Greetings, friends. My name is Jess McLean, and I'm here to provide you with some blueprints
Speaker:of disruption. This weekly podcast is dedicated to amplifying the work of activists, examining
Speaker:power structures, and sharing the success stories from the grassroots. Through these discussions,
Speaker:we hope to provide folks with the tools and the inspiration they need to start to dismantle
Speaker:capitalism, decolonize our spaces, and bring about the political revolution that we know
Speaker:we need. Greetings, audience. This is certainly a unique episode of Blueprints of Disruption,
Speaker:a deeply personal one for me. If any of you follow me on Twitter, you'll know that the
Speaker:Ontario NDP has launched an attack on me, a pretty unsubstantiated grasping at straws,
Speaker:defamatory sort of attack. But either way, here we are. And although I was asked to keep...
Speaker:this nonsense confidential and quiet. I think we all know that's just not my style, nor does
Speaker:that serve transparency or democracy any good. So I'm here today to kind of walk you folks
Speaker:through my NDP story. So this episode is going to be a little bit of a therapy session. I've
Speaker:been joined by my wonderful comrades, Jay Woodrove. and my comrade and producer, Santiago, hello,
Speaker:Quintero. And they're gonna help me just probably emotionally get through this episode, try to
Speaker:keep me on track. Maybe they'll ask some questions, some folks you are wondering yourself. Either
Speaker:way, I'm gonna start off by explaining how we got here. Why, it'll help folks understand
Speaker:why I'm under attack. by the NDP, I have been for some time, this is just kind of an escalation
Speaker:of tactics. And I think it will mirror many of your experiences within the party on how
Speaker:I entered this partisan space, how I was treated as a socialist and a dissenter, and how I feel
Speaker:about the party now. Although I'm extremely stressed out about this kind of attack. despite
Speaker:distancing myself from the party. I'm gonna go through it with you all anyway, because
Speaker:I want this to serve as like that final warning to folks, they absolutely will do this to you.
Speaker:There's nothing terribly unique about my experience except for perhaps I have shouted the loudest
Speaker:and maybe the longest about how off of this party is. I really don't know, but either way,
Speaker:here we go. I just want, yeah, I wanna make a note, like I'm not the first person. and
Speaker:I won't be the last person. We've had plenty of public stories come out of mistreatment.
Speaker:In fact, we've dedicated quite a few episodes here on Blueprints of Disruption that have
Speaker:amplified some of those stories. I hope maybe some of you will remember them. If not, they're
Speaker:easy to find. Wherever you're listening to this episode, you will find them. They're usually
Speaker:prefaced with inside the NDP. They'll help fill in a lot of the gaps that we won't go through
Speaker:in this hour, but... Essentially, I've given you little tidbits of my story throughout,
Speaker:but I've never really told it in full. I've never come out here and asked for a whole lot
Speaker:of solidarity or defending despite so many blows by this party. But I do think it's time that
Speaker:I kind of tell my entire story. And like I said, it'll explain where we've gotten to. All right,
Speaker:so. How did I join the NDP? I've been a longtime member. I mean, I've got some really rumpled
Speaker:up membership card with... Still has Andrea's face on it, but shit, I got it when I was a
Speaker:teenager. So, yeah, it's... I was brought up in a real leftist household. My dad was a Waffle
Speaker:member. I don't have the time to get into those stories, but he likely understands my experience,
Speaker:we'll say that. I wasn't very involved with the party until I moved up here out of the
Speaker:city. and I absolutely needed to connect with politically minded people. I'd just left University
Speaker:for Political Science where I had been even more radicalized and was determined to organize
Speaker:and push this country left by any means necessary. And I got my feet wet in my local campaign,
Speaker:a provincial campaign for Dave Solosi in York Simcoe. I because their Twitter account hadn't
Speaker:updated anything for the campaign. And if there was one thing that I knew, it was Twitter.
Speaker:And so I was like, hey, you know, the least I can do is I'll run your Twitter account.
Speaker:I'll help boost your signal. That's all I intended to do, you know, it was kind of, it was a lame
Speaker:offer. But I went in and I started helping. And like any small campaigns, you'll know there
Speaker:was, everybody in there was wearing four or five hats. So long story short. I do as I always
Speaker:do when I get into spaces, I do the work that needs doing, no questions asked. And I ended
Speaker:up managing that campaign when the campaign manager bailed. And we did very well. We challenged
Speaker:Carolyn Mulrooney and I was hooked on political campaigns. There was nothing else for me. I
Speaker:loved the excitement of E-Day. the frazzled nature of small campaigns and everybody trying
Speaker:to do everything. And I absolutely love the possibility of going out into conservative
Speaker:territory and talking socialism with these people. I wasn't really able to do that as freely on
Speaker:that campaign, but very soon I ran as a federal candidate in a by-election. That by-election
Speaker:was just me and Jagmeet, right? He was running in Burnaby and... I was running here in Ontario,
Speaker:so no one was watching my campaign, right? Nobody. But I had a lot of support from outside the
Speaker:province and within the province. And you know, my EDA was very supportive. They encouraged
Speaker:me to run. And at the time, the party, they encouraged me to run. I know a lot of you candidates
Speaker:out there have gotten that call from people talking you up, telling you how great you will
Speaker:be as a candidate. Jay, I know you had the same pitch thrown at you. Maybe didn't turn out
Speaker:the same, yeah? But that was fun. And I ran and I did really well. I was able to go toe
Speaker:to toe with conservatives. We raised $20,000 in one night in a writing that would have been
Speaker:our record spending. And we just blew that out of the water. And you know the only phone call
Speaker:that I ever fucking got during that whole campaign? was when I tweeted out about Venezuela. That's
Speaker:when I knew the party was just not the party I thought it was in. Rather than trying to
Speaker:call me and support me and give me a pep talk, or I had the national director, Melissa Bruno,
Speaker:call me right before my very first debate. So I have chronic anxiety. I am throwing up. I
Speaker:am sweating. I am so nervous. And my phone rings and it's the NDP. And all they wanted to do
Speaker:was chew me out for taking a stand against their god-awful position on Venezuela and the attempted
Speaker:coup. And I let them fucking have it. They thought I'm a first-time candidate. They didn't know
Speaker:me from Boo. And I just gave it right back to Bruno. And I think at that point they just
Speaker:knew I was a problem. But I wasn't having it. I told them they were wrong, their position
Speaker:was wrong, I don't care if it's causing bad press. And I know some of you out there don't
Speaker:appreciate my style, that perhaps that isn't politically savvy of me. But for all the other
Speaker:people who actually know me, they know that I am so principled. And I take a position,
Speaker:I take what I think is the right position, not the popular position. And that doesn't make
Speaker:me any friends inside of partisan spaces, I'll tell you that. Not many. That I feel like that
Speaker:was a dig at YouTube. I've made some really good friends too. So yeah, um, I'll walk that
Speaker:back a bit, but either way I run, I run a good campaign. Like I said, we, we raised record
Speaker:money. We had great numbers and I didn't get one thank you phone call. And this is normal
Speaker:for candidates. Yeah. Again, my story is not all that unique, but I'm. I'm now a realist
Speaker:when it comes to the party. But I run again. Don't ask me why, it's very complicated. That's
Speaker:a whole other episode probably. But I ran again. Nobody else in my writing would do it. And
Speaker:I wouldn't have a paper candidate. I guess that's the real, if we want to boil it down. I had
Speaker:built a movement here in York Simcoe. We had doubled our ADA. We had gotten people excited
Speaker:about real leftist policies and politics and... grassroots organizing in this conservative
Speaker:territory. And I didn't want to let that go, but I knew it was in store for me. But I ran
Speaker:by myself. I managed my own campaign. That's what it's like out here, you know, where we
Speaker:have no supports and people don't think we can win. And I doubled the vote share, running
Speaker:as an open socialist, again, on bare bones, bare bones campaign. So despite being really
Speaker:good at what I do, All I ever got from the party was pushback and hostility. So I thought I'd
Speaker:go in and change it up a bit. I wasn't gonna stand for this. This was my party. This was
Speaker:my dad's party. This was the left's party, the workers' party. I wasn't just gonna be like,
Speaker:oh, this space sucks. I'm leaving. This is stressful and it is stressful again. The toll on my mental
Speaker:health has been great. But I walked into my very first Ontario NDP convention. I took the
Speaker:whole family to Hamilton. I couldn't be without Mike. We all went, first time delegate, rookie.
