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Communist Party of Canada (Marxist–Leninist)

The Communist Party of Canada (Marxist–Leninist) (abbr. CPC(M-L)) is a federal political party in Canada. It was founded in 1970 by Hardial Bains, a staunch Stalinist and anti-revisionist. The CPC(M-L) has been registered with Elections Canada as the Marxist–Leninist Party of Canada (MLPC) since 1974, as the party is prohibited from using the name "Communist Party of Canada" in Canadian elections to avoid confusion among voters. The party is not an offshoot of the Communist Party of Canada; its early membership came from student-led organizations active in the 1960s. After a period of alignment with Maoism and China, the CPC(M-L) pursued a Hoxhaist, pro-Albanian line until the early 1990s. At present, the party directs most of its public support to Cuba and North Korea.

Communist Party of Canada (Marxist–Leninist)
Parti communiste du Canada (marxiste–léniniste)
AbbreviationCPC(M-L)
LeaderAnna Di Carlo
PresidentRolf Gerstenberger
First SecretarySandra L. Smith
FounderHardial Bains
FoundedMarch 31, 1970; 54 years ago (1970-03-31)
HeadquartersP.O. Box 666, Station C,
Montreal, Quebec
H2L 4L5
NewspaperThe Marxist–Leninist Monthly
Ideology
Political positionFar-left
ColoursRed and yellow
Senate
0 / 105
House of Commons
0 / 338
Website
www.cpcml.ca

Bains led the CPC(M-L) from its founding in 1970 until his death in 1997. Bains' widow Sandra L. Smith succeeded her late husband as First Secretary following his death. Elections Canada lists Anna Di Carlo as the head of the electorally-registered organization. None of the party's candidates have been elected. Since the 1970s, the party has had a larger electoral campaign presence than the CPC. It ran its largest number of candidates in 1980 when it nominated 177 candidates, contesting 63 percent of the country's electoral districts.

The party publishes an online newspaper named The Marxist–Leninist Monthly.

Origins edit

The CPC(M-L) developed from a progression of student-led organizations during the 1960s. It was created primarily as a result of the efforts of Indo-Canadian Marxist student activist Hardial Bains, who was the founder and national leader of the CPC(M-L) until his death in 1997. The CPC(M-L) was not created from a split from the Communist Party of Canada (CPC). The party emerged during a period of growing student and youth activism. At this time the CPC was still struggling to break out of isolation it faced during the Cold War, and from a major rupture in the international communist movement between the People's Republic of China and the Soviet Union, the latter of which the CPC had traditionally supported.

Hardial Bains and the Sino-Soviet split edit

Bains came from Mahilpur in Hoshiarpur District of Punjab, India. His family were members or supporters of the Communist Party of India (CPI)[1] and he joined its youth wing.[citation needed] The CPI that Bains knew as a teenager was a mass and militant party. Operating underground for part of the 1950s, the CPI won back its legality in time for the general elections of 1957, where it emerged as the largest opposition party in the country and held state government in Kerala. By this time, however, a young Bains had apparently quit the CPI in protest of its acceptance of Nikita Khrushchev's criticisms of Joseph Stalin.[2] Bains, according to the CPC(M-L)'s official biography, immigrated to Canada from India two years later in 1959 at age nineteen. In Vancouver, he pursued post-graduate studies at the University of British Columbia from 1960 to 1965,[3] in bacteriology.[2]

During this time, the international communist movement went through a major internal crisis and upheaval with the Sino-Soviet split. Developing from 1960 on, sharp polemics over revolutionary strategy were exchanged between the two countries. Then, in 1962 the Sino-Indian War broke out and the CPI was again repressed by the Indian government. Over differences in attitude to the war, the CPI fractured and Bains' parents joined the pro-China Communist Party of India (Marxist).[1]

In Canada, the Sino-Soviet split was less sharply divisive than demoralizing for the communists. In the ensuing fifteen years, the CPC had lost all of its limited gains in parliament under the pressure of the Cold War, and communist MP Fred Rose was jailed for sedition. Anti-communism in the labour movement resulted in the expulsion of all communist-led unions from the house of labour, and communists in general were treated as traitors. Following the 1956 revelations by Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev ("On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences") about the crimes of Joseph Stalin, the CPC suffered many resignations, and its youth organization, the National Federation of Labour Youth, fell apart briefly. By the time it was reorganized as the Socialist Youth League in the late 1950s, the CPC had lost much of its prior visibility on university campuses—including the University of British Columbia (UBC).

The Internationalists edit

Bains arrived at UBC in this vacuum of visible, public revolutionary politics on campus and just as a new generation of student activism was radicalizing. Mass student protests reacted to the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962.[4] Bains became actively involved in the political movement of the time and was elected President of the BC Students' Federation in 1964.[3] While he apparently applied to join the CPC during his time as a student activist, Bains never held membership in that party,[5] a claim which is not contradicted by the CPC(M-L).[3] Bains was, afterall, drawing different conclusions than the CPC and taking inspiration from Mao Zedong and Chinese communism, not the Soviet Union.

Bains played a key role in founding the predecessor to the CPC(M-L) on March 13, 1963, as the "Internationalists", a student group at the UBC championing what they described as anti-revisionism. "If you like to talk, join the Internationalists", opined the UBC student newspaper under the headline "Hot air types form own group."[6] But while co-organizer Mayling Weaver spoke of welcoming "students of any race, religion, or political beliefs", and both asserted that "the university is a coffee-shop", Bains was setting for itself much more adventurous goals than just "an extension to the extra-curricular programme" with "free-wheeling, year-round academic symposiums".[7] Bains desired in The Internationalists to form a future communist movement, founded on what he considered orthodox Marxist revolutionary theory, including opposition to de-Stalinization.[8] He fused his writings and lectures on Marxism with certain ideas that were existentialist and current with radical youth in the 1960s.[9]

Bains wrote what would become one of the main ideological texts of the CPC(M-L) at this time, The Necessity For Change, which developed from a speech and study guide into what the CPC(M-L) would term "NFC analysis".[10] Summarizing the text, Irish author Connor McCabe notes that:

"The main thrust of Necessity for Change appears to be towards students and academics, in that its criticisms are of intellectual production, and the intellectual industry, in the Western world. The control of ideas, of history, of 'common sense' by the ruling class needs to be challenged, first by a cadre who have un-taught themselves the prevailing ideas and have begun to see the world based on reality rather than the dominant, right-wing, intellectual discourse; then by the working class who will benefit from the intellectual and individual gains made by the cadre once these new ideas, and this new way of thinking, make their way into the working class through the actions of the cadre itself."[2]

These ideas became a foundation as the group developed into a party or, as Bains himself would later say, "the analysis that lays down ideological remoulding as the key to the uninterrupted advance and victory of revolution."[11]

The CPC(M-L) was not therefore born from a fracture within the CPC by supposed "breakaway hardliners"[12] but from the growing radical student movement in Canada of the mid-1960s.[13] Within a few years Bain's group had succeeded in recruiting several hundred members across Canada, including Quebec, without the help of prominent former CPC leaders who had left the CPC and sided with China, such as former MP Dorise Nielsen or labour activist Jack Scott.[14] Meanwhile, and throughout the 1960s, the CPC was struggling to make its presence felt and grasp what its General Secretary Leslie Morris called "the Challenge of the 60s". The CPC's youth organization experimented with a more decentralized model until the late 1960s when it reorganized. One of the few instances of CPC members quitting for the CPC(M-L) was that of a CPC youth activist from UBC who was accused of stealing a magazine subscription list and funds, and then joining the CPC(M-L).[15] In many places, in size and particularly youthfulness, the CPC(M-L) was beginning to rival the CPC.

