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Anti-democratic initiatives

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An overview of the anti-democratic initiatives that the government and corporations are pursuing, and that Dogwood Initiative is fighting in quest of a civil society.

The current government took office amid fanfare about a new era of more transparent government. After a few token open cabinet meetings (long abandoned) and a revamping of government websites, the government has.

Here are just a few of the anti-democratic policies and practices of the government that most concern Dogwood Initiative and our allies:

  • Privatization – the infamous VanderZalm government of the late 1980s fell far short of the current government's drive to privatize public land, assets and services. Dogwood Initiative's focus is on privatization of land and the management of the environment, but the scope goes well beyond, from BC Hydro to medicare to welfare management. And the government is privately telling supporters of a major campaign to privatize forest land in its second term.
  • Secrecy – a broad term, but important. We do not believe the government has a mandate to do many of the things it is doing, including privatization. This government has been blocking access to important information, frustrating the Freedom of Information (FOI) process, refusing to meet with many constituencies, carrying on secret negotiations with corporate supporters about matters of public interest, and making sweeping policy and legislative changes without consulting anyone but those special corporate interests.
  • Autocratic legislation – the most infamous example is Bill 75, the Significant Projects Streamlining Act, which allows a minister to override municipal decisions and provincial regulations to allow a development project. But many new laws are subtler, and more dangerous as a result. The Environmental Assessment Act has been stripped of substance, and reduced in scope. Those projects that do fall within its scope get a rubber stamp, albeit an expensive one. The FOI Act has been undermined by amendments. New forest legislation gives the keys to the henhouse to the foxes. The list goes on, right down to changes to the Coal Act that quietly expropriated coal rightsholder's ownership of coalbed methane, except for a few large companies who privately negotiated deals.
We are fighting these initiatives as they relate to our mission, and supporting the broader struggle to make government accountable, and help the public account for government—to, in other words, democratize democracy.

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"It is the political will of the people that makes and sustains the political will of governments."

- James P. Grant, former Executive Director, UNICEF