ec" = RIDING roughshod over CCF rank and eae Opposition, Coldwell supports At- tee et Pact and Marshall Plan which ut Canada in U.S. war camp. All foreign is pies must learn “that no nation and f ioe can oppose successfully our way fe,” he said, aping St. Laurent. ‘THE CCF parliamentary record on hous- mg shows a complete unwillingness : fight the government on this basic a of Canadians. Most CCFers want hn subsidized housing. But they'll __./Ye to vote LPP to be sure someone will be t for it in the next Parliament. J&Deing by the lack of action of the the f government in Saskatchewan, in war ace of thousands of layoffs, Cold- would Darty will act little differently than ‘ Liberals or Tories when widespread —ytPloyment hits Canada. ane genlay campaign to split labor won’ Strengthen fight for jobs. Davin Lewis, CCF national secretary, Weice main task of trade unionists to- 1S not to fight the bosses, but to fight strike ommunists. Coldwell, backed the Csy ebreaking role of the Liberals in the “ele Strike. by declaring the CSU should cre house”, Not a word of support has Officially given embattled seamen. Mill Paign have launched an all-out cam- Wheat S,the LPP is doing, for $2.00 ‘the M and an end to Canada’s tie with arshall Plan. WHEN Tim Buck asked Coldwell to back - Suran® fight for higher unemployment in- i fatnc payments, Coldwell replied: “It ile to expect this sort of action from ral-dominated parliament.” But th pain cuck proved that a fighting cam- lo © Li m oan Could force the government to . Xes, raise pensions. BY nis back-stabbing of CSU strike, ; Rove ldwell has gone down the line with hire Bartont’s use of armed police and Strik; Strikebreakers against legally cr "Ng unions, That is reverse of demo- acy, CCF’e : : rs who want Bill of Rights “ht should vote LPP. AA Mt "enema a Naas te kc | —SOCIAL CREDIT— SOCIAL CREDIT leader Solon Low is on “the record as an ardent supporter of ‘the Atlantic War Pact, the Marshall Plan and the tying of Canadian economy to the U.S. boom-bust dollar. In Alberta, Social Credit government welcomes U.S. war base in Edmonton. an INCE Social Credit is tied with the Drew-Duplessis axis, is the western ally of the Progressive-Conservative Party, Social Credit leadership under Solon Low and Manning, oppose any form of government subsidized low-rental housing or “socialistic” rent controls. A é - Se Besa és re ee Acumen SAID Social Credit Premier Manning of Alberta: “What we need is the maxi- mum scope for private enterprise and in- dividual initiative.’ With thousands of miners unemployed in Alberta, the S.C. party has not lifted a finger to start much-needed public works to provide new jobs. NUR RR DESPITE protests from large delega- tions from Alberta Trade unions, Social Credit government of that prov- ince hand-cuffed labor with Bill 91 — which apes infamous Taft-Hartley law in the U.S. Working closely with big U.S. oil interests, Manning acts to suppress militant labor action. Ml mM SDE RM : Nar teutt ze : i SOCIAL Credit follows the Tory policy on farm questions. In Alberta it has dropped interest in farmers to favor oil monopolists from the United States. Many farmers are being robbed right left and centre by these monopolists, with full approval of the Secial Crediter Solon Low. AM ACCORDING to Premier Manning and the Social Credit Party, there is too much “socialism” already in Canada. He said: “If the experience of state bureau- cracy we are having at present does not arouse every thinking person to the menace of the socialistic doctrine of the supreme state, I don’t know what will.” EMEMBER Sociai Credit leaders An- thony Hlynka, the late Norman Ja- ques and ex-fascist leader Charles Crate, and it will be recegnized that the Social Credit Party is a haven for anti-Semites and racists. Manning government rejects public demand for law aga‘nst Jim Crow in Edmonton. {GANA ARNOT UAE CK THE RECORD | * » > » " ry aun) MR la and Peace’ TIM BUCK, National Leader we £ PP. HE Labor-Progressive Party’s members fought for collective security against Hit- ler in the 1930's. They were the only party to denounce the Munich Pact. They campaigned for the second front in 1942-43 to end the war swiftly. Today the LPP stands by the {IN Charter against the Atlantic War Pact. i TNTRRUU RUT STS [N THE 1945 election, LPP candidates de- manded a billion dollars for homes. LPP members of the Ontario and Manitoba legis- latures and municipal councils in Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton, Winnipeg and elsewhere have made low-rental housing their No. 1 fight. LPP demands 100.000 homes now. CR eR Tu EH TSA IM BUCK, national LPP leader and candi- date in Trinity, leads fight to increase unemployment insurance benefits by 50 per- cent at once and to start a big public works program now to absorb 300,000 unemploy- ed. The LPP fights for the 40-hour 5-day week at same take home pay; for compelling industry to provide job security. SEIMEI ERR TUE a (PHE LPP demands a new national labor code to replace Mitchell-Big Business code now in force. LPP fights for legislation based upon trade unions’ demands for tightly-rivet- ted laws protecting workers’ rights. In On- tario and ‘Manitoba legislatures, LPP mem- bers Salsberg, MacLeod and Kardash have fought continuously for strong labor code. PERIOSTEUM ‘THE Labor-Progressive Party is the only political party in Canada actually fighting in the field for the farmers — for $2.00 wheat, for guaranteed floor prices on all farm producis, for lower freight rates, abolition of the Grain Exchange, protection from crop failure, a major campaign against drought by setting up Saskatchewan River Authority. ERRATA RA UDGE LPP policy by the actions of its members in legislatures, city councils and school boards. There, men like A. A. Mac- Leed, J. B. Sa'sberg, Wm. Kardash, have led the fight for higher cld-age pensicns, mo- thers’ allowances, workmen’s compensation, health insurance and many measures of so- cal security. TRU HU [?FP has for years fought for.a Canadian Bill of Rights. It stands in the forefront of the fight against racism, for religious free- dom, for curbing fascist actions, for full freedom for labor to organize and strike. That’s why Big Business and its government seek to outlaw the LPP and strangle the whole labor mevement. ' TT Published by the National Execuiive LABOR-PROGRESSIVE PARTY LM 73 Adelaide St. W., Toronto PACIFIC TRIBUNE — JUNE 10, 1949 — PAGE 7