Undergrad Corner

Conservative Party strategy to take over student unions exposed

Published on 19 Mar 2009

LEAKED RECORDINGS AND DOCUMENTS POINT TO A CONSERVATIVE PARTY EFFORT TO UNDERMINE STUDENT UNIONS AND CAMPUS SOCIAL JUSTICE ORGANIZATIONS

The Ryerson Free Press
March 16, 2009

By Rebecca Granovsky-Larsen, Editor-in-Chief and Nora Loreto, News Editor

Audio recordings, photographs and documents that were leaked from a recent Conservative Party student workshop at the University of Waterloo expose a partisan attempt to take over student unions and undermine Ontario Public Interest Research Groups (OPIRGs) on campuses across Ontario.

At a session held in early February by the Ontario Progressive Campus Conservative Association (OPCCA) and the Manning Centre for Building Democracy, campus Conservatives, party campaigners, and a Member of Parliament discussed strategies to gain funding from student unions for the Conservative Party and ways to run for—and win—positions within student unions.

The leaked materials were posted on WikiLeaks.org over the weekend and add to the growing body of evidence that the Conservative Party has a strategy for interfering in campus student unions. In early 2002, the campus press first learned of a secret Millennium Leadership Fund that the party’s campus wing used to fund candidates in student union elections. Now it appears that strategy has evolved into a campaign to falsely obtain student union funding and destabilize student clubs with a social justice mandate.

Among those present at the workshop were Member of Parliament for Kitchener-Waterloo, Peter Braid and his campaign manager, Aaron Lee-Wudrick. Lee-Wudrick is heard on the recordings providing advice on how to siphon money from students’ unions through “front organizations” that would work to further the goals of the Conservative Party.

Braid took the riding of Kitchener-Waterloo from Liberal incumbent Andrew Telegdi in the last federal election. Telegdi had held the riding since 1993. Braid won by 17 votes, a margin that Lee-Wudrick identifies as being the reason why getting students involved in federal politics is so important.

In the presentation caught on the recording, Lee-Wudrick and Ryan O’Connor, a former Vice-President of the Waterloo Federation of Students, spoke about how they were able to manipulate the student union board to run a referendum to refund the fees of the Waterloo OPIRG (WPIRG) chapter in the early 2000s. They disclose that when O’Connor was a Vice-President, he worked with Lee-Wudrick, then President of the campus Conservative club, to push forward their partisan agenda, often by using the resources of the students’ union.

In the presentation, Lee-Wudrick said, “If it’s possible if, in one fell swoop, to take over the Board of Directors [of OPIRG], I think that it would be pretty impressive, and you’d be a hero to the Conservative movement if you can pull that off.”

OPIRGs are campus organizations that are usually funded through a dedicated student levy to coordinate campus campaigns on human rights and social justice.

“We’ve always had people who wanted to destroy OPIRG. The interesting thing is the explicit participation of Conservative party members in these events put on by the OPCCA where they are discussing how to do these takeovers and end the role of OPIRGs on campus,” said Terrence Luscome who sits on the York University OPIRG’s board of directors.

“Of course when there are actual Conservative MPs involved, you have to question where this group is getting its funding and [people need to follow] the money trail, and to which interests within the government [it will lead],” he added.

While Lee-Wudrick and O’Connor’s plan to cancel WPIRG’s funding failed in 2002, they boasted that it paved the way for another attempt in 2005, and expressed hope of success in the future.
They also identified student unions, campus radio stations and the Canadian Federation of Students as potential targets of a campaign to eliminate each organization’s funding. “Part of the objective here is to bring people into the Party. That’s a good thing,” said O’Connor. “Young liberals will help you out…and they’re some of the strongest allies on student issues,” he added.
During the workshop, student Conservatives were also coached on how to set up “shell groups” as a way to advance a partisan agenda on campus.

“Yeah we had a front group like that: the Campus Coalition for Liberty. It was really just a front for the Conservatives, but it gave us like two voices.” said Lee-Wudrick.
He added: “Don’t think that the Party doesn’t like that, because they do. They’re things that will help the Party, but it looks like it’s an organically-grown organization and it just stimulated from the grassroots spontaneously. They love that stuff… Remember all of the Rallies for Democracy … that’s just an example of how big those things can get.”

Among those present at the Waterloo workshop were Richard Ciano, Founder of the Conservative Campaign University, a political training school for conservative activists; Nick Bergamini, student councillor and vice-president student issues-elect for the Carleton University Students’ Association, and Kevin Wiener, a student senator at Queen’s University, candidate for the National Council of the Conservative Party of Canada and secretary-treasurer of the Ontario Progressive Campus Youth Association.

Also present was Chris McClusky, Program Coordinator for the Manning Centre for Building Democracy in Ottawa and a former Vice-President of the Dalhousie Students’ Union. He has conducted a workshop, called “Strategies that work: Running for student government” at several other sessions including one in London and Ottawa.