Maoism edit

In 1968, the Internationalists renamed themselves the "Canadian Student Movement" and then the "Canadian Communist Movement (Marxist–Leninist)". On March 31, 1970, they declared themselves a formal political party, adopting the name "Communist Party of Canada (Marxist–Leninist)". After a legal challenge from the CPC because of confusion at the ballot, Elections Canada ruled that the party's preferred name was too close to that of the CPC, and since that time the party has been known electorally as the Marxist–Leninist Party. The party ran candidates for the House of Commons of Canada during the 1974 federal election under the name of the "Marxist–Leninist Party of Canada". Because of the upsurge of left nationalism in Quebec, two separate parties were maintained until 1974 when the PCQ (ML) was folded into the CPC(M-L). The Quebec party defined a twin struggle against "Anglo-Canadian colonialism" and U.S. imperialism.[14]

Historians of anti-revisionism in Canada have described the CPC(M-L) as standing out among the Canadian left because of its dedication to China and Mao Zedong – with slogans such as "China's path is our path" and "China's chairman is our chairman." The CPC(M-L) made a point of presenting its leader almost as a brand. Chairman Bains was the public face and spokesperson of their party, and consistently described with accolades of praise in the party press.[16] The CPC(M-L)'s publications were seen by many to copy of the writing style of Peking Review.[14] At this time, China diplomatically supported the junta of Augusto Pinochet due to the latter's continued endorsement of the One China Policy and so the CPC(M-L) was silent on the overthrow of Pinochet. Later, the CPC(M-L) supported UNITA forces in Angola, which were also supported by the United States and white minority-ruled South Africa.[1][17] Bains and the CPC(M-L) strongly criticized the Soviet Union and Cuba as "social imperialist".[14] Projecting themselves as more militant, marxist, revolutionary and youthful than the older CPC, the CPC(M-L) embraced a strident, "vigorous" or even righteous rhetoric, projecting a two-stage struggle for liberation from US imperialist domination and "self-determination for the Canadian people".[18]

International relations edit

Despite the self-proclaimed allegiance of the CPC(M-L) to the People's Republic of China, the Communist Party of China never recognized the CPC(M-L) as its official representative in Canada. By the mid-1970s there were at least five anti-revisionist, pro-China parties in Canada which debated forcefully with each other and—in particular—strongly condemned the CPC.[19] This included Quebec-based En lutte! and the Workers' Communist Party of Canada which also drew primarily from students (and not always from working-class backgrounds, such as Pierre Karl Péladeau). For a few years until this pro-Maoist wave of youthful political action fell apart in the early 1980s, the combined membership of pro-China communist parties also outnumbered the CPC.[20]

While the CPC(M-L) was unsuccessful uniting these tendencies together, Bains was very active forming similar anti-revisionist ML groupings around the world which were influenced by his writings and theory. Pro-Chinese ML groups came together in Ireland, Britain, Trinidad and Tobago, India and the USA. In 1967, Bains' "Necessity for Change" conference in London saw most of the Irish delegation reportedly walk out. Those who stayed went on to form the Communist Party of Ireland (Marxist–Leninist) and the Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain (Marxist–Leninist). Bains was a friend of well-known avant garde British composer Cornelius Cardew, who was linked to the British party, and the CPC(M-L) hosted Cardew on tour in Canada with a youth concert and variety show. (Bains also contributed the lyrics to Cardew's signature song from his later period, "We Sing for the Future".)

In the United States, the CPC(M-L) likewise sought out fraternal allies. Bains helped found and work with a succession of variously named groups which evolved into the Marxist–Leninist Party, USA. Reflecting the divided political landscape characterizing many of the New Left groups, Bain's group did not work with similarly named Communist Party USA (Marxist–Leninist) of Michael Laski or Michael Klonsky's Communist Party (Marxist–Leninist) (United States).

But the CPC(M-L)'s efforts were perhaps most successful in India. Bains and the CPC(M-L) maintained close links with Indian politics through the growing Indian immigrant community in Canada. In 1970, the party helped found the Hindustani Ghadar Party – Organisation of Indian Marxist–Leninists Abroad group. Initially pro-Naxalite, the group later developed into an Indian-based political party over the course of the decade. Bains also founded a business enterprise in New Delhi.[1]

Turn to Albania edit

By 1976, CPC(M-L) began to support the criticisms of Chinese foreign policy and the "Theory of Three Worlds" made by the Party of Labour of Albania (PLA). By 1977, one year after the death of Mao Zedong, the CPC(M-L) declared that China had degenerated into revisionism, and later that Mao was not a Marxist–Leninist.[21] Unlike the Chinese government, the government of Albania publicly recognized CPC(M-L) as the vanguard party in Canada, and delegations made many visits to Albania prior to the collapse of the PLA and the overturn of socialism in Albania.[14] In 1978, the CPC(M-L) held a large international rally – a tactic popular with pro-Albania parties at the time – in Montreal that included a delegation from the PLA.[22]

The following year the CPC(M-L) organized an international conference with a number of anti-revisionist forces, with the PLA holding a prominent position. Also in attendance were parties from Italy, France, Iran, India, Great Britain, Portugal, the United States, Chile, and Venezuela.[23] These conferences firmly cemented the CPC(M-L)'s position as the official pro-Albania party in Canada and its bookshops all carried regular literature from the Albanian government.[citation needed]

Unlike the strategy of the CPC, which engaged itself with existing labour and people's movements including those were more inclined to support the New Democratic Party, the CPC(M-L) favoured forming front organizations which it fully controlled. This approach, and contrarian attitude to the position of most anti-war forces at the time, left the CPC(M-L) disconnected from the peace and labour movements[14] as the party set up various rival committees. At times, other leftist groups accused the CPC(M-L) of attacking them in protests and rallies with sticks and bats.[24]

The new party continued to fare much better among students, winning influence over the editorial boards of a number of student newspapers and organizing several campus groups which were subject to police surveillance, harassment and repression. The Ontarion at the University of Guelph and The Chevron at the University of Waterloo carried a pro-CPC(M-L) editorial line for a time during the 1970s.[25] Over time, the CPC(M-L) was ousted from all of these student newspapers, as flamboyant leftist politics began to disappear from the Canadian campus landscape in the 1980s. The party also made gains in the Indo-Canadian community especially through the East Indian Defense Committee (EIDC). Also in 1980, the Canadian-based Hindustani Ghadar Party became the Communist Ghadar Party of India.

The CPC(M-L) continued to participate in most federal elections, following their entrance on the federal scene with 104 candidates in 1974. In the 31st general election held in May 1979, the party fielded 144 candidates. In the 32nd general election held in February 1980, there were 170 Marxist–Leninist candidates. In the 33rd general election held in September 1984, the Marxist–Leninist Party of Canada did not field any candidates.[26]

Crisis of the anti-revisionist parties edit

By the early 1980s many of the anti-revisionist parties of the 1960s and 1970s in Canada and internationally began to fade.[14] Partly, the rigorous discipline demanded of members of these groups including tithes for membership dues, frequent long meetings, confrontation with the police and harassment, all took its toll and as young students became the parents of young families. As neo-conservatism rose, the revolutionary optimism which seemed justified a few years ago started to appear less realistic. Many of the smaller anti-revisionist groups simply folded. In 1983, Roger Rashi's Workers' Communist Party imploded over the question of Cambodia and Pol Pot as well as alleged internal party sexism within the leadership. In Struggle! (En Lutte!) had already suffered a similar fate in 1982.

The CPC(M-L), however, generally lasted through these ideological, political and organization crises. One guiding light was the party's relationship with the Party of Labour of Albania (PLA), the only party in North America to have an official relationship with the PLA as the Albanian government somewhat distanced itself from U.S. pro-Albanian groups fearing of "CIA infiltration".[27] Another base was the parties work in the Indo-Canadian community and its anti-racist work.

