Site icon Yves Engler

Electoral reform and bottom-up transformation

To reverse galloping inequality and ecological ruin requires bottom-up transformation. That necessitates a party rooted in grassroots activism.

My first goal as NDP leader would be to create a party with engaged constituency associations working with unions, community and other organizations to spread our ideas and influence. The resulting grassroots structure would shape party policy. If we are to be a party that stands for real democracy in both the political and economic spheres we must demonstrate our commitment to internal democracy. To that end a policy conference would be organized as the culmination of a process energizing our party structure.

At that policy conference, I would argue for the following:

I would further argue for an election platform that included the following promises:

To have the legitimacy to undertake more substantive change, we must be empowered by the will of Canadians in a truly democratic election and take the time for party activists to explain what they want to accomplish and why. Limiting our initial election promise to electoral/media reform, together with some minimal initial economic and social promises, would broaden our appeal to the many who distrust politicians and our current electoral system. Then, if we did what was promised once elected, followed by immediately calling another election, the NDP would be seen as committed to democracy and not the same old Liberals and Conservatives.

The fact I’m not and have never been a politician might help ordinary Canadians believe in our sincerity.

NDP memberships can be had for as little as $5 on the party’s website

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