Speaker:And I meet all these great people, especially from Hamilton and Ottawa Center. They just
Speaker:came to me like, it's like they knew me, I guess from my tweets or I don't really know how they
Speaker:knew me. I guess people had been paying attention and I didn't know, right? And these folks,
Speaker:they... They were up until like 2 a.m. They convinced me to run for member at large. Like
Speaker:I had no idea how the process worked at all. They took care of everything for me. I didn't
Speaker:even know them. And I'll tell you, like, I remember so, I just have photographs. It was just such
Speaker:a blur. And true to my form as always, last minute campaign literally formed on the floor
Speaker:at the end of day one. And it was just... A protest campaign, like all my campaigns, just
Speaker:telling them you're not paying attention to the grassroots. You're not trying to change
Speaker:the narrative. You're just trying to win an election. Our job is so much more than that.
Speaker:And that really resonated with people because we had no campaign and I came within 11 votes
Speaker:of making it onto the executive. And if anybody understands internal NDP elections, those members
Speaker:at large, the VP slots, all of those executive slots. are set. The establishment knows exactly
Speaker:who they want in there. So anytime you can mount any kind of challenge to them, I think I'm
Speaker:going to toot my own horn. It was impressive. But I think it the reason it works is because
Speaker:so many people out there are so fucking frustrated with this party that what I was speaking was
Speaker:just pure truth and they voted for it. But I didn't make it on and I might be better off
Speaker:that I didn't because From the stories that we've shared here on Blueprints of Disruption,
Speaker:we know that those executives are absolutely toxic spaces. Another fun tidbit there, our
Speaker:current interim leader, he was a real friend of my writing. He had gone door to door with
Speaker:me. Peter Tabins had helped open my campaign office. Incredibly supportive prior to that.
Speaker:And I asked him because he had been so close. during my campaign if he would endorse me.
Speaker:And he openly told me I was far too radical for him to stand beside me on the floor. So
Speaker:that's what politics does to people. He's not alone in that either. I apologize for kind
Speaker:of centering Peter out there, but yeah, that is quite typical. And I think by the time I
Speaker:get to this part of my story, maybe a few of you have caught up. Maybe that's when you started
Speaker:following my story a little bit on your own, but I ran for the federal president. near the
Speaker:beginning of the pandemic. And I did that encouraged by my new DemoChat family. We'll kind of go
Speaker:into that later because they've been dragged into this sordid tale. And they made it as
Speaker:hard as possible for me in that campaign. I was given no information, no membership lists,
Speaker:no even confirmation that I had registered. They gave me details on. the length of speech
Speaker:I could provide and what kind of format it would be, all last minute, all last minute, just
Speaker:trying to be as difficult as possible. And again, this was a two week campaign and we got 33%
Speaker:of the vote because I got on the floor and I spoke the truth about almost every writing
Speaker:association's experience of being neglected, of campaigns being ruined, candidates being
Speaker:blocked. and folks that had an F. We were shocked with the result, right? In all of these campaigns
Speaker:that I have ever run in the party, the one thing that is, that runs through all of them, the
Speaker:thread that runs through all of them is I never did it to win. And it shocked me. We interviewed
Speaker:Dimitri Lascaris on this show in an episode called Wasted Energy, which really rings true
Speaker:right now. And I asked him that question, like, did you run to be the leader of the Green Party
Speaker:to win? And I thought for sure he'd say yes, because he came so close. It was close. Like
Speaker:that was a, that was a legitimate campaign. I felt like mine was just the opportunity.
Speaker:I just wanted the opportunity to be able to say on the floor of convention what everyone
Speaker:had been saying to one another, what we had all been complaining to one another for, for
Speaker:so long. just nobody have ever said it really like out loud to their face, except for the
Speaker:Socialist Caucus and we know how they're treated. But, you know, they do speak truth. No one
Speaker:likes their tactics, but those are truths. And they've been trying to tear down the bureaucracy
Speaker:for years to their credit. That's all the credit I'll give them right now. You know, and silly
Speaker:me, I try to do this again for the Ontario NDP, run for president. You know, I'll be honest,
Speaker:the results there were not very good. I think it was like 11 percent. I did. Very poorly.
Speaker:I guess I did. It was again, just, there's so much change that's needed in this party and
Speaker:people just keep trying to do it through all these different means. And I thought one of
Speaker:those would be to shape the executive or at least to bring these issues to light to the
Speaker:members as a mass in hopes that they would reform themselves. I was wrong. that party isn't ready
Speaker:for change. So I told that story, one, because I don't think I've ever, you know, kind of
Speaker:gone through it. But also because people keep asking me, why does the party attack you? Why
Speaker:would they do that?
Speaker:Why are you so combative with them? And I think it helps folks to see my progression and my
Speaker:dedication through the party and that it's just been resistance at every turn. And I know that
Speaker:can resonate with some folks out there, but I hope... If it doesn't, you guys can try to
Speaker:imagine what that must feel like to advocate within a progressive party, a party that's
Speaker:supposed to be built on fairness and equity and to just feel nothing but pushback, right,
Speaker:for you trying to change things. When I say I'm under attack, what's that mean? Because
Speaker:I know not everybody's gonna have read the letter. So Santiago, maybe you can help me kind of
Speaker:walk through the letter and explain it to folks. Like... I don't know, maybe you could summarize
Speaker:what it is from a more, a less personal perspective. There's a word that comes to mind that describes
Speaker:the letter pretty well. I mean, it's bullshit is what it is. Sorry that I don't have a more
Speaker:eloquent description right now. I just, I wanna start with that because it is what it is. The
Speaker:letter was...
Speaker:the NDP's best attempt at putting together a smear against you, and I say the best attempt
Speaker:because having read the letter, I'd say it falls quite short. They didn't have anything substantial
Speaker:at all, not even remotely, and a lot of the claims were quite a stretch to say the very
Speaker:least. I'm going to try to objectively kind of give you folks a rundown. Now, I'm not going
Speaker:to sit and read the whole letter. I mean, it's 12 pages of a PDF. It is on my Twitter account,
Speaker:watermarked all over the place, confidential. Please don't share this. I don't operate that
Speaker:way. And these folks aren't going to drag me behind closed doors and try to rake me over
Speaker:the coals. So that's why I tweeted it out. let's run through it just so we can set the stage
Speaker:because then we're gonna tear it apart. I'm gonna respond to it. I'm not gonna respond
Speaker:to it in the way that they want me to respond to it, you know, by, I don't know, November
Speaker:21st via respect at Ontario NDP.ca. I'm gonna do it in the way that feels comfortable for
Speaker:me, that allows me to express myself. So basically they've launched an investigation. This is
Speaker:really rich. The administrative committee. whatever the fuck that is, has given the subcommittee,
Speaker:they've created a subcommittee to investigate the following. All right, and so that's when
Speaker:we get into a list of tweets, essentially, that they don't like. One of them depicts a meme
Speaker:that they claim is anti-Semitic. Again, I have posted all of this on my Twitter for full disclosure,
Speaker:for folks to see that. From the discussions that went around as after I released this,
Speaker:you know, people did some digging on the meme format and apparently it does have some really
Speaker:obscure reference that not one of my Jewish comrades that approached me had known off the
Speaker:bat. It required an intense amount of research to get to that. So clearly the same trope that's
Speaker:been used against the left to say that I'm anti-Semitic, a known advocate for Palestine within the party.