East Indian Defence Committee edit

In addition to the East Indian Defence Committee (EIDC), founded to oppose "state-organized racist attacks", the CPC(M-L) also launched a West Indian Peoples' Organization (WIPO), Canadian Peoples' Defence Committee, and Peoples Front (PF) against racist and fascist violence. These organizations worked implement the slogans "an injury to one is an injury to all" and "an attack on one is an attack on all" and "all for one and one for all" and "self-defence is the only way". Active, popular and with a large following, these front groups were well known for their opposition to racism by the end of the 1970s.[1]

By the 1980s, community centres for the EIDC had been established in Winnipeg, Toronto and Vancouver under the name "Desh Bhagat Temple" (DBT).[24] Housed in relatively large buildings which were purchased with money contributed by ordinary people, mainly from the East Indian community, they were managed by the EIDC and owned by a trust set up by the EIDC. The centres were regularly used for CPC(M-L) meetings, and rented at cost for other social occasions.[1]

Shift to "democratic renewal" and support of Cuba edit

Serious problems in the socialist movement, however, developed in the late 1980s with the crisis in and the dissolution of the Soviet Union. "Many [communist] parties, especially in the West, have gone over from 'because it is socialism it can have no problems' position to 'because so many problems emerged, it is socialism which does not work'!" Bains wrote.[28] But soon it became clear that these developments were not only threatening the future of the Soviet Union. Almost immediately following Enver Hoxha's death in 1985, reform movements sprung up in Albania which was the last Eastern Bloc country to overturn socialism in 1992.

The overturn of socialism in Albania and the Soviet Union had negative impacts for the CPC(M-L). In the 34th General Election November 1988, it fielded 58 candidates whose names appeared on the ballot as non-affiliated due to the party's failure to meet the time-line registration provisions of the Canada Elections Act at the time.[29] During this time the party began to liquidate the EIDC centres generating about $2 million in profit from the sales of the properties.[1] There had already been considerable speculation about the CPC(M-L)'s high levels of funding for some time by other left groups. (Like all registered parties the MLPC's finances are available to the public and annually audited in accordance to Elections Canada regulations.)[30]

In response, during the late 1980s the CPC(M-L) adopted the slogan "We are our own models", and began to seek a new ideological approach, eventually talking less about socialism and taking a positive view of both Cuba and North Korea. Bains visited Cuba several times in the 1990s which led him (and the CPC(M-L)) to reconsider his earlier views of Cuba as revisionist.

The CPC(M-L) was closely aligned with the Canadian Party for Renewal in 1993. On January 1, 1995, the party put forward a broad program of work, which it named the Historic Initiative. This was further elaborated during its Seventh Congress.

During the 1990s, the party called for a popular referendum on the budget cuts initiated by the federal Liberal government of Jean Chrétien. The language of the CPC(M-L) has increasingly centred on its concept of "democratic renewal" oriented on electoral reform and "empowerment of the people", dropping its earlier sharp polemics against labour, social movements, and the Communist Party of Canada.

Bains' death and legacy edit

Bains died in 1997 and his widow, Sandra L. Smith, replaced him as the leader of the CPC(M-L). Bains' funeral was a significant occasion for the party who have held several memorials in his honour and, although he was cremated, purchased a grave plot in The National Cemetery of Canada in Ottawa, Canada's national cemetery (which is also the national cemetery for the Canadian Forces and RCMP). The party eulogy said:

"Comrade Bains, the twinkle in your eyes, your mischievous smile, your beautiful artistic hands, your fine mind, your tender love for all of us they all combined to work a magic. Who could resist your purity, your sincerity, your drive to bring out the best in everyone you met, in everyone you worked with, no matter what their age, what their standing in life, what their ideas or opinions? Meeting you was like falling in love at first sight, over and over and over again, just as you too fell in love with the best in everyone, bringing out whatever they had to offer to make this world, 'where tears are hung on every tree', a better place ..."[31]

According to the CPC(M-L) website, the 8 by 51/2 foot memorial is made of granite quarried in Jhansi, India. The monument is emblazoned with a hammer and sickle and star of CPC(M-L) and inscribed with the slogan "Workers of All Countries Unite!" and, on the other side, the party's motto and a prominent plaque to Bains. Also carved on the monument are the lines "Vous êtes le rouge de notre drapeau – Lal Salaam" (You are the red of our flag – Red Salute) and the names of other past veteran members.[32]

Following his death, the CPC(M-L) established the Hardial Bains Party School on Journalism. The party continues to reproduce his works on its website and honour his memory, and he is also remembered somewhat in India.

Current positions edit

After Bains's death, the party shrunk considerably. The Manitoba wing of the CPC(M-L) has not run candidates in Manitoba for several years[33] and is no longer a registered provincial party.[34] In 2008, Anna Di Carlo became the leader of the party's electoral arm, the Marxist–Leninist Party of Canada (MLPC)[35] while Smith remains First Secretary of the CPC(M-L) and president of the MLPC.[36]

The CPC(M-L) currently sees as its immediate goal the "vesting of sovereignty in the people so that they can exercise control over their lives"[37] and "organizing Canadians to empower themselves".[38] The party's motto is, "The issue is not to wave the red flags, but to show our colours through our deeds."[32]

Today, the CPC(M-L) tends to be supportive of North Korea's right to self-determination, although it does not promote Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong-il or juche in the manner that it promoted Enver Hoxha and Mao Zedong in previous years. However, it issued a statement mourning the death of Kim Jong-il.[39] The CPC(M-L) has become strongly supportive of Cuba and the Cuban Revolution and now has close relations with the Cuban Embassy in Ottawa. It prints the English language edition of the Communist Party of Cuba's newspaper, Granma, for Canadian distribution.

CPC(M-L) members are active in several trade unions, particularly the Canadian Union of Postal Workers and the United Steelworkers of America whose Stelco local (Local 1005) in Hamilton, Ontario was led by party vice-president Rolf Gerstenberger, until he retired on May 5, 2015.[40] Local 1005 is one of several USWA locals at Stelco.

CPC(M-L) members have also been active in the movement against the wars in Iraq[41] and Afghanistan.[42]

The party has adopted its own "Contemporary Marxist–Leninist Thought". Its Eighth Party Congress was to be held in 2005 with the theme "Laying the Foundations for the Mass Communist Party",[43] but the congress was delayed because of the federal election.[44] The congress was held in September 2008.

The CPC(M-L) has a news-sheet, The Marxist–Leninist Daily, and a youth wing, the Communist Youth Union of Canada (Marxist–Leninist). It operates the "Workers Centre" which helps educate and organize trade unionists through discussion groups, and a magazine, Worker's Forum. The party often conducts broader political activity under the name "People's Front" and uses that name for its provincial wing in British Columbia. In Ontario, CPC(M-L) supporters ran as Independent Renewal candidates in the 2003 provincial election.

Current relationship with the CPC edit

For much of the CPC(M-L)'s history, it has strongly condemned the CPC, an attitude which was more or less reciprocated. The CPC and CPC(M-L) remain apart. They appear to continue to have significant differences in their evaluation of international, Canadian and Quebec politics; approach, style of work; historic interpretations of the role of the parties in the past; and conclusions about immediate action and the road to socialism in Canada. Some of these differences include:

  • Different strategies. The CPC(M-L) has a short concise programme entitled "Stop Paying the Rich, Expand Social Programmes" emphasizing "democratic renewal" and "renewal of international relations", creating "a new, modern, truly democratic society in which people are sovereign" as its goal,[45] while the CPC presents a detailed and lengthy programme entitled "Canada's Future is Socialism" and putting forward "the road to socialism" including a phase of struggle involving a democratic, anti-imperialist and anti-monopoly coalition as the route to socialism;
  • These different levels of detail and emphasis were also reflected in the respective parties 2015 electoral platforms;
  • The CPC(M-L) in Quebec advocates a pro-independence position, while the CPC supports a new constitution including the right to separate for Quebec but is against independence under current conditions;
  • The CPC(M-L) does not have an official position on either the Soviet Union or contemporary China while the CPC made a short analysis of both countries around 2001;
  • The CPC(M-L) maintains an independent position and does not participate in any regular grouping or international while the CPC is a member of the International Meeting of Communist and Workers' Parties;
  • The CPC(M-L) does not have active campus groups, while the CPC has a handful of YCL clubs on campuses, mainly in Ontario and Quebec;

As a result, the CPC and CPC(M-L) are not moving towards forming a united party.[13] The CPC has also cited lack of self-critical historical evaluation of the CPC(M-L)'s past (i.e., admitting to mistakes) and what it calls the political inconsistency of CPC(M-L) activists, as barriers to prioritizing any discussion about unity. Nevertheless, the two parties work together on a variety of issues including Cuba and Latin American solidarity and, for example, supported the CPC(M-L) leadership in Local 1005 of the Hamilton Steelworkers.

