I knew that Mr. Weaver was the leader of the B.C. Green Party, as well as the B.C. Greens’ only member of the provincial legislature. I knew he was a climate scientist who had done important work on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. I knew he had successfully sued Postmedia, Canada’s largest newspaper publisher, after one of its newspapers published false and defamatory statements about Mr. Weaver’s work as a climate scientist.
Based on these facts, I had a positive opinion of Mr. Weaver. I had never spoken a critical word about him, privately or publicly.
BDS resolution passes with strong support from members
At its Ottawa convention, the Green Party of Canada adopted a human rights policy resolution that I had authored. A few months before the convention, while serving as the justice critic in the party’s shadow cabinet, I had travelled to the West Bank and witnessed with my own eyes Israel’s brutal and suffocating occupation of Palestinian territory. I returned to Canada determined to advance a resolution calling for the application of boycott, divestment and sanctions, or BDS, to those who profit from that occupation.
In drafting the BDS resolution, I studiously avoided reference to the most controversial aspect of the Palestinian call for a boycott of Israel — namely, the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homeland. I also avoided the use of terminology that, although completely justified, might inflame the debate over BDS, such as “war crimes,” “racism” and “apartheid.” The BDS resolution was a modest defence of Palestinian rights, and one that a party subscribing to the values of non-violence, social justice and respect for diversity should have no difficulty espousing. A large majority of those who attended the biannual convention agreed. The BDS resolution was adopted. So strong was members’ support for the resolution that it passed over the strong objections of the party’s leader, Elizabeth May.
The human rights abuses that motivated me to author and advance this resolution have been documented for decades by reputable human rights organizations, including U.K.-based Amnesty International, U.S.-based Human Rights Watch, and Israel-based B’Tselem. Those abuses include Israel’s settlements, which are almost universally recognized (including by the Canadian government) as a flagrant violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Israel also engages in collective punishment, indefinite detention without due process of peaceful dissenters, and torture, including the torture of children.
Despite Israel’s well-documented and decades-long contempt for human rights, Mr. Weaver immediately criticized the Green Party of Canada for adopting the BDS resolution. Within hours of the conclusion of the party convention, the B.C. Green Party issued a press release in which Mr. Weaver was quoted as stating that the adoption of the BDS resolution “represents a significant step away from the values that define the BC Green Party. This is not a policy that I nor the B.C. Green Party support…. BDS is a politically motivated movement that damages any attempt at peace in the Middle East by assigning blame to one party.”
Refusal to dialogue
Upon learning of Mr. Weaver’s criticism, I was reminded of the words of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who has compared Israel’s occupation to South African apartheid: “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” I nevertheless decided that, by engaging in a dialogue with Mr. Weaver, and by sharing with him the views of Archbishop Tutu and other human rights defenders who have condemned Israel’s oppression of the Palestinian people, I might be able to persuade him that the BDS resolution was not a “significant step away” from the values of the B.C. Green Party, and instead was fully consonant with, and indeed mandated by, those values.
I therefore sent a private message to Mr. Weaver requesting the opportunity to discuss the BDS resolution with him. He responded to my invitation by refusing to speak to me and by condemning the BDS resolution as “discriminatory.”
Bitter attacks
In light of Weaver’s refusal to engage in dialogue, 24 Green Party of Canada members who had sponsored and supported the BDS resolution, including 12 former candidates and three sitting members of the shadow cabinet, decided to author an op-ed responding to Weaver’s public criticism of the resolution. In our op-ed, we commended Weaver for his work as a climate scientist but argued that his criticism of the BDS resolution was “misguided.”
Weaver swiftly reacted to this op-ed with bitter attacks upon its authors. In comments to Postmedia (the giant newspaper chain that Weaver had successfully sued for defamation), he described us as “a rogue group with an agenda” and asserted that the Green Party of Canada had been “hijacked by extremist fringe elements.” He warned that members of the B.C. Green Party were considering changing the party’s name to distance it from the federal one. He also pronounced that he’d be shocked if Green Party of Canada leader Elizabeth May did not take action against me and the other two members of the shadow cabinet who had signed the op-ed.
On the same day that the op-ed was published, Ms. May did indeed take action against us. She demanded that we apologize to Weaver or be removed from shadow cabinet. In good conscience, I could not apologize for defending a humanitarian policy from Weaver’s misguided attacks. May therefore removed me from shadow cabinet. She also removed shadow cabinet members Lisa Barrett and Colin Griffiths, who had signed the op-ed with me.
Canadians support peace and justice in Mideast
Six months later, EKOS Research Associates, a well-respected Canadian polling firm, conducted a poll on Canadian attitudes toward Israel/Palestine. I sponsored that poll along with political commentator Murray Dobbin and two human rights organizations, Independent Jewish Voices Canada and Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East. The poll found that 78 per cent of those who expressed a view believed that a Palestinian call for a boycott on Israel was reasonable. More tellingly, it found that a whopping 91 per cent of respondents who identified themselves as supporters of the Green Party of Canada felt that the Palestinian call for a boycott was reasonable. One could hardly imagine a more powerful refutation of Weaver’s claim that the Green supporters of the BDS resolution were “extremist fringe elements.”
Weaver’s conduct during the BDS debate raises a serious question about his commitment to progressive values. For 50 years, Israel has been stealing Palestinian land in flagrant violation of international law. In 2004, the International Court of Justice unanimously ruled, with the concurrence of a U.S. judge, that Israel’s settlements violate the Fourth Geneva Convention. After decades of dispossession, the Palestinian people remain stateless. Their prospects for a viable sovereign state are more remote than ever.
