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December 2, 2000
Anti-election activities in Montreal and Quebec City
VOTEZ BIEN, VOTEZ RIEN!
MONTREAL, November, 22, 2000 -- In just five short days, like sheep to
slaughter, millions of so-called citizens of the Canadian state will be
heading to the polls to exercise their "right" to choose the men and women
who will invariably screw them over for the next 3-5 years.
Elections Canada, ever mindful of increasing voter apathy, especially
among youth, has been running ads in a desperate bid to reverse the
consistent trend of low voter turnouts. Meanwhile, cities and towns across
Canaduh are replete with glad-handing politicians, tedious media coverage,
excessive election advertising, not to mention the increasing level of hot
air that, despite the cold weather, is about as welcome as a kick to the
groin.
Beyond the mainstream drivel about elections, diverse and spontaneous
anti-electoral and pro-democracy efforts have arisen in Quebec, building
on previous abstention campaigns during elections and referendums. The
anti-election efforts, while autonomous, share several common themes: the
belief that genuine democracy resides in extra-parliamentary organizations
and collectives that positively reflect values of mutual aid, solidarity
and self-activity; the idea that electoral politics, as well as
parliamentary democracy, are sham processes that only serve to reinforce
prevailing power structures; and the confidence that encouraging effective
resistance and revolt to capitalism and the state is invariably more
valuable than some "x" on a ballot every couple of years.
One organized anti-election effort is occurring in Quebec City, where two
local anarchist groups -- le Groupe anarchiste Emile-Henri and le
Collectif libertaire le Maquis -- are sponsoring an abstention campaign.
On election night, they are holding an anti-election party at the
appropriately named "Sacrilege" bar on St-Jean Street near Vieux Quebec
(across from a church).
The campaign includes a publicly displayed and signed declaration in
favour of real democracy and against parliamentary elections, as well as a
poster depicting a naive "Foghorn Leghorn" caricature obliviously voting
into a ballot box that is really a KFC bucket bearing the image of Colonel
Sanders. The poster is accompanied by the caption: "Don't be the turkey of
the farce ..." ["Ne soyez pas le dindon de la farce."]. The poster can be
viewed at <http://montreal.indymedia.org/display.php3?article_id=129>.
Some activists at Laval University in Quebec City are planning street
theatre on election day. Actors, blindfolded and gagged, will be
robotically placing ballots into a box in a futile and never-ending
circle.
The posters and theatre in Quebec City are not the only anti-election
agitprop that has appeared in the past weeks. Election signs on the major
highway between Quebec City and Montreal (a 2-3 hour stretch) have been
systematically covered with graffiti. Posters have also in Montreal
reading "Elections are useless." Another depicts a ferris wheel with logos
of the major political parties in Quebec. The latter poster can be viewed
at <http://montreal.indymedia.org/display.php3?article_id=115>.
A relatively new anarchist publication in Montreal, "Le Trouble", has also
dedicated space in its recent issue to anti-election articles and images.
A photo of an electric chair is accompanied by the caption: "Yes,
democratic institutions are reformable ... with new chairs in parliament!
Against elections and for electrons!" An editorial, with the title "Vote
well, don't vote" [Votez bien, votez rien!], advocates "acting" instead of
"electing" ["agir au lieu d'elire"] and ends with the rhyming declaration,
"to the social question, no electoral solution" ["A la question sociale,
pas de solution electorale!"].
A lesser known local endeavor is the Montreal chapter of the Edible Ballot
Society (EBS), part of a larger initiative in the Canadian state. The EBS
originates in the province of Alberta, home to major dinosaur remains, as
well as real living fossils in the form of right-wing wingnuts like
Premier Ralph Klein and Stockwell Pray, the leader of the Canadian Reform
Alliance Party (CRAP).
Perhaps in reaction to the particularly wretched kind of politician
produced locally, several EBS activists in Alberta ate their ballots at
advance polls, and intend to engage in more ballot destruction on election
day. The EBS motto is: "Don't vote, it just encourages them!" Chapters
exist across Canaduh.
Montreal EBS efforts have been modest, including a sticker and postering
campaign. The poster is accompanied by the slogan, "Never mind the
ballots!" The overall EBS webpage is at: <http://edibleballot.tao.ca>
The efforts in Quebec and Canaduh resemble recent anti-electoral and
pro-democracy efforts in the U$A and elsewhere. The "Anarchists Against
Voting" website <http://www.infoshop.org/voting.html> and the "Direct
Democracy, not Election Hypocrisy" effort
<http://www.directdemocracynow.org> provide more detailed information.
All of the anti-election/pro-democracy efforts in Quebec are distinctly
hostile to political parties, even the marginal ones like the Marijuana
Party (aka the "Bloc Pot"). Local anarchists have been known to taunt the
merry-marijuana crowd with the words, "If you want to smoke pot, don't
change the government, change the world."
However, some local anti-election activists have confessed certain
sympathy for a newly formed Montreal-based political party called the
Parti Populaire des Putes (the People's Prostitutes' Party). The PPP is
comprised of sex workers and former sex-workers that organized this summer
against a campaign by businesspeople and right-wing residents targeting
drug users, street workers and homeless people in Montreal's Centre-Sud
neighborhood. The neighbourhood, in Montreal's east-end, is slowly being
gentrified.
The PPP's campaign slogan provides some insight into their view of
parliamentary democracy: "Vote for the PPP, and elect a REAL whore to
Parliament."
Like the members of the PPP, the individuals and groups involved in
anti-electoral efforts in Quebec are actively involved in local grassroots
campaigns, groups and collectives. They are activists and organizers
working against poverty, police brutality, ecocide, racism, sexism,
prisons and capitalist globalization, while promoting solidarity efforts
and alternative forms of organization and social change.
Many of the anti-election activists will be involved in a community squat
project in Montreal that will be publicly revealed in December, as well as
organizing against the Summit of the Americas meeting in Quebec City next
April. More info on these issues will be forthcoming in the coming weeks
and months.
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by Jaggi Singh jaggi@tao.ca
Montreal (November 22, 2000)
for a-infos, indymedia, act-mtl, damn and others
anti-copyright
anti-election websites:
Anarchists Against Voting: <http://www.infoshop.org/vote.html>
Direct Democracy, not Election Hypocrisy:
<http://www.directdemocracynow.org>
Edible Ballot Society: <http://edibleballot.tao.ca>
Quebec anti-election contacts:
Edible Ballot Society (Montreal): lombrenoire@tao.ca
Le Groupe anarchiste Emile-Henri (Quebec City): emile.henri@sympatico.ca
Le Collectif libertaire le Maquis (Quebec City): lemaquis@moncourrier.com
Le Trouble Newspaper (Montreal): letrouble@yahoo.fr
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last updated: January 1, 2005
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