As of 2017, the MLPC and CPC(M-L) continue to strongly back their anti-revisionist ideology.

Party leaders edit

  • Hardial Bains (1970–1997)
  • Sandra L. Smith (1998–2008), widow of Bains
  • Anna Di Carlo (2008–present)

Election results edit

In the 2015 federal election, the CPC(M-L) ran 70 candidates—44 more than the CPC. Its twelve-plank party platform called for rewriting the Canadian constitution, increasing social spending, repealing anti-terrorism legislation such as Bill C-51, withdrawal from free trade deals and military involvement abroad, establishing "nation-to-nation" relations with Aboriginal peoples, and government action on climate change.[46] At public forums, some CPC(M-L) candidates have advocated voting Liberal or New Democratic Party to defeat the Conservative Party.[citation needed]

The party has run candidates in Canadian federal elections since 1972. The number of candidates in any election has ranged from as few as 51 and as many as 177. Most of its candidates have run in the provinces of Ontario and Quebec. It was most prominent in the 1979 federal election and 1980 federal election, running under the slogan "Make the rich pay."

Its slogan in the 2004 federal election was "Annexation no! Sovereignty yes!"

Election Leader Candidates Seats won Votes %
1974 Hardial Bains
104 / 264
0
16,261
0.17%
1979
144 / 282
0
14,231
  0.12%
1980
177 / 282
0
14,697
  0.13%
1993
51 / 295
0
5,202
  0.04%
1997
65 / 301
0
11,468
  0.09%
2000 Sandra L. Smith
84 / 301
0
12,068
  0.09%
2004
76 / 308
0
8,696
  0.06%
2006
69 / 308
0
8,980
  0.06%
2008
59 / 308
0
8,565
  0.06%
2011 Anna Di Carlo
70 / 308
0
9,925
  0.07%
2015
70 / 338
0
9,105
  0.05%
2019
50 / 338
0
4,124
  0.02%
2021
36 / 338
0
4,532
  0.03%
By-elections
  • September 8, 1980: 0 elected
    • Hamilton West: 30,960 total votes, 120 votes received (0.39%)
  • February 13, 1995: 0 elected
  • September 14, 1998: 0 elected
    • Sherbrooke: 36,446 total votes, 72 votes received (0.19%)
Average number of votes per candidate

2015 election platform edit

The party announced its 2015 election platform on its website, which addressed four themes: Economy & Trade, Constitutional Reform, Foreign Policy, and Climate Change. The one-page document does not provide any financial information on how the program might be financed.[46]

Economy & trade

  • State control of industry
  • Economic growth powered by the manufacturing and natural resource sectors
  • An end to subsidies and tax cuts for wealthy Canadians and private corporations
  • Increased social spending on childcare, recreation, education, health care, seniors care, and pensions
  • Cancellation of all free trade deals that allow foreign businesses and corporations to exploit Canada's national resources

National constitutional reform

Foreign policy

  • Immediate withdrawal from NATO, NORAD and any other military interventions abroad, such as those in Syria and Iraq
  • Using diplomacy to end the displacement of people from their home countries
  • Strict respect for national sovereignty
  • Provide humanitarian aid to refugees and those affected by natural disasters

Climate change

  • Devolve responsibility for reducing harmful emissions such as greenhouse gases and pollution, as well as environmental destruction to the workers' organizations (unions, associations, cooperatives) in these industries

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "More on the charlatan Hardial Bains". www.leninism.org. Retrieved March 7, 2024.
  2. ^ a b c "Irish Left Review-Discover Iceland-Hotels Reykjavik". www.hotel-reykjavik.com. Retrieved March 7, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on August 9, 2011. Retrieved October 4, 2011.; Hardial Bains, Party founder and leader
  4. ^ (PDF). ubc.ca. Archived from the original on January 28, 2005. Retrieved November 12, 2015.
  5. ^ Letter, "On the CPC (ML)," CPC Central Committee, 2001
  6. ^ "The Marxist-Leninist Daily". www.cpcml.ca. Retrieved March 7, 2024.
  7. ^ http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/pdfs/ubyssey/UBYSSEY_1963_10_03.pdf; Ubyssey, "Hot air types form own group," October 3, 1963
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  9. ^ "The Movement for the Party". www.marxists.org. Retrieved March 7, 2024.
  10. ^ "The Marxist-Leninist Weekly". cpcml.ca. Retrieved March 7, 2024.
  11. ^ NFC Preface
  12. ^ JJ's Complete Guide to Canada, "Fringe Parties", No date.
  13. ^ a b Hopper, Tristin (August 11, 2015). "Communist parties battle for few Marxist votes: No will to unite Canada's far left". National Post. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g "The Second Wave of Anti-Revisionism, 1971-1981," Encyclopedia of Revisionism On Line
  15. ^ Ben Isitt, Militant Minority: British Columbia Workers and the Rise of a New Left, U of T Press, 2011
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on March 15, 2016. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  17. ^ . marxists.org. Archived from the original on May 30, 2016. Retrieved November 12, 2015.
  18. ^ https://www.marxists.org/history/erol/ca.secondwave/bu-albania/part18.htm;Bolshevik July 16, 2018, at the Wayback Machine Union, "The Party of Labor of Albania Came to Canada Under a Stolen Flag," Proletarian Revolution, Vol. l, No. 8, December 1978
  19. ^ For example: https://www.marxists.org/history/erol/ca.firstwave/learnfromtheteachers/learnfrom.htm
  20. ^ "The First Wave of Anti-Revisionism, 1964–1970", Encyclopedia of Anti-Revisionism On-Line
  21. ^ https://www.marxists.org/history/erol/ca.firstwave/6th-2.pdf;People's April 1, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Daily News, "Sixth Consultative Conference of the CPC(ML)," April 2, 1979
  22. ^ https://www.marxists.org/history/erol/ca.secondwave/doing-everything.htm; In Struggle, "CPC(ML)'s International Conference," No. 152, April 3, 1979
  23. ^ Sixth Conference
  24. ^ a b https://www.marxists.org/history/erol/ca.firstwave/isoncpc/chapter4.htm; In Struggle!, The CPC(ML): A Revisionist Organization of Agent-Provocateurs.
  25. ^ https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/spartacist-canada/013_1977_02-SpartCan.pdf;Spartacist March 15, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Canada, "Free Speech and the Chevron Affair," February 1977.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on February 29, 2016. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  27. ^ https://www.marxists.org/history/erol/ncm-5/;U.S April 25, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Anti-Revisionism, The New Communist Movement: Crises, Splits and More New Parties, 1977-1980
  28. ^ "Shivanand Kanavim The Weekend Observer, February 1992". reflections-shivanand.blogspot.ca. July 26, 2007.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on February 29, 2016. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  30. ^ EROL. "The Party of Labor of Albania Came to Canada Under a Stolen Flag". Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  31. ^ "Oh Comrade, Dear Comrade, Beloved Comrade", TML Weekly September 14–20, 1997.
  32. ^ a b . Archived from the original on August 19, 2015. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  33. ^ 2013 - Élections Canada. "Election Night Results - National". Retrieved April 11, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  34. ^ Elections Manitoba, Registered Parties[permanent dead link]
  35. ^ "Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist)". Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  37. ^ . CPC (ML). Archived from the original on August 9, 2011. Retrieved October 4, 2011.; "," No date.
  38. ^ "Little Red Umbrella, "Fringe Party Profiles: The Marxist Leninist Party of Canada", (Interview with Anna Di Carlo), 2011". littleredumbrella.com.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on May 29, 2012. Retrieved January 2, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  40. ^ "Local 1005 acclaims Howe as new president". The Hamilton Spectator. March 12, 2015. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  41. ^ cpcml. "The Marxist-Leninist Daily". Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  42. ^ cpcml. "The Marxist-Leninist Daily". Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on July 11, 2008. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on August 3, 2010. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  45. ^ . Archived from the original on August 20, 2015. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  46. ^ a b . Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved April 11, 2016.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Communist Party of Canada (Marxist–Leninist) — Canadian Political Parties and Political Interest Groups — web archive created by The University of Toronto Libraries

communist, party, canada, marxist, leninist, confused, with, communist, party, canada, abbr, federal, political, party, canada, founded, 1970, hardial, bains, staunch, stalinist, anti, revisionist, been, registered, with, elections, canada, marxist, leninist, . Not to be confused with the Communist Party of Canada The Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist abbr CPC M L is a federal political party in Canada It was founded in 1970 by Hardial Bains a staunch Stalinist and anti revisionist The CPC M L has been registered with Elections Canada as the Marxist Leninist Party of Canada MLPC since 1974 as the party is prohibited from using the name Communist Party of Canada in Canadian elections to avoid confusion among voters The party is not an offshoot of the Communist Party of Canada its early membership came from student led organizations active in the 1960s After a period of alignment with Maoism and China the CPC M L pursued a Hoxhaist pro Albanian line until the early 1990s At present the party directs most of its public support to Cuba and North Korea Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Parti communiste du Canada marxiste leniniste AbbreviationCPC M L LeaderAnna Di CarloPresidentRolf GerstenbergerFirst SecretarySandra L SmithFounderHardial BainsFoundedMarch 31 1970 54 years ago 1970 03 31 HeadquartersP O Box 666 Station C Montreal QuebecH2L 4L5NewspaperThe Marxist Leninist MonthlyIdeologyCommunismMarxism LeninismAnti revisionismHistorical Maoism 1970 1977 Hoxhaism 1977 1990 Political positionFar leftColoursRed and yellowSenate0 105House of Commons0 338Websitewww wbr cpcml wbr caPolitics of CanadaPolitical partiesElectionsBains led the CPC M L from its founding in 1970 until his death in 1997 Bains widow Sandra L Smith succeeded her late husband as First Secretary following his death Elections Canada lists Anna Di Carlo as the head of the electorally registered organization None of the party s candidates have been elected Since the 1970s the party has had a larger electoral campaign presence than the CPC It ran its largest number of candidates in 1980 when it nominated 177 candidates contesting 63 percent of the country s electoral districts The party publishes an online newspaper named The Marxist Leninist Monthly Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Hardial Bains and the Sino Soviet split 1 2 The Internationalists 2 Maoism 2 1 International relations 3 Turn to Albania 3 1 Crisis of the anti revisionist parties 3 2 East Indian Defence Committee 4 Shift to democratic renewal and support of Cuba 4 1 Bains death and legacy 5 Current positions 6 Current relationship with the CPC 7 Party leaders 8 Election results 9 2015 election platform 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksOrigins editThe CPC M L developed from a progression of student led organizations during the 1960s It was created primarily as a result of the efforts of Indo Canadian Marxist student activist Hardial Bains who was the founder and national leader of the CPC M L until his death in 1997 The CPC M L was not created from a split from the Communist Party of Canada CPC The party emerged during a period of growing student and youth activism At this time the CPC was still struggling to break out of isolation it faced during the Cold War and from a major rupture in the international communist movement between the People s Republic of China and the Soviet Union the latter of which the CPC had traditionally supported Hardial Bains and the Sino Soviet split edit Bains came from Mahilpur in Hoshiarpur District of Punjab India His family were members or supporters of the Communist Party of India CPI 1 and he joined its youth wing citation needed The CPI that Bains knew as a teenager was a mass and militant party Operating underground for part of the 1950s the CPI won back its legality in time for the general elections of 1957 where it emerged as the largest opposition party in the country and held state government in Kerala By this time however a young Bains had apparently quit the CPI in protest of its acceptance of Nikita Khrushchev s criticisms of Joseph Stalin 2 Bains according to the CPC M L s official biography immigrated to Canada from India two years later in 1959 at age nineteen In Vancouver he pursued post graduate studies at the University of British Columbia from 1960 to 1965 3 in bacteriology 2 During this time the international communist movement went through a major internal crisis and upheaval with the Sino Soviet split Developing from 1960 on sharp polemics over revolutionary strategy were exchanged between the two countries Then in 1962 the Sino Indian War broke out and the CPI was again repressed by the Indian government Over differences in attitude to the war the CPI fractured and Bains parents joined the pro China Communist Party of India Marxist 1 In Canada the Sino Soviet split was less sharply divisive than demoralizing for the communists In the ensuing fifteen years the CPC had lost all of its limited gains in parliament under the pressure of the Cold War and communist MP Fred Rose was jailed for sedition Anti communism in the labour movement resulted in the expulsion of all communist led unions from the house of labour and communists in general were treated as traitors Following the 1956 revelations by Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences about the crimes of Joseph Stalin the CPC suffered many resignations and its youth organization the National Federation of Labour Youth fell apart briefly By the time it was reorganized as the Socialist Youth League in the late 1950s the CPC had lost much of its prior visibility on university campuses including the University of British Columbia UBC The Internationalists edit Bains arrived at UBC in this vacuum of visible public revolutionary politics on campus and just as a new generation of student activism was radicalizing Mass student protests reacted to the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962 4 Bains became actively involved in the political movement of the time and was elected President of the BC Students Federation in 1964 3 While he apparently applied to join the CPC during his time as a student activist Bains never held membership in that party 5 a claim which is not contradicted by the CPC M L 3 Bains was afterall drawing different conclusions than the CPC and taking inspiration from Mao Zedong and Chinese communism not the Soviet Union Bains played a key role in founding the predecessor to the CPC M L on March 13 1963 as the Internationalists a student group at the UBC championing what they described as anti revisionism If you like to talk join the Internationalists opined the UBC student newspaper under the headline Hot air types form own group 6 But while co organizer Mayling Weaver spoke of welcoming students of any race religion or political beliefs and both asserted that the university is a coffee shop Bains was setting for itself much more adventurous goals than just an extension to the extra curricular programme with free wheeling year round academic symposiums 7 Bains desired in The Internationalists to form a future communist movement founded on what he considered orthodox Marxist revolutionary theory including opposition to de Stalinization 8 He fused his writings and lectures on Marxism with certain ideas that were existentialist and current with radical youth in the 1960s 9 Bains wrote what would become one of the main ideological texts of the CPC M L at this time The Necessity For Change which developed from a speech and study guide into what the CPC M L would term NFC analysis 10 Summarizing the text Irish author Connor McCabe notes that The main thrust of Necessity for Change appears to be towards students and academics in that its criticisms are of intellectual production and the intellectual industry in the Western world The control of ideas of history of common sense by the ruling class needs to be challenged first by a cadre who have un taught themselves the prevailing ideas and have begun to see the world based on reality rather than the dominant right wing intellectual discourse then by the working class who will benefit from the intellectual and individual gains made by the cadre once these new ideas and this new way of thinking make their way into the working class through the actions of the cadre itself 2 These ideas became a foundation as the group developed into a party or as Bains himself would later say the analysis that lays down ideological remoulding as the key to the uninterrupted advance and victory of revolution 11 The CPC M L was not therefore born from a fracture within the CPC by supposed breakaway hardliners 12 but from the growing radical student movement in Canada of the mid 1960s 13 Within a few years Bain s group had succeeded in recruiting several hundred members across Canada including Quebec without the help of prominent former CPC leaders who had left the CPC and sided with China such as former MP Dorise Nielsen or labour activist Jack Scott 14 Meanwhile and throughout the 1960s the CPC was struggling to make its presence felt and grasp what its General Secretary Leslie Morris called the Challenge of the 60s The CPC s youth organization experimented with a more decentralized model until the late 1960s when it reorganized One of the few instances of CPC members quitting for the CPC M L was that of a CPC youth activist from UBC who was accused of stealing a magazine subscription