Speaker:This is not my first time that they've thrown that at me. But so apparently that tweet is
Speaker:what launched the initial investigation. And clearly since then, they have been monitoring
Speaker:my Twitter account. Now I'm not an MPP, I'm not an elected. executive of the party. I resigned
Speaker:from my EDA. So I'm not even what you would consider an active member, but they have been
Speaker:monitoring my Twitter account. And I think it serves a good purpose here to mention a few
Speaker:of them because like Santiago said, they're all very ridiculous. So for all of the tweets
Speaker:that they've sent me, they've demanded I answer certain questions, very pointed questions about
Speaker:whether or not I think it violates their harassment policy. Things like, yes, the system is rotten.
Speaker:Of course, replacing key folks won't solve it all. But how do you start to reform a system
Speaker:while the controllers remain at the helm? Dug in. You don't. You clean house first. Can you
Speaker:please advise whether you believe your contact aligns with the objective of the policy? This
Speaker:repeats itself over and over again. Again, all public, you can read it. But they're essentially
Speaker:my valid critiques of the party. I occasionally use language that you hear on the podcast.
Speaker:Yes, I use the F word in some of my tweets. Some of them are very pointed to individuals
Speaker:like Lucy Watson. I say, Lucy Watson can't figure out how to make their meetings accessible.
Speaker:Fire her. I mean, I stand by that statement. Jay, how many times have we said that publicly?
Speaker:I think we've even said it in provincial council and nobody wrote us up for this. The thing
Speaker:that's interesting about that tweet is this committee that launched this investigation
Speaker:would have met on Zoom. So They can find the accessibility for themselves, but not for members.
Speaker:And you call that out and that's a violation. Another irony about this committee that we
Speaker:didn't bring up, but Jay, thank you. We've talked to three executives on the Ontario NDP and
Speaker:none of them were aware that this committee was being struck or that it was, you know,
Speaker:they had no involvement in its initiation. which makes it kind of sound like a bit of a secret
Speaker:committee, which to my knowledge isn't terribly democratic, but, um, I mean, you guys can decide
Speaker:that for yourself. Just for some information, the administrative committee is said to be
Speaker:made up of party officers and the national director, but we don't know the actual list of people
Speaker:who take part in this. This is a subcommittee of the executive and the administrative committee,
Speaker:which we don't know the roster of, strikes the, not just the anti-harassment committees and
Speaker:stuff like that, but any number of committees that they want and their work is confidential
Speaker:for the most part from the executive, which is struck by council. So the executive doesn't
Speaker:know how to report to council on the subcommittees that it strikes. So just to add a little bit
Speaker:of detail to the administrative committee and the process in which this investigation was
Speaker:created, as deep in the shadows as you can be. It sounds scary. It's not really. It's three
Speaker:vice presidents. I'm going to name them because they had the audacity to put their names on
Speaker:this letter and send it to me. And I feel harassed by them. So maybe I should launch a complaint?
Speaker:I don't know. Either way, Vice President Susan Barclay, Ali Shatour, and Alex Felsky are the
Speaker:subcommittee tasked with investigating my online conduct. Now how does that feel? I mean Santiago,
Speaker:I know you- I don't know if you're still a member or whatnot, but I'm gonna put that to both
Speaker:of you folks just for a second. How does that make you feel thinking that the party might
Speaker:be monitoring your Twitter account, taking screenshots, building a file? I mean, for one, it pisses
Speaker:me off that that's what they're, we're wasting their time doing when members are begging them
Speaker:to do something, anything else in this moment. I mean, it's an entire... It's a complete waste
Speaker:of time when there was, as far as I know, virtually no messages to do with the potential general
Speaker:strike that almost happened. Everything that was, everything that we've been going through
Speaker:in this last week with a leadership race coming up, this is what they're using their time for.
Speaker:This is what they're wasting, wasting the donations and money and time doing. I mean, it's an absolutely...
Speaker:ridiculous thing to do and quite frankly with all of the issues that members bring up constantly
Speaker:you would think that you know it should be quite the opposite there have been so many complaints
Speaker:against members of the executive yet there never seems to be an investigation against them and
Speaker:I mean it's very clear why but that's just what comes to mind right now. I'm laughing so hard
Speaker:at what you just said Santiago, because what are the two things this party continuously
Speaker:say? We don't have enough money, we don't have enough people. Is that because they're too
Speaker:busy investigating and monitoring members? Also, it's important to note, what are their affiliations
Speaker:with the federal level? Because one of those names is someone who is supposed to be focused
Speaker:on the team jug meat. So it's interesting that the resources of two parties were used to go
Speaker:and investigate some tweets about you calling out how this party operates partly. It's just
Speaker:when we look at the actual see on if you read the letter and you just read it and judge it
Speaker:based on what it is. You don't actually realize how every single thing in that letter is what
Speaker:you have called them out for doing for years. So it's like, hey, you know what we should
Speaker:do? We should try to smear her, smear her while actively validating everything she has criticized.
Speaker:I do feel very validated. They're punishing you for being accurate. Yeah, yeah, that's
Speaker:my issue there. Like, you know, folks are like, are you worried they'll do this and that? I'm
Speaker:like, they can't hurt me. I don't give a shit about their membership card at all. They can
Speaker:have it. I mean, I say that lightheartedly and I really don't care about my membership card,
Speaker:but I do care that they're gonna do this to the next person and the next person and the
Speaker:next person. And that's just been become the norm when you get too feisty within the party
Speaker:and they don't like what you have to say, they will. do this. You guys brought up two things.
Speaker:They've been doing this. Yeah, no. Definitely, I have seen this happen to so many people and
Speaker:it's definitely not even their first attempt at me. So none of this surprises me. Two things
Speaker:you guys brought up remind me, like that's what you guys are gonna do throughout this. Like
Speaker:remind me of all these tangents that are essentially tied together. But both you kind of mentioned
Speaker:proximity to the Ontario leadership run and the fact that they've been digging, clearly
Speaker:been digging through my Twitter account almost in an effort to pre-disqualify me. Full disclosure,
Speaker:I had no intent and Jay, Jay if there's anyone who knows this so clearly because Jay has asked
Speaker:me about a kajillion times to run and I never... really even considered it. I didn't even humor
Speaker:Jay for very long at all. It was not in my cards, but I can see how they thought it might be.
Speaker:You know, I'm clearly not happy with Merritt being anointed. She's not my idea of a socialist
Speaker:or anybody that will reform the party, and I've said as much. But... It seems strange that
Speaker:they were going through my Twitter account in this time that you say they should be so busy
Speaker:doing this, that, and the other thing. But what we have to remember about this party is holding
Speaker:on to that inner circle's power has always been their number one priority. Not winning elections,
Speaker:not even looking good because this makes them look so bad. They are predominantly occupied
Speaker:most of the time with maintaining their own power. So I think this was a blend of making
Speaker:sure there was no chance I could run for leadership of the Ontario NDP, because we have to remember
Speaker:Lucy Watson, the person who's 100% behind most of this, gets final say on who gets to run
Speaker:and who doesn't. Another huge factor why a lot of grass—there's almost no grassroots member
Speaker:that will attempt to run, because they can likely only expect something like this, you know?
