to enable the leader and party executive to act more nimbly, rather than having to navigate through the cumbersome, detailed requirements currently spelled out in the 18 different constitutions that govern the party, its provincial wings and commissions.
     
    "I think it's a leap of faith," said Brenda Kurczak, former president of the party's Ontario wing, adding that she believes grassroots members can "have faith in the leader" and the executive to consult with them before making any major changes to party operations.
     
    But others aren't quite as willing to trust the party hierarchy.
     
    Winnipeg delegate Victoria Rempel said "all of us at the grassroots level" are concerned the proposal will take power from riding associations and commissions and concentrate it in the leader and party executive.
     
    "I think that whenever you consolidate power in such a way that it reduces power at the grassroots level, you're very much at risk of losing touch," she said.
     
     
    While there don't seem to be widespread objections to the concept of doing away with paid memberships, delegates are concerned that the proposed constitution includes no mention of the principles or values that would supposedly bind registered Liberals together.
     
    Trudeau has been in Japan for the G7 summit during the first two days of the convention. But he'll be in attendance for today's wrap-up, giving a speech just a couple of hours before the vote on the proposed constitution.
     
    Whether or not he makes a final plea for support, Trudeau has already invested a lot of personal capital in the proposal.
     
    Still, Kurczak said rejection of the constitutional package should not be seen as a "slap in the face to the leader or the party executive."
     
    "I just think it might be the result of the feeling that this is happening too quick."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CRA Goes To Court Seeking Information On RBC Clients Linked To Panama Papers

    CRA Goes To Court Seeking Information On RBC Clients Linked To Panama Papers
    OTTAWA — The Canada Revenue Agency has gone to Federal Court seeking information on Royal Bank clients referred to in the Panama Papers leak.

    CRA Goes To Court Seeking Information On RBC Clients Linked To Panama Papers

    Politics Running Up Against Policy As Liberals Mull Mexican Visa Lift

    Politics Running Up Against Policy As Liberals Mull Mexican Visa Lift
    The federal Liberal cabinet is wrestling with how to lift visa requirements for Mexican visitors to Canada without having to spend millions of dollars handling what would likely be a spike in asylum claims as a result.

    Politics Running Up Against Policy As Liberals Mull Mexican Visa Lift

    Youth's Injuries Prompt B.C. Children's Watchdog To Call For 'Secure Care' Law

    Youth's Injuries Prompt B.C. Children's Watchdog To Call For 'Secure Care' Law
    British Columbia's representative for children and youth is calling on the province to urgently consider a law allowing youth to be involuntarily placed in a facility for their own short-term safety.

    Youth's Injuries Prompt B.C. Children's Watchdog To Call For 'Secure Care' Law

    Ministers Responsible For Emergency Preparedness Meet In Toronto Friday

    Ministers Responsible For Emergency Preparedness Meet In Toronto Friday
    The meeting was planned before wildfires in northern Alberta forced a massive evacuation of Fort McMurray involving tens of thousands of people.

    Ministers Responsible For Emergency Preparedness Meet In Toronto Friday

    B.C. Crews Chase Wildfire As It Crosses Border Into Disaster-Stricken Alberta

    B.C. Crews Chase Wildfire As It Crosses Border Into Disaster-Stricken Alberta
    A wildfire burning in northeast British Columbia has crossed over into Alberta, but B.C. crews are fighting the blaze on both sides of the border.

    B.C. Crews Chase Wildfire As It Crosses Border Into Disaster-Stricken Alberta

    Syrian refugees helping victims of Fort McMurray fire

    Syrian refugees helping victims of Fort McMurray fire

    A group of Syrian refugees have come forward to help Fort McMurray evacuees. Almost tens of thous...

    Syrian refugees helping victims of Fort McMurray fire