list and funds and then joining the CPC M L 15 In many places in size and particularly youthfulness the CPC M L was beginning to rival the CPC Maoism editIn 1968 the Internationalists renamed themselves the Canadian Student Movement and then the Canadian Communist Movement Marxist Leninist On March 31 1970 they declared themselves a formal political party adopting the name Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist After a legal challenge from the CPC because of confusion at the ballot Elections Canada ruled that the party s preferred name was too close to that of the CPC and since that time the party has been known electorally as the Marxist Leninist Party The party ran candidates for the House of Commons of Canada during the 1974 federal election under the name of the Marxist Leninist Party of Canada Because of the upsurge of left nationalism in Quebec two separate parties were maintained until 1974 when the PCQ ML was folded into the CPC M L The Quebec party defined a twin struggle against Anglo Canadian colonialism and U S imperialism 14 Historians of anti revisionism in Canada have described the CPC M L as standing out among the Canadian left because of its dedication to China and Mao Zedong with slogans such as China s path is our path and China s chairman is our chairman The CPC M L made a point of presenting its leader almost as a brand Chairman Bains was the public face and spokesperson of their party and consistently described with accolades of praise in the party press 16 The CPC M L s publications were seen by many to copy of the writing style of Peking Review 14 At this time China diplomatically supported the junta of Augusto Pinochet due to the latter s continued endorsement of the One China Policy and so the CPC M L was silent on the overthrow of Pinochet Later the CPC M L supported UNITA forces in Angola which were also supported by the United States and white minority ruled South Africa 1 17 Bains and the CPC M L strongly criticized the Soviet Union and Cuba as social imperialist 14 Projecting themselves as more militant marxist revolutionary and youthful than the older CPC the CPC M L embraced a strident vigorous or even righteous rhetoric projecting a two stage struggle for liberation from US imperialist domination and self determination for the Canadian people 18 International relations edit Despite the self proclaimed allegiance of the CPC M L to the People s Republic of China the Communist Party of China never recognized the CPC M L as its official representative in Canada By the mid 1970s there were at least five anti revisionist pro China parties in Canada which debated forcefully with each other and in particular strongly condemned the CPC 19 This included Quebec based En lutte and the Workers Communist Party of Canada which also drew primarily from students and not always from working class backgrounds such as Pierre Karl Peladeau For a few years until this pro Maoist wave of youthful political action fell apart in the early 1980s the combined membership of pro China communist parties also outnumbered the CPC 20 While the CPC M L was unsuccessful uniting these tendencies together Bains was very active forming similar anti revisionist ML groupings around the world which were influenced by his writings and theory Pro Chinese ML groups came together in Ireland Britain Trinidad and Tobago India and the USA In 1967 Bains Necessity for Change conference in London saw most of the Irish delegation reportedly walk out Those who stayed went on to form the Communist Party of Ireland Marxist Leninist and the Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain Marxist Leninist Bains was a friend of well known avant garde British composer Cornelius Cardew who was linked to the British party and the CPC M L hosted Cardew on tour in Canada with a youth concert and variety show Bains also contributed the lyrics to Cardew s signature song from his later period We Sing for the Future In the United States the CPC M L likewise sought out fraternal allies Bains helped found and work with a succession of variously named groups which evolved into the Marxist Leninist Party USA Reflecting the divided political landscape characterizing many of the New Left groups Bain s group did not work with similarly named Communist Party USA Marxist Leninist of Michael Laski or Michael Klonsky s Communist Party Marxist Leninist United States But the CPC M L s efforts were perhaps most successful in India Bains and the CPC M L maintained close links with Indian politics through the growing Indian immigrant community in Canada In 1970 the party helped found the Hindustani Ghadar Party Organisation of Indian Marxist Leninists Abroad group Initially pro Naxalite the group later developed into an Indian based political party over the course of the decade Bains also founded a business enterprise in New Delhi 1 Turn to Albania editBy 1976 CPC M L began to support the criticisms of Chinese foreign policy and the Theory of Three Worlds made by the Party of Labour of Albania PLA By 1977 one year after the death of Mao Zedong the CPC M L declared that China had degenerated into revisionism and later that Mao was not a Marxist Leninist 21 Unlike the Chinese government the government of Albania publicly recognized CPC M L as the vanguard party in Canada and delegations made many visits to Albania prior to the collapse of the PLA and the overturn of socialism in Albania 14 In 1978 the CPC M L held a large international rally a tactic popular with pro Albania parties at the time in Montreal that included a delegation from the PLA 22 The following year the CPC M L organized an international conference with a number of anti revisionist forces with the PLA holding a prominent position Also in attendance were parties from Italy France Iran India Great Britain Portugal the United States Chile and Venezuela 23 These conferences firmly cemented the CPC M L s position as the official pro Albania party in Canada and its bookshops all carried regular literature from the Albanian government citation needed Unlike the strategy of the CPC which engaged itself with existing labour and people s movements including those were more inclined to support the New Democratic Party the CPC M L favoured forming front organizations which it fully controlled This approach and contrarian attitude to the position of most anti war forces at the time left the CPC M L disconnected from the peace and labour movements 14 as the party set up various rival committees At times other leftist groups accused the CPC M L of attacking them in protests and rallies with sticks and bats 24 The new party continued to fare much better among students winning influence over the editorial boards of a number of student newspapers and organizing several campus groups which were subject to police surveillance harassment and repression The Ontarion at the University of Guelph and The Chevron at the University of Waterloo carried a pro CPC M L editorial line for a time during the 1970s 25 Over time the CPC M L was ousted from all of these student newspapers as flamboyant leftist politics began to disappear from the Canadian campus landscape in the 1980s The party also made gains in the Indo Canadian community especially through the East Indian Defense Committee EIDC Also in 1980 the Canadian based Hindustani Ghadar Party became the Communist Ghadar Party of India The CPC M L continued to participate in most federal elections following their entrance on the federal scene with 104 candidates in 1974 In the 31st general election held in May 1979 the party fielded 144 candidates In the 32nd general election held in February 1980 there were 170 Marxist Leninist candidates In the 33rd general election held in September 1984 the Marxist Leninist Party of Canada did not field any candidates 26 Crisis of the anti revisionist parties edit By the early 1980s many of the anti revisionist parties of the 1960s and 1970s in Canada and internationally began to fade 14 Partly the rigorous discipline demanded of members of these groups including tithes for membership dues frequent long meetings confrontation with the police and harassment all took its toll and as young students became the parents of young families As neo conservatism rose the revolutionary optimism which seemed justified a few years ago started to appear less realistic Many of the smaller anti revisionist groups simply folded In 1983 Roger Rashi s Workers Communist Party imploded over the question of Cambodia and Pol Pot as well as alleged internal party sexism within the leadership In Struggle En Lutte had already suffered a similar fate in 1982 The CPC M L however generally lasted through these ideological political and organization crises One guiding light was the party s relationship with the Party of Labour of Albania PLA the only party in North America to have an official relationship with the PLA as the Albanian government somewhat distanced itself from U S pro Albanian groups fearing of CIA infiltration 27 Another base was the parties work in the Indo Canadian community and its anti racist work East Indian Defence Committee edit In addition to the East Indian Defence Committee EIDC founded to oppose state organized racist attacks the CPC M L also launched a West Indian Peoples Organization WIPO Canadian Peoples Defence Committee and Peoples Front PF against racist and fascist violence These organizations worked implement the slogans an injury to one is an injury to all and an attack on one is an attack on all and all for one and one for all and self defence is the only way Active popular and with a large following these front groups were well known for their opposition to racism by the end of the 1970s 1 By the 1980s community centres for the EIDC had been established in Winnipeg Toronto and Vancouver under the name Desh Bhagat Temple DBT 24 Housed in relatively large buildings which were purchased with money contributed by ordinary people mainly from the East Indian community they were managed by the EIDC and owned by a trust set up by the EIDC The centres were regularly used for CPC M L meetings and rented at cost for other social occasions 1 Shift to democratic renewal and support of Cuba editSerious problems in the socialist movement however developed in the late 1980s with the crisis in and the dissolution of the Soviet Union Many communist parties especially in the West have gone over from because it is socialism it can have no problems position to because so many problems emerged it is socialism which does not work Bains wrote 28 But soon it became clear that these developments were not only threatening the future of the Soviet Union Almost immediately following Enver Hoxha s death in 1985 reform movements sprung up in Albania which was the last Eastern Bloc country to overturn socialism in 1992 The overturn of socialism in Albania and the Soviet Union had negative impacts for the CPC M L In the 34th General Election November 1988 it fielded 58 candidates whose names appeared on the ballot as non affiliated due to the party s failure to meet the time line registration provisions of the Canada Elections Act at the time 29 During this time the party began to liquidate the EIDC centres generating about 2 million in profit from the sales of the properties 1 There had already been considerable speculation about the CPC M L s high levels of funding for some time by other left groups Like all registered parties the MLPC s finances are available to the public and annually audited in accordance to Elections Canada regulations 30 In response during the late 1980s the CPC M L adopted the slogan We are our own models and began to seek a new ideological approach eventually talking less about socialism and taking a positive view of both Cuba and North Korea Bains visited Cuba several times in the 1990s which led him and the CPC M L to reconsider his earlier views of Cuba as revisionist The CPC M L was closely aligned with the Canadian Party for Renewal in 1993 On January 1 1995 the party put forward a broad program of work which it named the Historic Initiative This was further elaborated during its Seventh Congress During the 1990s the party called for a popular referendum on the budget cuts initiated by the federal Liberal government of Jean Chretien The language of the CPC M L has increasingly centred on its concept of democratic renewal oriented on electoral reform and empowerment of the people dropping its earlier sharp polemics against labour social movements and the Communist Party of Canada Bains death and legacy edit Bains died in 1997 and his widow Sandra L Smith replaced him as the leader of the CPC M L Bains funeral was a significant occasion for the party who have held several memorials in his honour and although he was cremated purchased a grave plot in The National Cemetery of Canada in Ottawa Canada s national cemetery which is also the national cemetery for the Canadian Forces and RCMP The party eulogy said Comrade Bains the twinkle in your eyes your mischievous smile your beautiful artistic hands your fine mind your tender love for all of us they all combined to work a magic Who could resist your purity your sincerity your drive to bring out the best in everyone you met in everyone you worked with no matter what their age what their standing in life what their ideas or opinions Meeting you was like falling in love at first sight over and over and over again just as you too fell in love with the best in everyone bringing out whatever they had to offer to make this world where tears are hung on every tree a better place 31 According to the CPC M L website the 8 by 51 2 foot memorial is made of granite quarried in Jhansi India The monument is emblazoned with a hammer and sickle and star of CPC M L and inscribed with the slogan Workers of All Countries Unite and on the other side the party s motto and a prominent plaque to Bains Also carved on the monument are the lines Vous etes le rouge de notre drapeau Lal Salaam You are the red of our flag Red Salute and the names of other past veteran members 32 Following his death the CPC M L established the Hardial Bains Party School on Journalism The party continues to reproduce his works on its website and honour his memory and he is also remembered somewhat in India Current positions editAfter Bains s death the party shrunk considerably The Manitoba wing of the CPC M L has not run candidates in Manitoba for several years 33 and is no longer a registered provincial party 34 In 2008 Anna Di Carlo became the leader of the party s electoral arm the Marxist Leninist Party of Canada MLPC 35 while Smith remains First Secretary of the CPC M L and president of the MLPC 36 The CPC M L currently sees as its immediate goal the vesting of sovereignty in the people so that they can exercise control over their lives 37 and organizing Canadians to empower themselves 38 The party s motto is The issue is not to wave the red flags but to show our colours through our deeds 32 Today the CPC M L tends to be supportive of North Korea s right to self determination although it does not promote Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong il or juche in the manner that it promoted Enver Hoxha and Mao Zedong in previous years However it issued a statement mourning the death of Kim Jong il 39 The CPC M L has become strongly supportive of Cuba and the Cuban Revolution and now has close relations with the Cuban Embassy in Ottawa It prints the English language edition of the Communist Party of Cuba s newspaper Granma for Canadian distribution CPC M L members are active in several trade unions particularly the Canadian Union of Postal Workers and the United Steelworkers of America whose Stelco local Local 1005 in Hamilton Ontario was led by party vice president Rolf Gerstenberger until he retired on May 5 2015 40 Local 1005 is one of several USWA locals at Stelco CPC M L members have also been active in the movement against the wars in Iraq 41 and Afghanistan 42 The party has adopted its own Contemporary Marxist Leninist Thought Its Eighth Party Congress was to be held in 2005 with the theme Laying the Foundations for the Mass Communist Party 43 but the congress was delayed because of the federal election 44 The congress was held in September 2008 The CPC M L has a news sheet The Marxist Leninist Daily and a youth wing the Communist Youth Union of Canada Marxist Leninist It operates the Workers Centre which helps educate and organize trade unionists through discussion groups and a magazine Worker s Forum The party often conducts broader political activity under the name People s Front and uses that name for its provincial wing in British Columbia In Ontario CPC M L supporters ran as Independent Renewal candidates in the 2003 provincial election Current relationship with the CPC editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message For much of the CPC M L s history it has strongly condemned the CPC an attitude which was more or less reciprocated The CPC and CPC M L remain apart They appear to continue to have significant differences in their evaluation of international Canadian and Quebec politics approach style of work historic interpretations of the role of the parties in the past and conclusions about immediate action and the road to socialism in Canada Some of these differences include Different strategies The CPC M L has a short concise programme entitled Stop Paying the Rich Expand Social Programmes emphasizing democratic renewal and renewal of international relations creating a new modern truly democratic society in which people are sovereign as its goal 45 while the CPC presents a detailed and lengthy programme entitled Canada s Future is Socialism and putting forward the road to socialism including a phase of struggle involving a democratic anti imperialist and anti monopoly coalition as the route to socialism These different levels of detail and emphasis were also reflected in the respective parties 2015 electoral platforms The CPC M L in Quebec advocates a pro independence position while the CPC supports a new constitution including the right to separate for Quebec but is against independence under current conditions The CPC M L does not have an official position on either the Soviet Union or contemporary China while the CPC made a short analysis of both countries around 2001 The CPC M L maintains an independent position and does not participate in any regular grouping or international while the CPC is a member of the International Meeting of Communist and Workers Parties The CPC M L does not have active campus groups while the CPC has a handful of YCL clubs on campuses mainly in Ontario and Quebec As a result the CPC and CPC M L are not moving towards forming a united party 13 The CPC has also cited lack of self critical historical evaluation of the CPC M L s past i e admitting to mistakes and what it calls the political inconsistency of CPC M L activists