Speaker:And the other point, Santiago— You know, you talked about complaints, harassment complaints,
Speaker:detailed accounts of nomination meetings being so sus, right? Folks with receipts, folks who've
Speaker:emailed them, launched formal complaints, gone public, you name it, you know, from slighted
Speaker:MPPs and the executives. Those wonderful people that said that they would lead this party never
Speaker:investigated any of it. Their current president of the ONDP and the current president of the
Speaker:federal NDP sat through conventions where members just constantly called out all of these internal
Speaker:democratic issues with the party, issues of harassment and oppression. And they didn't
Speaker:investigate one thing. Not one thing, right? Not one of those claims around any of those
Speaker:nomination meetings ever got investigated, but a subcommittee can be launched to investigate
Speaker:a single member and what they consider hostile tweets to other members. Just cause I don't
Speaker:know the answer to this. Out of all the tweets that they pulled up, which one of them is the
Speaker:most recent? Like, are they particularly recent at all? It would have been the petition ones.
Speaker:Or the remove people one. And when would that have been? September. It's November right now.
Speaker:The timing of it begs the question, right? Yeah, they've spent considerable time digging because
Speaker:if we go back to the original meme that they lead off the complaint with, I mean, that's
Speaker:two years old. And then we have things as recent as, you know, the end of the summer here in
Speaker:2022. Yeah, but with that... that original tweet from two years ago, they like to keep receipts
Speaker:for later. So I doubt this committee even investigated it. They just had it presented to them as an
Speaker:issue, took the word of the issue or made the issue apparent. Because there are people who
Speaker:ran four years ago and then for this campaign, they were like, oh, no, because you have. Podcast
Speaker:episodes that are bad, but they remove those podcast episodes like four years ago because
Speaker:the party asked them to remove it in order for them to run So they are rejecting people based
Speaker:off of receipts that are from like four years ago Yeah, well, that's typical too So folks
Speaker:who listen to our episode on the candidate search and all the problems around that if you want
Speaker:to run from the NDP As a candidate for MP or MPP You need to subject yourself to an intense
Speaker:level of scrutiny. I'm not fucking running for anything. There's no reason they should be
Speaker:looking through my Twitter account. So yeah, when you run for candidate, you actually have
Speaker:to upload your entire profile. People have to give up their dating profiles, everything.
Speaker:Your private messages from Facebook are given to them. And that's the reason for taking so
Speaker:long on a lot of vetting is because they go through this. So I want people to understand
Speaker:that your donations... All those letters that you get to meet a certain deadline, to help
Speaker:Team Jagmeet, this and that, those donations are being spent clearly on combing through
Speaker:the social media of its own people. Like we saw in BC how they turned on folks advocating
Speaker:for more leftist policies, eco-socialists in BC, the smear campaign, called them thugs.
Speaker:That's the same right across the province. That is how they view the grassroots as a threat.
Speaker:And that's how they treat us. But they are spending those resources. We have such limited resources
Speaker:compared to the other parties. And we are spending it on policing within our own party, tone policing,
Speaker:making sure the provincial director isn't facing any calls to have her fired. That's one of
Speaker:the other items that they really bring up that they try to come after me for is a petition.
Speaker:So I didn't call Jay on here to kind of scapegoat him, but anybody who links themselves to that
Speaker:petition can see that Jay Woodroof is the author. And yet in this letter to me, they demand to
Speaker:know whether I started that. Like talking about attacking my freedom of association, right,
Speaker:like because Jay did something, I am involved in it, you know? You're always getting me in
Speaker:trouble, Jay. It's easy to do. Well, let's be clear, like this petition calls on Lucy Watson
Speaker:to be fired. And I 100% stand by the petition. I shared the petition. I signed the petition.
Speaker:I think the names were public. Quite a few people signed that. So I guess beware. They take some
Speaker:offense to folks using their name on a petition that's addressed to them. I don't know. what
Speaker:to do with that. Either way, that's my response to the whole petition thing. I mean, Jay, do
Speaker:you wanna promote the petition? We can always link it in the show notes. I think covering
Speaker:the absurdity of these things is very important because in the letter that you shared, the
Speaker:screenshot that they use as evidence for the petition has the word author and Jay Woodrow.
Speaker:So to ask you if you authored it, well, you provided me evidence that has the author's
Speaker:name. Second of all, why does that petition exist? Because the director or secretary, depending
Speaker:on the province you're in, the national director, the provincial director, provincial secretaries
Speaker:are non-elected, they're non-union, they are employed at the will of the council. So as
Speaker:council members we can vote to remove them. I tried to have a motion added to the agenda
Speaker:of a council meeting that called for a vote to determine if council still wanted the director
Speaker:that we had. So of course the director controlled executive which has secret committees wouldn't
Speaker:acknowledge it. So what I did is I do what any organizer does and I emailed all the executives.
Speaker:So what happened is they got angry that I had found their emails and they launched an investigation
Speaker:because a member contacted the executive to say, stop preventing this motion from being
Speaker:tabled. Look, I have a petition that shows you How many people want this motion tabled? Stop
Speaker:blocking it. It has yet to be tabled, and now they are punishing people for their association,
Speaker:for promoting it or signing it. And here's the thing, they went after you for sharing it before
Speaker:they went after me for authoring it, and for doing the horrible violation of contacting
Speaker:our executive. So. It's also important not just to say, oh, because there was a petition, but
Speaker:why that petition existed in the first place makes this even more absurd because the petition
Speaker:exists for them blocking member rights and you are in violation of something. I mean, even
Speaker:just the notion that a petition is in any way a problem. I mean, the literal name of the
Speaker:party is New Democratic Party. Right? Like. I'm sorry that we're expecting there to be
Speaker:some sort of level of democracy here. A petition is not even a vote. I mean, it's like, it's
Speaker:essentially a strongly worded letter, right? Like, come on. The fact that there can be no
Speaker:possible interpretation where petition is in any way grounds for any sort of investigation
Speaker:to conduct. I mean, come on. The idea of that I take such issue with. It's so ridiculous.
Speaker:If Santiago takes issue with that, I want to get his reaction on how they first came after
Speaker:you for that petition and us, right? Like, I'm always, you're always again, I'm always getting
Speaker:painted with everyone's brush. But they called us anti worker because we were trying to get
Speaker:the most senior fucking management person fired who's not even a member of the union. Somehow
Speaker:they got that union. to come out and issue a letter, like in her defense. I mean, they started
Speaker:going on about some graphic and playing semantics on how we said, you know, can the members fire
Speaker:staff? And they're like, you're anti-worker. And literally, like these are folks with dozens
Speaker:of harassment complaints collectively against them. And we were anti-worker for calling them
Speaker:out. Because this last week, showed that the NDP is particularly pro-worker, right? Because
Speaker:they did so much this past week to support workers, right? Fuck off. Don't even get me started
Speaker:about the ONDP and workers. So I've had, see, here's the thing. That history that I gave
Speaker:you all those times, I was like super public complaining about the party. Well, that made
Speaker:me a little bit of a beacon of sorts, right? Endless people and from MPs, MPPs to grassroots
Speaker:members, to labor relations folks that work with the NTP, I have all their stories. The
Speaker:writing associations, the blocked candidates, the former staffers, the former phone bank
Speaker:workers fired for advocating against ABA therapy. The disabled members that were ambushed inside
Speaker:their own space by an MPP, that was never investigated. I have all of these stories. They are endless.
Speaker:They are in books that I'm surrounded by. Some I can share their names. Some we've shared
Speaker:on episodes. But all of these things build up to this huge case against the party. and the
Speaker:people that run it, and the only thing that they can think to do is to come after me for
Speaker:some strongly worded tweets. I imagine their goal is to remove my membership. Like, I just...