In the face of such facts, it is unfathomable that an individual of Mr. Weaver’s intelligence could claim that the imposition of peaceful economic sanctions on those who are responsible for these crimes is stepping away from the values of social justice, non-violence and respect for diversity — three of the B.C. Green Party’s six core principles. It is even more remarkable that Mr. Weaver would smear the proponents of this humanitarian policy as a “rogue group” comprised of “extremist fringe elements.”
Christy Clark praised Israel during Gaza attack
To be fair to Weaver, when it comes to the plight of the Palestinian people, he is no worse than B.C.’s current leader.
In 2014, as Israel’s military rained bombs down on 1.8 million Palestinians trapped in the densely populated and besieged enclave of Gaza — a bombardment that ultimately resulted in the massacre of 500 Palestinian children and the wounding of 3,000 more children — B.C.’s current premier, Liberal Christy Clark, showered praise on Israel, calling it “a vibrant, culturally rich democratic nation committed to maintaining the rights of its citizens, regardless of gender or religion.”
“Israel is an example not only to the region,” Clark gushed, “but the world.”
Nothing obliged Christy Clark to laud Israel even as it committed war crimes in Gaza. Indeed, in Canada, foreign policy lies within the jurisdiction of the federal government, not provincial governments. But it is equally true that nothing obliged Andrew Weaver to insert himself into a foreign policy debate within the federal Green Party, a party of which he was not even a member.
Centrist party?
Unfortunately, Weaver’s refusal to take a stand for Palestinian human rights is far from the only reason to doubt his commitment to progressive values.
On the day that he all but demanded our dismissal from the Green Party of Canada shadow cabinet, Weaver told the right-leaning Vancouver Sun that the B.C. Green Party is “centrist” in its ideological approach. “Centrism” is little more than a euphemism for the preservation of the status quo. At best, it is a call for incrementalism. As a climate scientist, however, Weaver surely understands — or ought to — that decades of political inaction now oblige us to take radical action to transform the provincial, national and global economies. The system of ruthless, crony capitalism prevailing in much of the Western world lies at the core of the climate crisis. As Naomi Klein said on Democracy Now:
We have not done the things that are necessary to lower emissions because those things fundamentally conflict with deregulated capitalism, the reigning ideology for the entire period we have been struggling to find a way out of this crisis. We are stuck because the actions that would give us the best chance of averting catastrophe — and would benefit the vast majority — are extremely threatening to an elite minority that has a stranglehold over our economy, our political process, and most of our major media outlets.
Hostility to labour
In British Columbia, the guardians of deregulated capitalism are the incumbent Liberals.
Yet Andrew Weaver is offering an economic plan that he unabashedly declares to be “much closer” to that of the Liberals than the NDP. Mr. Weaver argues his plan is superior to that of the NDP because “their economic plan is to have government retrofit its buildings with union workers. You know, that doesn’t incentivize industry. You need to send a signal to the market and let the innovation and creativity happen there in the market.” That sounds a lot like a politician who wants to distance himself from organized labour while perpetuating the myth that markets can save us from a looming climate catastrophe.
Weaver raised further concerns about his commitment to organized labour when he recently met with two members of the Greater Victoria Teachers’ Association to discuss current issues in public education. In a Facebook post, one of those teachers wrote that Mr. Weaver complained in the meeting that the teachers’ association “grieves everything. That’s all you do is grieve, grieve, grieve. It’s the wrong approach. The [B.C. Teachers’ Federation] has some responsibility for this because you protect these bad teachers.”
The teacher says they left the meeting “feeling shocked and surprised by the disrespectful treatment they experienced,” adding that “many British Columbians perceive the Greens as a progressive party but many of their policies are libertarian and not aligned with the values people think they represent.”
What matters most to Weaver?
Other aspects of Andrew Weaver’s record raise serious questions about his political orientation. As Murray Dobbin recently observed:
[Andrew Weaver] supported two Liberal Party budgets. He supported the Liberals’ run-of-the-river hydro privatization that will keep hydro rates sky-high for the next two decades. He supported the idea of an oil refinery at Kitimat to refine tar sands bitumen — when most environmentalists are saying we have to keep most of it in the ground.
And just this week he came as close as possible to endorsing Clark when asked in a Global News interview which leader he would be “most comfortable” working with. Weaver would not answer but repeatedly referred to Horgan’s temper and how he would have to control it if Weaver was to work with him. And then he praised Clark: “[Y]ou can have a respectful disagreement in a one-on-one conversation and it’s not personal.”
Both the B.C. Greens and the NDP oppose the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion, whereas the Liberals support it. Both the B.C. Greens and the NDP support a proportional representation electoral system, whereas the Liberals have no interest in abandoning a first-past-the-post electoral system that has been very generous to them. Both the B.C. Greens and the NDP want to prohibit corporate political donations, whereas the Liberals are awash in corporate money.
As the May 9th election day approaches, polls indicate that the B.C. NDP has a slight lead on the Liberals, with both parties hovering near 40 per cent. Mr. Weaver’s Greens are a distant third at around 18 per cent. Thus, there is no realistic prospect of Mr. Weaver’s Greens winning this election, but his Greens may influence whether the Liberals are returned to power or are mercifully replaced by the NDP.
As B.C. voters head to the polls, they would do well to ask: What matters more to Andrew Weaver — John Horgan’s manners or Christy Clark’s slavish devotion to big business?