as barriers to prioritizing any discussion about unity Nevertheless the two parties work together on a variety of issues including Cuba and Latin American solidarity and for example supported the CPC M L leadership in Local 1005 of the Hamilton Steelworkers As of 2017 the MLPC and CPC M L continue to strongly back their anti revisionist ideology Party leaders editHardial Bains 1970 1997 Sandra L Smith 1998 2008 widow of Bains Anna Di Carlo 2008 present Election results editIn the 2015 federal election the CPC M L ran 70 candidates 44 more than the CPC Its twelve plank party platform called for rewriting the Canadian constitution increasing social spending repealing anti terrorism legislation such as Bill C 51 withdrawal from free trade deals and military involvement abroad establishing nation to nation relations with Aboriginal peoples and government action on climate change 46 At public forums some CPC M L candidates have advocated voting Liberal or New Democratic Party to defeat the Conservative Party citation needed The party has run candidates in Canadian federal elections since 1972 The number of candidates in any election has ranged from as few as 51 and as many as 177 Most of its candidates have run in the provinces of Ontario and Quebec It was most prominent in the 1979 federal election and 1980 federal election running under the slogan Make the rich pay Its slogan in the 2004 federal election was Annexation no Sovereignty yes Election Leader Candidates Seats won Votes 1974 Hardial Bains 104 264 0 16 261 0 17 1979 144 282 0 14 231 nbsp 0 12 1980 177 282 0 14 697 nbsp 0 13 1993 51 295 0 5 202 nbsp 0 04 1997 65 301 0 11 468 nbsp 0 09 2000 Sandra L Smith 84 301 0 12 068 nbsp 0 09 2004 76 308 0 8 696 nbsp 0 06 2006 69 308 0 8 980 nbsp 0 06 2008 59 308 0 8 565 nbsp 0 06 2011 Anna Di Carlo 70 308 0 9 925 nbsp 0 07 2015 70 338 0 9 105 nbsp 0 05 2019 50 338 0 4 124 nbsp 0 02 2021 36 338 0 4 532 nbsp 0 03 By electionsSeptember 8 1980 0 elected Hamilton West 30 960 total votes 120 votes received 0 39 February 13 1995 0 elected Ottawa Vanier 19 843 total votes 61 votes received 0 30 Saint Henri Westmount 16 697 total votes 47 votes received 0 28 September 14 1998 0 elected Sherbrooke 36 446 total votes 72 votes received 0 19 Average number of votes per candidateGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org 2015 election platform editThe party announced its 2015 election platform on its website which addressed four themes Economy amp Trade Constitutional Reform Foreign Policy and Climate Change The one page document does not provide any financial information on how the program might be financed 46 Economy amp trade State control of industry Economic growth powered by the manufacturing and natural resource sectors An end to subsidies and tax cuts for wealthy Canadians and private corporations Increased social spending on childcare recreation education health care seniors care and pensions Cancellation of all free trade deals that allow foreign businesses and corporations to exploit Canada s national resourcesNational constitutional reform Rewrite the Canadian constitution to eliminate colonial imperialist and racist elements Guarantee the rights of non citizens and refugees Guarantee freedom of conscience rights in the Constitution Repeal Bill C 51 and other surveillance and counter terrorism legislation to guarantee civil rights Guarantee Quebec s right to self determination including the right to separate Establish nation to nation relations with Canada s Aboriginal peoplesForeign policy Immediate withdrawal from NATO NORAD and any other military interventions abroad such as those in Syria and Iraq Using diplomacy to end the displacement of people from their home countries Strict respect for national sovereignty Provide humanitarian aid to refugees and those affected by natural disastersClimate change Devolve responsibility for reducing harmful emissions such as greenhouse gases and pollution as well as environmental destruction to the workers organizations unions associations cooperatives in these industriesSee also edit nbsp Canada portal nbsp Politics portalRevolutionary Communist Party of Britain Marxist Leninist Communist Party of Ireland Marxist Leninist References edit a b c d e f g More on the charlatan Hardial Bains www leninism org Retrieved March 7 2024 a b c Irish Left Review Discover Iceland Hotels Reykjavik www hotel reykjavik com Retrieved March 7 2024 a b c CPC M L Hardial Bains Archived from the original on August 9 2011 Retrieved October 4 2011 Hardial Bains Party founder and leader New Red Leaders Need China Pact November 20 1964 pg 2 PDF ubc ca Archived from the original on January 28 2005 Retrieved November 12 2015 Letter On the CPC ML CPC Central Committee 2001 The Marxist Leninist Daily www cpcml ca Retrieved March 7 2024 http www library ubc ca archives pdfs ubyssey UBYSSEY 1963 10 03 pdf Ubyssey Hot air types form own group October 3 1963 Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved April 11 2016 The Movement for the Party www marxists org Retrieved March 7 2024 The Marxist Leninist Weekly cpcml ca Retrieved March 7 2024 NFC Preface JJ s Complete Guide to Canada Fringe Parties No date a b Hopper Tristin August 11 2015 Communist parties battle for few Marxist votes No will to unite Canada s far left National Post Retrieved April 11 2016 a b c d e f g The Second Wave of Anti Revisionism 1971 1981 Encyclopedia of Revisionism On Line Ben Isitt Militant Minority British Columbia Workers and the Rise of a New Left U of T Press 2011 Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Archived from the original on March 15 2016 Retrieved April 11 2016 Maoists front for Angolan anti communists marxists org Archived from the original on May 30 2016 Retrieved November 12 2015 https www marxists org history erol ca secondwave bu albania part18 htm Bolshevik Archived July 16 2018 at the Wayback Machine Union The Party of Labor of Albania Came to Canada Under a Stolen Flag Proletarian Revolution Vol l No 8 December 1978 For example https www marxists org history erol ca firstwave learnfromtheteachers learnfrom htm The First Wave of Anti Revisionism 1964 1970 Encyclopedia of Anti Revisionism On Line https www marxists org history erol ca firstwave 6th 2 pdf People s Archived April 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine Daily News Sixth Consultative Conference of the CPC ML April 2 1979 https www marxists org history erol ca secondwave doing everything htm In Struggle CPC ML s International Conference No 152 April 3 1979 Sixth Conference a b https www marxists org history erol ca firstwave isoncpc chapter4 htm In Struggle The CPC ML A Revisionist Organization of Agent Provocateurs https www marxists org history etol newspape spartacist canada 013 1977 02 SpartCan pdf Spartacist Archived March 15 2014 at the Wayback Machine Canada Free Speech and the Chevron Affair February 1977 Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Archived from the original on February 29 2016 Retrieved April 11 2016 https www marxists org history erol ncm 5 U S Archived April 25 2014 at the Wayback Machine Anti Revisionism The New Communist Movement Crises Splits and More New Parties 1977 1980 Shivanand Kanavim The Weekend Observer February 1992 reflections shivanand blogspot ca July 26 2007 Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Archived from the original on February 29 2016 Retrieved April 11 2016 EROL The Party of Labor of Albania Came to Canada Under a Stolen Flag Retrieved April 11 2016 Oh Comrade Dear Comrade Beloved Comrade TML Weekly September 14 20 1997 a b CPC M L The Party Memorial Archived from the original on August 19 2015 Retrieved April 11 2016 2013 Elections Canada Election Night Results National Retrieved April 11 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Elections Manitoba Registered Parties permanent dead link Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Retrieved April 11 2016 Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved April 11 2016 Hardial Bains party founder and leader CPC ML Archived from the original on August 9 2011 Retrieved October 4 2011 No date Little Red Umbrella Fringe Party Profiles The Marxist Leninist Party of Canada Interview with Anna Di Carlo 2011 littleredumbrella com Archived copy Archived from the original on May 29 2012 Retrieved January 2 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Local 1005 acclaims Howe as new president The Hamilton Spectator March 12 2015 Retrieved April 11 2016 cpcml The Marxist Leninist Daily Retrieved April 11 2016 cpcml The Marxist Leninist Daily Retrieved April 11 2016 The Marxist Leninist Daily Archived from the original on July 11 2008 Retrieved April 11 2016 Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Archived from the original on August 3 2010 Retrieved April 11 2016 Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Archived from the original on August 20 2015 Retrieved April 11 2016 a b Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved April 11 2016 External links editOfficial website Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist Canadian Political Parties and Political Interest Groups web archive created by The University of Toronto Libraries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Communist Party of Canada Marxist Leninist amp oldid 1216819448, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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