Speaker:I can't really understand their end game. I think that's one thing that also keeps getting
Speaker:me, but... Yeah, with everything that you just said, like... That was actually kind of my
Speaker:first reaction. when I heard about that this morning, I'm like, wow. Really? Jess knows
Speaker:where all the bodies are buried. Do they really wanna provoke her right now? Like, because
Speaker:all of the dirt that you have on them is so exponentially greater than this. Everything
Speaker:that they tried to pin against you. I mean, like the amount of legitimate, actual, like,
Speaker:documented. Issue like proof that you have against them and the audacity here to launch something
Speaker:against you. I mean it It almost seems Uncalculated Jay, well, I have a theory but I also want
Speaker:to point something out that you left out of your story and only lightly touched on I met
Speaker:you because I was on a mission to try and find a way to contact all the writing associations
Speaker:To have open communication So let me get through this before you comment, because this is gonna
Speaker:have like every possible trigger going forward. So we met trying to connect people, connect
Speaker:members. And we did that to try and help coordinate and help boost each other and support each
Speaker:other. And then we started finding members who were sharing issues. And then we were hosting
Speaker:events to teach people how to take part. what to do, how best practices, let's share thoughts
Speaker:and a collective, a collective NDP resource. You horrible person, you. How dare you do this?
Speaker:But at the same time, while the party is sitting there viewing your organizing as horrible and
Speaker:investigating you, you've done nothing but connect people for years within the NDP. And it hasn't
Speaker:been to funnel people out of the NDP, it's how to exist in a safe way, or try to make it safer,
Speaker:and have the party not spend its time investigating members, but doing what you were doing. So
Speaker:I find it unbelievably telling, and again, the validation of them going after you for pointing
Speaker:out exactly what they are proving. And that's the interesting thing is when they lash out,
Speaker:they're actually proving people right when they do. You saw it in the BC leadership stuff,
Speaker:you see it right now, you're pulling out the realities. So to me, I ask, why now? It's a
Speaker:pretty quiet time. Why you? Why because of my petition? Why? would this situation exist?
Speaker:And the only thing I can think of is either they're afraid you're going to run or try to
Speaker:run and they know if they gave you any issues there would be major backlash or two they want
Speaker:to clean the slate before their big PR opportunity of a acclamation of their chosen candidate
Speaker:and any voice that is more influential and can overshadow the party must be removed. So I
Speaker:want to ask you. Why do you think it's now? Why do you think it's these really petty things
Speaker:that when we talk about the petition, one of the issues they have with the petition is it
Speaker:used their name and it used an image that they created for material. So it's not even things
Speaker:you have said, that you have supported something that has images and words. So it's not even
Speaker:a valid thing against you. So why now? and why you? I think part of telling my story at the
Speaker:beginning was to explain why me. I'm not the only person that speaks out against the party,
Speaker:but I do air a lot of that dirty laundry that Santiago talks about. Like I don't just complain
Speaker:about their policies. I'm not belittling the people that do that. That's legitimate, and
Speaker:I do that as well. Most of them suck. And, but I air their dirty laundry legit, you know?
Speaker:I tell people exactly how they are manipulating the system, how their authoritarian control
Speaker:is destroying the party. I name names very specifically. A lot of people are hesitant to do that, so.
Speaker:And like. I think it's connected to the New Demo Chat story that I left out. I think that's
Speaker:a hard story for me to tell. I think I hold a lot of guilt for that work because I pulled
Speaker:a part of people into the party. I encouraged people to stay longer than they should have
Speaker:and they were incredibly hurt as a result. But I... I've been forthcoming on what the experience
Speaker:is, but still, you know, New Demo Chat and why they thought it was a threat is, I think, key
Speaker:to this story as well. Because what I do, sometimes, I don't even know how I do it, but I seem to
Speaker:connect people. And... in this space, in the New Demo Chat space, like Jay said, you know...
Speaker:I was approached by friends that wanted help, boosting other friends, other writing associations,
Speaker:other great people.
Speaker:If you just know like all these EDAs, all these writing associations, they're run by such wonderful
Speaker:people, by such great activists, most of them. Like people like you and I, like doing whatever
Speaker:they can in their spare time to lift the party up because they think it'll change the world.
Speaker:They do. Their hopes are tied up in this party. And we initially just wanted to connect them.
Speaker:We were frustrated. Our Twitter accounts had no followers and we couldn't make news even
Speaker:in our own communities. So we thought we would start to boost everyone's signal. We would
Speaker:teach people how to use Twitter effectively. We would teach them how to run a writing association
Speaker:more effectively, share our knowledge, share our resources, right? Like, so we didn't all
Speaker:have to repeat work. It's very practical at the beginning. But what it was, was also a
Speaker:space for us to connect. and that's dangerous for the party for so many reasons. One, when
Speaker:we get together, we start sharing our stories and then we realize this is not unique and
Speaker:it is widespread, is systemic, and it needs to stop. Right? When it happens to just you
Speaker:isolated, you think it's you. It thinks it's a unique experience. Something you did made
Speaker:you unworthy to be a candidate, right? You actually, but then you hear like, no, they did that to
Speaker:everyone. everyone that was really progressive, everyone like me. And that doesn't sit well
Speaker:with progressives. We get mad, injustices make us mad. That space is full of a lot of neurodiverse,
Speaker:beautiful people too. And we don't stop when something's wrong. And so the space morphed
Speaker:from a place to just connect to a place to really make waves in the party. It's how we mounted
Speaker:my presidential campaign really quickly with people I didn't even hardly know. It is how
Speaker:we pushed for a lot of big changes in the party, how we supported some people that got onto
Speaker:executive that are still trying to do this fight. It was an emotional support system for a lot
Speaker:of people who had such big dreams to do things in the party and were just thrown aside like
Speaker:they will do me. They are also attacked so it's not fair to just say thrown aside because that
Speaker:actually to me lessens what they actually do. They attack you before they try and discard
Speaker:you. and when they run into a powerful force like you, they then attack, and then by then,
Speaker:the whole outcome of all of this stuff is hopefully you just leave. And again, to punish you for
Speaker:spending the last few years connecting people, doing more work than any paid members of that
Speaker:staff, connecting more people, organizing more events, being- force for education and onboarding
Speaker:at a level that the party says they cannot do and that is what you are being attacked for
Speaker:because as a result of doing that like you said you find these issues you find people's personal
Speaker:stories and you don't just ignore them you care this thing is hurting them this person is hurting
Speaker:them and that is what they are actually lashing out at that and they're perceive you to have
Speaker:power and influence and it's because you are doing these horrible things like trying to
Speaker:help people. Like it's very important for me that people understand how many members are
Speaker:not a part of this party anymore who got these letters. And just for clarification because
Speaker:people are gonna come at you, oh it says confidential how dare you. It's
Speaker:person the complaint is about or the investigation is about. So you have every right to make your
Speaker:personal complaint public. But there are people who get these letters, and they'll answer those
Speaker:baiting questions. They will, it doesn't matter how you respond, they've already made the decision.
Speaker:So I want to ask, do you think they have done this? to get this response because they know
Speaker:you're not going to stand for an injustice like this, to get you to go public with all of this,
Speaker:and then try and use that as the final justification to finalize their attack on you. Yeah, I'm
Speaker:certain of that because anybody who knows me had to know 100% that was just a taunt to tell
Speaker:me to keep this confidential because I have never kept anything that they've ever done
Speaker:to me confidential. It is not my style. One cannot campaign on transparency within the
Speaker:party and then try to defend themselves in the dark. They knew I would go public. And yeah,
Speaker:they can use
Speaker:any fucking tweet that they want to kick me out of the party. But I went public so that
Speaker:everybody knows that this will be you next. And it's not like I'm naive either. I've seen
Speaker:a few people tweeting like, oh, I'm glad you've seen the light. Like, please, please go back
Speaker:and listen to some of these podcasts. When I was first approached to do this podcast, I
Speaker:had to think of like, first I was surprised anybody wanted to hear from me. And then my
Speaker:first instinct was, well, what's my purpose now, right? Not in the party. And it was...
Speaker:The design of this show is to draw people out of electoral politics and onto the street.
