Pubdate: Thu, 30 Nov 2006 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2006 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Andy Riga DELEGATES TO HASH OUT GUN-CONTROL POLICY Social and justice workshop passes measures; Marijuana Party founder says legalization of pot would be a boon to tax collectors ANDY RIGA, The Gazette Liberal delegates today will debate whether the party should support a ban on automatic and semi-automatic weapons. Montrealer Ethan Cox, a gun-control activist working with Dawson shooting victim Hayder Kadhim, yesterday made a plea for the motion, which urges Ottawa to support "legislation to eliminate the personal use of automatic and semi-automatic weapons." Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper "has embarrassed himself in front of the country by refusing to meet with Hayder Kadhim, by refusing to deal with gun control," Cox told delegates at a policy workshop. "The Liberal Party can be the standard bearer. I urge you strongly on behalf of victims of (the Dawson shooting) and all others to" back the motion. One of the weapons used by Dawson gunman Kimveer Gill was a legally obtained semi-automatic rifle. Delegates at the social and justice workshop passed the gun-control motion, which now moves to today's full party plenary. In total, the workshop passed 20 motions, but only three got the support required to reach the plenary - the next step required for it to become official party policy. The other two social and justice motions that will go to today's plenary urge Ottawa to reduce child poverty and boost affordable housing. The only contentious workshop motion was one calling for pot's legalization. Marijuana Party founder Marc Boris St-Maurice, who defected to the Liberals two years ago, presented the pot motion, arguing the substance isn't dangerous and legalizing it would allow governments to reap great tax benefits. But Bob Goulais, a delegate from North Bay Ont., said it would be a mistake to legitimize pot. "This is linked to organized crime, this is big crime," Goulais said. "I don't want to be a part of Canada where my kids are seeing people smoking up on the side of the road just for the sake of a few tax dollars." Delegates supported the motion by a 28-15 vote, but it failed to get the needed support to reach today's session. n In a policy workshop on international affairs, delegates voted against increasing Canadian support for international peacekeeping operations, once a hallmark of Liberal government foreign policy. Delegates defeated a resolution calling on the party to support development of a federal government strategy to increase Canada's effective role in military and non-military peacekeeping and conflict resolution. Among the workshop's three priority resolutions, one urged the Canadian government to begin pushing for an international convention regulating the global trade in small arms and light weapons and their munitions. Another called for the government to ensure that freshwater resources are treated as a common good under public ownership. The final priority resolution supported the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous people to be voted on by the UN, and called on the federal government to develop a comprehensive arctic sovereignty strategy. n The controversial motion to recognize Quebec as a nation was withdrawn without discussion at the request of its sponsors, Quebec wing members Marc Belanger and William Hogg, who had announced their intention the day before on the ground that the issue had been adequately resolved by a House of Commons vote to that effect on Monday. n Delegates in a health policy workshop endorsed a resolution supported by one-time Progressive Conservative leadership candidate David Orchard that calls for tougher measures to limit environmental contaminant linked to cancer. "I'm pleased to be speaking at my first Liberal convention," said Orchard, now a Liberal and a Stephane Dion supporter. He said that in his native Saskatchewan spraying of pesticides is widespread and appealing for stricter controls. Without them, "our health costs are to continue to rise," he warned. The remaining two priority health resolutions call for more preventive health measures and clear performance indicators across Canada. The Quebec government, jealous of its jurisdiction over health care, opposes Canada-wide performance indicators. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek