Blair Redlin
Blair Redlin is a researcher with the Canadian Union of Public Employees, based in Burnaby. In addition to bargaining support for CUPE's municipal sector in B.C., his research priorities include privatization and P3s, water, trade agreements, energy and transportation. He's a member of the Boards of Oxfam Canada and B.C. Citizens for Public Power. In the 1990s, he was a Deputy Minister in the B.C. government. Are EU trade talks behind the pressure to end local procurement?
Judging by all the recent hype about “Buy America,” you’d think Canada had suddenly been devastated by some horrible natural disaster.
As if out of nowhere, “Buy America” provisions in the U.S. stimulus Bill are suddenly at the top of the policy agenda for the Harper government, the Premiers and the Federation of Canadian Municipalities. It matters little that the U.S. government has had “Buy America” laws in place since 1933.
Just what we don't need: An investor rights deal with the EU
How many Canadians realize the Harper government is well into detailed talks aimed at concluding a comprehensive “free trade” agreement with the European Union?
Probably not many yet, though hopefully more will soon. In light of the bad experience with NAFTA and other similar trade deals worldwide, the last thing we need right now is yet another investor rights agreement, this time to increase the power of European and Canadian corporations at the expense of Canadian and European citizens. But corporate lobby groups like the Canadian Council of Chief Executives are relentless. Even though the global economic meltdown has totally discredited the prescription of deregulation, privatization and free trade, they continue to insist we need still more of it.
Eyewitness to the Americas Social Forum
Just as economies and financial markets were crashing worldwide, more than 7,000 social activists from some 350 organizations throughout the western hemisphere gathered in Guatemala City, October 7 to 12, for the third Americas Social Forum.
Their goal was to elaborate a more democratic and humane vision for the Americas - a vision of strengthened community control that is increasingly coherent as neoliberal corporate systems implode.
Hopeful alternatives emerging in Latin America