Speaker:It's not a safe space for leftists. It's not. They will hurt you. They will waste our energy.
Speaker:They are dragging us down. They are trying to deradicalize us, and they're trying to stop
Speaker:us. And it's, they're doing it through this space. And I have been hitting the warning
Speaker:bells for a long time. And I think... This particular attack on me allows me to finally validate
Speaker:all of that to folks in a real succinct way. I do love how they've laid out that letter
Speaker:because it almost goes through all of their lame, tired old tactics one by one. The anti-Semitic
Speaker:smear. They even included a claim that I'm racist because I come after Janelle Brady and Jagmeet
Speaker:Singh. But there is nobody in power who's ever been immune to my criticism, ever. There's
Speaker:been no pattern other than I have consistently gone after those in power and only those in
Speaker:power. Once you will get yourself, you come to the floor, you ask people to elect you to
Speaker:sit on the executive, you are fair game. If you were going to make bad decisions, if you
Speaker:were going to hurt the people around me, you are fair game. Nobody is hiding behind this
Speaker:volunteer bullshit that they try to do because you asked for power and you got it. And now
Speaker:you will face the consequences for it. And the folks often ask me like, why am I so hostile?
Speaker:Like, oh, you know, I cringe at some of your tactics and some of the language that you use
Speaker:is, you know, combative. I know Santiago was arguing with me earlier. He's like, I don't
Speaker:think they're that combative. Like, these are valid critiques. And the ones they've actually
Speaker:used are, really. But sometimes I do get real feisty. But I hope folks understand, when you've
Speaker:heard the amount of stories, and they're not stories, if you have heard that lived experience,
Speaker:from the amount of people that I have sat on calls with to hear them pour their heart out
Speaker:the way that I kind of have tried in this episode. You get really mad. And when you've used every
Speaker:mechanism within the party, within their rule book, and seen them break all those same rules,
Speaker:you would be silly. I wanna use other words, right? Like, you would be really, really silly
Speaker:to try to keep going at it the same way over and over and over again. So yeah, I decided
Speaker:a long time ago. that the way I would interact with this party was front-facing, fully public,
Speaker:fully transparent. And that is just not their style for good reason, right? Because as we
Speaker:see, as more folks start to understand how this power structure works, this thing they've devoted
Speaker:a lot of their free time to, their money to,
Speaker:they're actually contributing to the problem. I want them to realize that at this point.
Speaker:And it took me a long time to get to that point. And I feel like maybe that might sound condescending,
Speaker:but anybody out there working on an NDP campaign, I don't even care if it's a star candidate.
Speaker:I know there's some great ones out there. If you were drawing in donations, you are absolutely
Speaker:supporting the destruction of the left at this point. Like I've laid the groundwork to explain
Speaker:that in episodes far beyond before these attacks on me personally, right? This is just proof
Speaker:that as I air this dirty laundry, their attempts to silence me are increasing. And I think I
Speaker:jumped on here this evening to make sure that everybody knew that I would not be silent about
Speaker:this. And I, Santiago talks about like knowing all the dirt on the party. I mean, the amount
Speaker:of stories I share off camera is sometimes amusing for folks to hear. I know Santiago likes getting
Speaker:caught up. It makes them really angry. Jay wants to write a book. But yeah, more of these stories
Speaker:are definitely gonna come out. If you thought I was going full on before, I was not. Something
Speaker:was stopping me from burning the whole place down, but I don't know, people ask me what
Speaker:I want to come from this. I joke and say you can burn my membership card, but they don't
Speaker:have the right to do that. I don't want to be a member. Like I don't, I've already told them
Speaker:I have no interest. I just don't actually know how to go through the process of like removing
Speaker:my membership. So I'm on the book somewhere because I get their stupid emails. But they
Speaker:can't continue to do this. So there's some folks out there that are still propping up this party.
Speaker:As long as you keep doing that, they will keep doing this. And one day you're going to get
Speaker:sick of it and you're going to try to say something. And they will do this to you. And they will
Speaker:do it to your comrades. They'll do it to your writing associate. And I bet you they already
Speaker:have. They've already probably wronged you in some way if you're anyway involved with the
Speaker:party in a manner that gives any pushback. So if you're just sitting along for the ride and
Speaker:rubber stamping everything, you might not know what I'm talking about. Or maybe you do. Maybe
Speaker:you've been a part of the executive that's put this shit together, right? Because it's drawn
Speaker:from members and I think that's the most maddening part. that you see these folks on social media
Speaker:and they're talking about all the same issues that we're talking about and they seem to want
Speaker:to change the world, but yet they are completely complicit in these abuses against members,
Speaker:in these violations of the constitution, right? A denial of democracy. They 100% see this happening.
Speaker:And I'm not talking about paid staffers either, right? People are in a precarious job situation.
Speaker:I'm not gonna go there. I'm talking about the elected executives. that sit there and witness
Speaker:this and do nothing. So I mean, I don't know what they're all thinking of this right now,
Speaker:but Jay, you're an executive. I mean, did you ever see your role would be to police other
Speaker:members? Like, is that what anybody gets into the shipwreck? I can tell you at the federal
Speaker:level, I did sneak in. I wasn't going to convention until just like minutes before cutoff. So they
Speaker:had no way to prepare for me to be there and run. Just like how you said that your campaign
Speaker:formed on the floor last minute and it did so well. And this is one of the reasons or one
Speaker:of the avenues they can control it is when they know who's running they can figure out oh well
Speaker:let's just do this. Or they don't actually go organize against you but they will supply and
Speaker:support their chosen candidate for those positions such as campaign managers for the role of president
Speaker:such as campaign staff for a candidate for president but I could tell you right now that my first
Speaker:day on the executive our first meeting I fought to have and resign the national director so
Speaker:I think it was made very clear right away I was not a hyper partisan friend of the the
Speaker:orange, the orange crushing force of whoever these people are. And I can tell you, I have
Speaker:existed in every space I can, and I mean every version of the NDP that exists. I have gone
Speaker:to countless meetings, I've gone to writing association meetings, AGMs, I've gone to councils,
Speaker:caucus meetings in every province and territory. And I can tell you the two connective things
Speaker:are... The playbook they use and many of the people are the same people. No matter what
Speaker:province, no matter what level, these people are like a crew of party fixers. The go-to
Speaker:crew. And I want to say that, like you kind of touched on it, but as an executive who is
Speaker:not in favour and hyper-partisan, I am ignored. I've been, I tabled a motion to the executive
Speaker:which was blocked and then voted down saying that it was a matter for the policy committee.
Speaker:The policy committee, which is inactive and I'm an acting co-chair and has now been taken
Speaker:over by the president and the national director, determined that, well no, these policies already
Speaker:exist you're just asking for them to apply to the disabled members. It got recommended to
Speaker:council. But I have to ask the people who rejected it. to add it to the agenda for council, which
Speaker:I'm being ignored. I am stonewalled. I have no real resources to pull from, from the party
Speaker:as an equity committee co-chair, because they don't wanna give me an inch. Anything I do
Speaker:good is actually somehow bad for them, because I'm not a part of that crew. I know more about
Speaker:the deeper workings from former. staff members, from former caucus members, from former presidents
Speaker:and council members and so on who have been put through versions of what they're putting
Speaker:you through. But they are terrified to speak out because I want people to understand the
Speaker:implications of these things aren't this contained NDP game. This stuff can impact people's lives.
Speaker:Because, like you said, they were saying you're anti-worker. Well, unions have many members
Speaker:in the NDP. If they're all working under the impression that you're anti-worker, that hurts
Speaker:your career potential. That hurts your life. This shit isn't partisan games. It can destroy
Speaker:people's lives. So. You talk about the respectability politics, fuck every single one of the people
Speaker:doing this and everyone who allows this to happen, and anyone who is sitting there with a copy
Speaker:of one of these letters in their inbox, I would suggest maybe you consider sharing that so
Speaker:everyone can see the depth to which they will go. But if they ever asked me to spend time
Speaker:working against the members that I have spent... countless hours and so much time, effort, mental
Speaker:and physical, emotional capacity on to help this party, I'd find a way to contact a lawyer.
