本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Head tax stance may cost Liberals; Issue pivotal in Trinity-Spadina Ianno vulnerable to NDP challenger
Rita Daly
Toronto Star
765 words
15 December 2005
The Toronto Star
ONT
B02
English
Copyright (c) 2005 The Toronto Star
Old loyalties to political parties die hard. But the controversial Chinese head tax issue is stirring up a cauldron of emotions in Toronto's Chinatown that could cost Liberal incumbent Tony Ianno some crucial votes.
"This time the Liberals are being taken down because they have done wrong," says George Lau, trudging along the snow-covered sidewalk on Spadina Ave., south of College St.
His father, now deceased, paid the discriminatory $500 head tax to come into this country and now Lau, 74, is angry enough at the Liberals' position to be out campaigning for the NDP's Olivia Chow.
Ianno, has held the Trinity-Spadina riding for 12 years, but for the third time he is up against a formidable foe. Chow, who resigned her Toronto City Council seat to run, hopes to join husband and NDP Leader Jack Layton in Ottawa after the Jan. 23 election. Running for the Conservatives is lawyer Sam Goldstein.
While Ianno and Chow remain equally popular among many residents, the head tax issue has turned some die-hard Liberal voters against their traditional party of choice.
Up until last year's election Lau always voted Liberal, a common practice for many foreign-born Canadians grateful to the Trudeau government for easing immigration rules. He won't any more.
"It's not just me," he says, clutching one of Chow's election leaflets. "A lot of people are putting their vote into the NDP."
Late last month the federal government hammered out a $2.5 million agreement with a group called the National Congress of Chinese Canadians, angering other Chinese organizations left out of the deal who wanted an official apology and individual compensation to head-tax payers and their families. The money is being earmarked instead for educational activities.
"We're not compensating an individual for something that took place at the time the laws were what they were," says Ianno, campaigning a few blocks north on College St.
"What we're dealing with is the future, and today, in a way that educates Canadians at large so we can never allow this to happen again."
The community, he adds, "supports it overwhelmingly."
Ronnie Chiu, a real estate agent in the area, considers Chow a friend. But he sides with the Liberals on this issue and is campaigning for Ianno. Individual compensation would "open up a whole can of worms," he says.
His father, too, paid the head tax, he explains. But like so many Chinese immigrants back then, he bought another man's immigration papers to enter the country. "I, on the other hand, arrived on my father's papers. The guy who sold my father his papers has sons as well. So who is legally entitled to receive compensation? It would be one big mess."
Some 81,000 Chinese paid a total of $23 million between 1885 and 1923 under the head-tax scheme. Only a few hundred are still alive. Chow says it wouldn't hurt the government, at the very least, to pay those survivors back their money and apologize to the head-tax families.
"You can't move forward until you settle the past," she says. For years Chow has listened to families' stories of hardship, of years of labour it took for fathers to pay off the head tax, of families separated by the government's discriminatory laws against the Chinese.
The Chinese community, comprising nearly 20 per cent of the riding population, has been divided in the past when it comes to politics. Chinatown sits in the middle of Chow's former city ward, but long-time resident and NDP supporter Doug Hum - also the descendant of a head-tax payer - says not everyone in the Chinese business community likes her.
"Some don't feel she is business-oriented enough. You know, when public health gets after the restaurants, I guess they feel she doesn't crack down on public health and tell them to lay off."
Some businessmen with ties to the booming economy of mainland China have also criticized Chow for being too vocal in denouncing the Tiananmen Square massacre and raising human rights issues.
483568-337523.jpg | "What we're dealing with is the future," Liberal Tony Ianno says. Olivia Chow of the NDP says settle the past first. Sam Goldstein, a lawyer, is running for the Conservatives. - Olivia Chow of the NDP says settle the past first. - Sam Goldstein, a lawyer, is running for the Conservatives.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Rita Daly
Toronto Star
765 words
15 December 2005
The Toronto Star
ONT
B02
English
Copyright (c) 2005 The Toronto Star
Old loyalties to political parties die hard. But the controversial Chinese head tax issue is stirring up a cauldron of emotions in Toronto's Chinatown that could cost Liberal incumbent Tony Ianno some crucial votes.
"This time the Liberals are being taken down because they have done wrong," says George Lau, trudging along the snow-covered sidewalk on Spadina Ave., south of College St.
His father, now deceased, paid the discriminatory $500 head tax to come into this country and now Lau, 74, is angry enough at the Liberals' position to be out campaigning for the NDP's Olivia Chow.
Ianno, has held the Trinity-Spadina riding for 12 years, but for the third time he is up against a formidable foe. Chow, who resigned her Toronto City Council seat to run, hopes to join husband and NDP Leader Jack Layton in Ottawa after the Jan. 23 election. Running for the Conservatives is lawyer Sam Goldstein.
While Ianno and Chow remain equally popular among many residents, the head tax issue has turned some die-hard Liberal voters against their traditional party of choice.
Up until last year's election Lau always voted Liberal, a common practice for many foreign-born Canadians grateful to the Trudeau government for easing immigration rules. He won't any more.
"It's not just me," he says, clutching one of Chow's election leaflets. "A lot of people are putting their vote into the NDP."
Late last month the federal government hammered out a $2.5 million agreement with a group called the National Congress of Chinese Canadians, angering other Chinese organizations left out of the deal who wanted an official apology and individual compensation to head-tax payers and their families. The money is being earmarked instead for educational activities.
"We're not compensating an individual for something that took place at the time the laws were what they were," says Ianno, campaigning a few blocks north on College St.
"What we're dealing with is the future, and today, in a way that educates Canadians at large so we can never allow this to happen again."
The community, he adds, "supports it overwhelmingly."
Ronnie Chiu, a real estate agent in the area, considers Chow a friend. But he sides with the Liberals on this issue and is campaigning for Ianno. Individual compensation would "open up a whole can of worms," he says.
His father, too, paid the head tax, he explains. But like so many Chinese immigrants back then, he bought another man's immigration papers to enter the country. "I, on the other hand, arrived on my father's papers. The guy who sold my father his papers has sons as well. So who is legally entitled to receive compensation? It would be one big mess."
Some 81,000 Chinese paid a total of $23 million between 1885 and 1923 under the head-tax scheme. Only a few hundred are still alive. Chow says it wouldn't hurt the government, at the very least, to pay those survivors back their money and apologize to the head-tax families.
"You can't move forward until you settle the past," she says. For years Chow has listened to families' stories of hardship, of years of labour it took for fathers to pay off the head tax, of families separated by the government's discriminatory laws against the Chinese.
The Chinese community, comprising nearly 20 per cent of the riding population, has been divided in the past when it comes to politics. Chinatown sits in the middle of Chow's former city ward, but long-time resident and NDP supporter Doug Hum - also the descendant of a head-tax payer - says not everyone in the Chinese business community likes her.
"Some don't feel she is business-oriented enough. You know, when public health gets after the restaurants, I guess they feel she doesn't crack down on public health and tell them to lay off."
Some businessmen with ties to the booming economy of mainland China have also criticized Chow for being too vocal in denouncing the Tiananmen Square massacre and raising human rights issues.
483568-337523.jpg | "What we're dealing with is the future," Liberal Tony Ianno says. Olivia Chow of the NDP says settle the past first. Sam Goldstein, a lawyer, is running for the Conservatives. - Olivia Chow of the NDP says settle the past first. - Sam Goldstein, a lawyer, is running for the Conservatives.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net