Shelley Melanson, Chairperson of the Canadian Federation of Students-Ontario was surprised when told of the leaked strategy. “Campus student unions are there to represent students and should be free from the partisan interference of federal and provincial parties,” she said. “The contribution of students’ unions and OPIRGs to the broader social justice movement in Ontario is important and it’s disturbing to think that Canada’s governing party would use its resources to undermine democratic student organizations in this way.”

While recordings are available from only the Waterloo workshop, the OPCCA and the Manning Foundation have held similar Conservative training sessions on campuses in Ottawa, Toronto, London, Halifax and Winnipeg.

Braid was not the only sitting Conservative politician to attend such a workshop. Monte Solberg and MP Chris Warkentin attended similar seminars in Ottawa on Nov. 20, 2008, while Nova Scotia Environment Minister Mark Parent, Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Greene, and Former New Brunswick Premier Bernard Lord all participated in the Halifax workshop held from October 26 to 28, 2007.

In 2002, a secret Millennium Leadership Fund of the youth wing of the Progressive Conservative Party was exposed by the Western Gazette in an article called “Tories plot to infiltrate student government.”

The article referred to an email leaked in March of 2002 in which then OPCCA President Adam Daifallah boasted to fellow party members about Millennium Leadership Fund recipients who were successfully elected that year at Queen’s University, the University of Waterloo and the University of Windsor. According to the Gazette, the Millennium Fund was largely paid for by senior Progressive Conservative members and supporters.

Influencing the results of campus student elections and referenda continue to be on the priority list of the OPCCA.
Eric Merkley, president of the OPCCA and deputy campaign manager of Braid’s successful election campaign was also present at the workshop. In his election platform for president of the OPCCA, Merkley promised that, “Team Merkley will continue with progress made in providing across-province training sessions for recruitment and campus activism for student election and referendum campaigns.”

LINK HERE to the Ryerson Free Press article.

http://ryersonfreepress.ca/site/archives/745

TODAY: Why Undergrad Students Supported the CUPE 3903 Strike

Published on 12 Feb 2009

Come out to the
UNDERGRADUATE FORUM: Why Students Supported the CUPE 3903 Strike.

Thursday, February 12th 2009
5:00 pm
Rm 307 The Student Centre

Speakers from various student groups discuss the strike and its importance to students. Includes an open forum for students to engage with the issues.

- Why we as students support the CUPE strike:
- We are or will be workers in the future.
- Back-to-work legislation is an attack on basic labour rights
- wages, benefits, and social services have been undermined by both government and business interests for decades
only through collective action can we defend our interests
- CUPE 3903 has been at the forefront of fighting for accessibile and quality education
- If undergraduate students had supported the strike from the beginning, it would have ended a lot sooner

An Undergraduate Intiative. Supported by OPIRG York, Students Against Israeli Apartheid, Always Question, Basics Free Community Newsletter and more…

Financial Assistance for Students Due to Labour Disruption

Published on 30 Jan 2009

Via York University Office of Student Financial Services

Students who require financial assistance (or additional assistance) due to the CUPE 3903 labour disruption can apply for financial assistance through the following programs:

The York University Hardship Bursary
The York University Undergraduate Bursary Program
The Friends of Glendon Hardship Bursary

To apply for these programs you must complete the Student Financial Profile and the Request for Additional Financial Assistance form. Applications will be assessed on an ongoing basis.

Need help completing an award application? Attend one of our one hour workshops on Scholarships, Bursaries and an Award Winning Application.

York Federation of Students Strike Relief Application

The YFS has created a Strike Relief Fund in order to aid students who have experienced financial hardship due to the strike. When completing your form, please deliver it by mail or drop it off at the YFS office (336 Student Centre). No faxes, please!
York Federation of Students
c/o Clubs Committee
336 Student Centre
4700 Keele Street
Toronto ON
M3J 1P3

LINK HERE this post for a copy of the YFS Strike Relief Application and look for the Download at the bottom of the page.
If you are having trouble viewing the application please email Krisna Saravanamuttu, vpequity@yfs.ca

Letter to Undergrads

Published on 20 Jan 2009

Dear Students,

Your teachers and TAs are very sympathetic with your frustration over this long strike, and we want to inform you about recent events in negotiations. As the strike enters its tenth week, the York administration has called for a “forced ratification vote,” and at this crucial point we feel an increased need to communicate with you, because we recognize that as undergraduates you have been caught in the middle. The purpose of this letter is to explain the York administration’s responsibility for unnecessarily prolonging the strike, despite their public relations messages that suggest that CUPE 3903 is to blame.  We do this for two purposes: Continue Reading »

Website Spoof Claims Much, Delivers Little, Dumbs Down Public

Published on 07 Jan 2009

The article below was posted on January 7 in response to a spoof site of our strike website that had aggravated many York students and members of CUPE 3903. After posting this article, our webmaster visted the spoof website to see about contacting the owners. This is the message they had since posted.

This website was a practical joke to a closed set of friends, which unintentionally was leaked out and spread like wildfire. I firmly stand behind CUPE 3903 and I sincerly apologize.

Mr. F

We were glad to see this message from Mr. F. Thank you for this, and for your support.

To see the response we wrote, and for reference to the general misinformation that many have propogated regarding the CUPE 3903 strike, see the original article below.

Here is It’s a new year and a new day and yet another group of anti-CUPE / anti-Strike / anti-Union techies are making hay with their tireless commitment to misinforming undergrads, parents and the general public.

This time, it’s a spoof of the CUPE 3903 Strike website, the very one you’re reading, where the spoof site falsely declares and end to the strike by alleged ‘mutual CUPE-York agreement on Monday, January 5th,’ and that classes will allegedly resume tomorrow, Thursday, January 8th. All of this is untrue.

Of course, as with the first nine weeks of the strike, this spoof site link and its misinformation are running like wildfire through the anti-strike landscape of planet facebook - where gossip, rumour, slander and speculation are routinely communicated as if they are facts, official reports, and first-hand knowledge, by individuals who bypass the practice of even basic research in favour of anti-social justice agendas.

At its worst, their spoof is a cruel deception of students, workers, and the York community working hard to mobilize for a fair and equitable agreement, and eager to return to classes. At “best,” it is an affirmation of our site’s effectiveness.

As the saying goes, ‘imitation (cloning) is the highest form of flattery. ‘

p.s. Here’s where to look at their site. Their url is a no-brainer.

http://sponk.jenox.com/strike.

p.p.s. York University alone has the power to call classes back to session. LINK HERE for more.

Dispatch #12 - Taking it Big, One Raindrop at a Time

Published on 05 Jan 2009

From:  Daniel
To:   all York students, workers, strikers and friends
Date:   Mon, Jan 5, 2009 at 9:15 PM
Subject:  Dispatch #12 - Taking it Big, One Raindrop at a Time

Monday, January 5, 2009

We are each of us a raindrop. Together, we can be an ocean.

We were a torrential downpour of 80 raindrops this afternoon, when the rally passed through the ninth floor. At the rally, raindrops talked about the sit-in, the General Strike in Greece, the New School Occupation in New York City, and the 2005 Quebec student strike. We were reinvigorated by the rally and the energy of our fellow raindrops. Thank you!

Rain continued to seep into the ninth floor during teach-ins on Video Activism and Possibilities for Anti-Colonial Feminist Organizing. Some raindrops also created a video based on MTV’s “Cribs”: a synopsis of a day in the life of a ninth-floor raindrop.

Continue Reading »

COMMUNIQUÉ: from outside York U President’s office

Published on 04 Jan 2009

THE RETURN OF THE SITTERS

Sunday, January 4, 7:00 pm - Toronto, ON.

We’re back, we’re sitting, and we’re waiting.

We figured that the Administration figured that we’d be back. But we figured that the Administration figured that we wouldn’t be back until Monday morning. So we figured that we’d outfigure the Administration and arrive on Sunday evening. And we figured really good: nobody seems to know we’re here yet, even though we made our triumphant entry to the tune of “Solidarity Forever.”

We are a group of undergraduate and graduate students and workers, and we’re asking what seems to be the unaskable: that York President Mamdou Shoukri meet with his students.

Continue Reading »

NEWSFLASH: UofT’s Case Crumbles Against the “Fight Fees 14″

Published on 04 Jan 2009

Continue Reading »

Dispatch #6 - Problems with President Shoukri’s Response to Students

Published on 18 Dec 2008

From: Carmen
To: all students, CUPE and friends
Date: Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 11:06 PM
Subject: sit-in update “Problems with Shoukri’s Response”

Wednesday December 17, 2008 11pm

Problems with President Shoukri’s response to students:

Around 3:45 pm on Wednesday, December 17, a letter was given to the 9th floor sit-in on behalf of President Shoukri where he commented that he would not meet with members of the sit-in. There were two main problems with the letter that President Shoukri wrote. First, it was addressed solely to CUPE 3903 and ignored the role of undergraduate students and non-CUPE 3903 graduate students involved in the sit-in. This is especially important considering the significant role of undergraduates in organizing, supporting, and maintaining the sit-in.

Continue Reading »

York Students Demand Presidential Accountability, Occupy Offices

Published on 15 Dec 2008

December 15, 2008 - TORONTO, Ont.

As we write, more than 110 York undergraduate students are joining graduate student members of CUPE 3903 in an occupation of the President’s Office on the 9th floor of the Ross Building at York University. They are demanding that President Mamdouh Shoukri come out, engage them, and address 12 key questions.

They also plan to present him a letter to sign, requesting that he commit to participating in a public forum of undergraduates and CUPE members, to be held in the week of Jan. 5th, 2009.

Since the strike began on November 5th, and the University locked out students by canceling all classes, Shoukri’s actions and those of his representatives have ranged from unresponsive to hostile to the majority of student concerns. Most recently, President Shoukri refused to participate in an undergraduate Town Hall organized by the York Federation of Students on Thursday, Dec. 4th. There, students discussed the YFS economic proposal* urging York to direct funds and fundraising dollars away from non-essential expenses such as luxurious celebrations, and huge raises and bonuses for York Administrators, back to the classroom where it belongs.

Continue Reading »

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