Speaker:Like that's the thing, I want to ask you this because I kind of went on a rant, but when
Speaker:you know of how many members have been hurt in this way, versus how many members have absolutely
Speaker:treated you like pure garbage because you've called it out, and then you get into between
Speaker:them and it's just you and the party and they're coming at you. I'm sorry you can like edit
Speaker:this out if you don't want to ask but the mental toll not just of this incident, but the totality
Speaker:of everything that you've talked about here. Do you think that will ever heal? Do you think
Speaker:it will ever not creep up on you when an election comes and you want to take part but then this
Speaker:party has hurt you so bad? Like, I don't know how to end that question, sorry. Yeah, well
Speaker:someone asked me today, you know, whether I was involved in the provincial election that
Speaker:just went in Ontario, a real critical one. And I wasn't, not one minute. I wouldn't even retweet
Speaker:folks, except Drew, Drew Compson. Friends asked me to promote his campaign and so I would.
Speaker:But no, I absolutely not in any good conscience, not in any good conscience right now, advocate
Speaker:for any wing of the NDP. No, especially looking to BC, they are not a solution. We need to
Speaker:get into the streets and pressure whoever's in power to do what they need to do the way
Speaker:we should have done with the general strike. And that is the only means, right? Disruption
Speaker:is the only means now, for sure. But anybody who's seen the inside of the NDP has to know
Speaker:that. The mental toll. Ah, shit. That's tricky. I'll tell you, I think a lot of the weight
Speaker:that I carry isn't from... the people who've attacked me. It's actually from my supporters.
Speaker:Because the position I've put myself in for the last few years has to been the front line.
Speaker:And I've acted as a shield in a way. I've taken a lot of hits for doing what I do for criticizing
Speaker:the party and for telling other people's stories. Sometimes I don't give their names, so I...
Speaker:And I've taken a lot of hits. And I seem, like, really strong, I think, because I don't...
Speaker:about my breakdowns on Twitter. But it is hard. You know, it is hard being attacked from the
Speaker:inside, but I think I'm so used to that now. They have gotten me so steeled against that,
Speaker:I'm prepared for them, they don't scare me anymore. But I feel that way of all those stories that
Speaker:I've heard, and that's why I stayed. I needed to fight for them. I needed to get justice
Speaker:for those people, for myself too. I've already been harmed by the party many times. I needed
Speaker:to reclaim the NDP for the left, for the people it was always meant for, the grassroots. And
Speaker:I feel them looking to me, you know? I felt them, their hopes. Like Santiago talked about
Speaker:convention and... before we started recording, and that was hard for me to hear. You know,
Speaker:I don't want to put you on the spot, but Santiago talked about what it felt like when the left
Speaker:kind of came together around that convention. I spent a lot of efforts talking to all the
Speaker:socialist groups, trying to come to an agreement, trying to get them to trust me, to represent
Speaker:them on the floor, so there would be no other competition that we wouldn't divide the left.
Speaker:We did that. We did that. We had one presidential candidate and everyone was working to do that.
Speaker:And I felt that way for a long time. Like I should have done something with it.
Speaker:But at some point I had to cut and run from this party for my own mental health. And they've
Speaker:still come out to find me and to hurt me, even though I tried to distance myself from their
Speaker:spaces so that it wouldn't. so they couldn't get me. And I really feel like, no, check that.
Speaker:I don't feel like I've failed in my mission to unite the left in Canada. I know I don't
Speaker:take this task on myself, but it is my life's goal. It's part of building towards a political
Speaker:revolution. And I believe that I belong in that revolution. But I feel like I just can't find
Speaker:them justice in that party, that those folks are gonna continue to get away with what they
Speaker:do. And I made no real ends, I made no real inroads there. The same people that have hurt
Speaker:us are still in power. They're still using their same old tricks. They're still hurting people,
Speaker:blowing elections, and erasing people and communities. So... That's where the mental toll really comes
Speaker:from, I think. But that's why the show is so great and having comrades like you folks are
Speaker:so great, because it allows us to refocus on what's next, like a new party or grassroots
Speaker:movements that are issue-based, that are more uniting than partisan politics can be. So I
Speaker:draw hope from there and purpose and... You know, I hope, again, like sharing my story
Speaker:here and all the episodes that we've done to just really explain exactly how the NDP works.
Speaker:I can redeem myself in trying to make it so nobody else enters those spaces at least unprepared
Speaker:or unwarned. And those that are in them know that they're not alone in their frustrations
Speaker:and they don't have to stay. I hope that answered your question. I'm going to ask another one,
Speaker:but I'm going to give you the opportunity because I think this might pull on some deep emotion
Speaker:too. What hurts more? The attacks that you're getting from these people or the support you
Speaker:get in the shadows? Yeah, so what Jay's talking about is whenever I feel heat, whenever I'm
Speaker:in the spotlight. I have public support and I have private messages of support. So folks
Speaker:that know what is happening is wrong and they will reach out to make sure I'm doing okay
Speaker:to tell me that this is bullshit, but they don't do it publicly. And quite often it's those
Speaker:closest to power, those with something to lose politically. And Nah, those folks don't hurt
Speaker:me so much. I'm disappointed in them. I guess part of me, maybe it's being neurodivergent
Speaker:or just me, like I remember, I file that away. I know who I can trust to be courageous and
Speaker:who will be looking after themselves ultimately. And so I play accordingly, that's all. But
Speaker:it is incredibly, I know it, It bothers you a lot. It does bother me because we're all
Speaker:supposed to be activists in the NDP, really. Right? That's how I see it. And I don't understand
Speaker:how people can just stop being activists and stop being progressive, just because the people
Speaker:doing the oppressive behavior wear orange. And so, but that completely just shapes what I
Speaker:think of their character, to be honest, because I've seen people risk it all in political spaces,
Speaker:and I've people be seen be complete cowards. So yeah, I guess it takes all stripes, but
Speaker:I get anxious, right? And I shake with rage when I'm attacked, but they actually don't
Speaker:really hurt me so much anymore. Those individuals, the fact that the system seems to kind of be
Speaker:unloading on me, that weighs a lot. We fight on. And, um, yeah, I think obviously I'll probably
Speaker:have more to say on this as we go through, and I don't really know how this is all going to
Speaker:shape up. I mean, in a perfect world, I think I'm owed an apology that I'll never get. A
Speaker:lot of people are owed apologies that they will never get from that party. I would really love
Speaker:if they would stop harassing me. I don't want anything to do with their party. and they have
Speaker:no right to be going through my tweets and trying to call me accountable to my critiques. I owe
Speaker:them nothing, not confidentiality, not support, nothing. So I hope that wasn't too emotional.
Speaker:I think it probably was, but yeah, I just thought it was super important for me, probably for
Speaker:me personally to get this out. It's been therapeutic. to sit with you folks. I know I mostly maybe
Speaker:had my eyes closed and not really looking at you, but I know you two are there. And it makes
Speaker:sharing this a little easier, even though you made me cry, Jay. But, yeah, I hope this does
Speaker:make people feel a little bit uncomfortable and they start to question if they hadn't already.
Speaker:And I wanna thank the people who have supported me. You have no idea what that means when you're
Speaker:under attack. to see folks you've never met vouch for you and defend you. I know it because
Speaker:I've defended every person I've ever met that was wronged. It's just part of what I do. But
Speaker:when people do it for you, it really, it really matters. It really does. Every email I saw
Speaker:that was in support, every tweet that from folks that I know don't agree with me politically
Speaker:all the time, but understand that this is wrong. That really matters. Folks who don't think
Speaker:that their support matters inside the NDP, that their complaint about this wouldn't matter,
Speaker:it matters to me that you spoke up. So I thank you. At the start of this show, it opens with
Speaker:the chance of this is what democracy looks like. And I think I want to add a mention of the
Speaker:fact that what you've endured, what you've gone through, the amount of time, effort, and emotion
Speaker:that you've given countless other people, trying to help them and protect them and fight with
Speaker:them. This is what solidarity looks like should be what your opening is because you are the
Speaker:physical embodiment of solidarity and you've been nothing but attacked for it. I appreciate
Speaker:that, Jay. You know, there's some ways to describe me. that I know are accurate and not very flattering.
Speaker:But having a principled stand and being someone who understands and displays solidarity, I'm
Speaker:glad you feel that way about me. That's important. It's something I want to instill in my children.
Speaker:Santiago, you got to make her cry before we leave or else I'll feel bad. I have so many
Speaker:thoughts right now that it's really difficult for me. work through it all. But right now,
Speaker:the level of anger I feel, and it's a familiar anger, because I haven't been in this long.
Speaker:I'm 23. I haven't been in this fight a long time, but the amount of times I have seen this
Speaker:happen over and over. and over and over again this is
Speaker:It's what they want, they want you to give up, they want you to lose hope and that's what
Speaker:it leads you to a lot is to... To losing hope because you see how difficult it is, you see
Speaker:how it's stacked against you but no, that's not what's gonna happen here. I refuse... To
Speaker:give in to the cynicism and I refuse to stand by and watch this continue to happen to people,
Speaker:to so many good people who all they're trying to do is... is try and fight selflessly to
Speaker:try and make the world a little fucking bit better for other people and to see this happen.
Speaker:And I mean, I feel like, I mean, it wasn't very long ago that we were talking about the injustices
Speaker:that were happening against Anjali's campaign in BCNDP and before that all the injustices
Speaker:that have happened to so many people who have been expelled and who have been prevented from
Speaker:running who, who I mean, it's such a fucking difficult thing to put yourself in that position
Speaker:too. I mean, to expose yourself out there. To expose yourself to the public. It's a very
Speaker:fucking difficult thing to do. And DNDP makes that infinitely more difficult. Because, I
Speaker:mean, you expect when you make those kinds of decisions, you expect it to be, you expect
Speaker:the attacks to come from the other side politically, you know. You expect it to come from the right.
Speaker:You expect to have to fight the right. You expect to have to fight the fucking liberal party.
Speaker:You don't expect. to have to fight with the people who are supposed to be helping you and
Speaker:to be on your side. That's not what anybody expects going into this. And it's not fair.
Speaker:It's not fair. It shouldn't be this fucking hard. So, I mean, I beg people to please don't
Speaker:put yourself through that. Not in this space, not in the NDP. They don't fucking deserve
Speaker:your compassion. They don't deserve... Your kindness, your dedication, your selflessness,
Speaker:they don't deserve that. And you don't deserve going through that. That's a message for everybody.
Speaker:And there are ways outside of it to do it. And there'll be so much more to come about that.
Speaker:And we're gonna be here talking about that and exploring those options and finding ways because
Speaker:the fight is anything but fucking over. We're not rolling over. We're not lying down. We're
Speaker:not going away. But it's not here. It's not in the NDP. And there's no doubt about that.
Speaker:I mean, look what they did to win, Charlie, right? Like, there's no doubt. that they will
Speaker:do anything and everything to stop you. Nah, it's over in the NDP, but it's not over. I
Speaker:don't know. No, it's Bart. No, please, my thoughts are a mess. I have no idea what I'm even saying
Speaker:anymore. No, I'm smiling because, you know, when we're talking about what did they think
Speaker:they were starting with me, you know, but maybe they don't realize the fire they started in
Speaker:Santiago.
Speaker:Santiago, I think, because not that he needed it, but been re-radicalized against partisan
Speaker:politics as a result. It's actually... a bright spot for me, not only because it reaffirms
Speaker:what I know about you as you are a good comrade and you have stood by me more than once, but
Speaker:that hopefully this has this impact on other people, that it's not a matter of losing hope
Speaker:because perhaps the one avenue they had chosen to spend their time in to change the world
Speaker:has betrayed them. you know, they are disillusioned, properly disillusioned with it, but that they
Speaker:find their fight back and will understand how much more effective and free they are when
Speaker:they don't have to worry about a party monitoring their Twitter account amongst many other things.
Speaker:So, I'm glad to see you frazzled-dazzled, you know? That means you're mad, and I think most
Speaker:people should be mad. And I've gone through a whole range of emotions, I think, just here
Speaker:in this episode, but all day long. And I really hope this is the last time that I have to face
Speaker:this kind of trash from that party, because I am done. I feel like, do you end there? Like,
Speaker:it seemed kind of negative, but. It's allowed to be negative. May I say something that I
Speaker:don't know if I tagged you in these emails and I'm going to brace you because this is going
Speaker:to be a horrible way for me to end my part in this but I recently sent an email to a large
Speaker:amount of MPs, MLAs, MPPs, executives, staffers and directors talking about how I reached a
Speaker:certain milestone in this party that not only exemplifies the true repercussions of the way
Speaker:things are done, but the human toll this takes. I have had a total of 40 members who I have
Speaker:either had their final communication telling me there's no hope, or family members when
Speaker:I reach out to see if they're okay because they were... really excited to be at that next committee
Speaker:meeting or that next event I was hosting. And they weren't there. And then I have that conversation
Speaker:with a family member telling me that the last hope they felt they had was in this party.
Speaker:And there are members who don't care too much about the party because that's what the party
Speaker:does to people. But the community... the family that you build within the party, some of these
Speaker:amazing members like you two, not that you're necessarily members, but the connections you
Speaker:make to leave that, to be forced out of that, is where a lot of these emails stem from. And
Speaker:I sit at meetings and events and council and convention. and I don't see their Zoom box.
Speaker:And I know where their voice would be. I know what things they would be talking about and
Speaker:fighting for. And I know what things led them to not be there. And I've met so many people
Speaker:who say, well, that's just politics. And this is people's lives. It's their mental health.
Speaker:It's their physical health. It's their lives. And I want people to understand that that.
Speaker:is what the NDP says it stands for. That's what you as members say you are doing all of this
Speaker:work for. But look what you're allowing to happen internally and it is finally brought out into
Speaker:the public by just making this move to pull transparency from the shadow. I think some
Speaker:folks still truly believe that party, internal party matters belong behind closed doors, that
Speaker:the media will always. attack us, grab these stories and use them against us, and that means
Speaker:we're propping up the PCs or the liberals or whoever we're focused on at the time. The truth
Speaker:is the media will always print garbage stories about us, they're owned by capital, that's
Speaker:their job. So I don't know, I think that's just like, hopefully falling a little bit more flat
Speaker:with folks now. because we've seen the only time the party has ever moved on anything is
Speaker:when public complaints were made, when public noise was made. Nothing has ever really been
Speaker:accomplished in the private, behind closed doors, in personal emails back and forth within the
Speaker:party. That is a wrap on another episode of Blueprints of Disruption. Thank you for joining
Speaker:us. Also a very big thank you to the producer of our show, Santiago Helu Quintero. Blueprints
Speaker:of Disruption is an independent production operated cooperatively. You can follow us on Twitter
Speaker:at BPofDisruption. If you'd like to help us continue disrupting the status quo, please
Speaker:share our content and if you have the means, consider becoming a patron. Not only does our
Speaker:support come from the progressive community, so does our content. So reach out to us and
Speaker:let us know what or who we should be amplifying. So until next time, keep disrupting.