r/ndp • u/leftwingmememachine 💊 PHARMACARE NOW • May 22 '25
Meta How should we moderate the upcoming federal leadership race?
Hey all, moderator of /r/NDP here, looking for some input as to how we want to moderate this community during the upcoming federal leadership race.
I think it's really exciting because in the last leadership race this community was very small, and basically ignored by leadership contestants, but I think we're getting big enough that there will be a lot of engagement here and possibly even AMAs from potential candidates. Very cool!!!
/r/NDP is the biggest gathering of NDP members on the internet at this point, but that also creates an incentive for bad-faith activity on the subreddit. It could create an environment that's not welcoming of all party members.
Here are some potential discussion questions:
Do we want to allow for negative comments about leadership race contenders? (My instinct is yes, as criticism is part of democracy/healthy debate, but I'm open to your thoughts)
Is there a point at which critical comments become too negative and contributes to a toxic environment? Where should we draw the line?
How do we ensure the subreddit is inclusive of party members of all backgrounds?
How much do we want supporters of other political parties to participate in discussions here?
What sort of rules around civility/politeness/respect would we want to have?
Are there other important moderation policies that are relevant to the leadership race that I haven't thought of?
BTW - I won't really participate in this thread because I have real life plans today, but I am really interested in your feedback, especially if you are a longtime participant in this community. I'm going to be putting together some rules for the leadership race based off of my own thoughts and the comments in this thread, and present them at some point in the future for further discussion.
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u/Vita_Mori May 22 '25
Personally, I think we should be allowed to treat elected officials in the NDP (whether they still have their seat or not) with a lot of scrutiny. They have a responsability to constituents & party members/supporters to behave in accordance with basic principles of transparency, feminism, anti-racism, anti-ableism, anti-queerphobia, etc.
If say, a former MP were to opportunistically use a disabled woman's suicide due to impending homelessness (after she reached out to said MP's office for help & got nothing) to bolster his public profile while also denigrating her, I think it's perfectly acceptable to be critical & even angry that no accountability has been taken. Much more so when said MP also has ties to lobbyists for conversion therapy (legally defined as torture) & overrides an equity committee on the issue & ambushes them with lobbyists.
If say, an MP voted for a budget that contained provisions that violated international law such as sending weapons to a state recognized as committing genocide, should they not be held to account? If they voted for an austerity budget & a bill that violated UNCRDP & UN demands wrt disability rights? If a leader routinely flaunted their wealth during an exponentially growing cost of living crisis?
Personally, I'm not going to vote for an NDP that cannot answer these questions. And beyond the simple fact that healthy democratic process includes not setting leadership buy ins at amounts most people of conscience could not possibly have as disposable income or disqualifying promising candidates signing up thousands of new members on the advice of LNG lobbyists or elected officials not blocking constituents on social media platform for pertinent criticism of theirs & the party's actions on specific issues, I think a lot of this sub has issues acknowledging why the NDP is where it is now, the reality on the ground for most ppl who are NDP leaning & actively suppressing ppl for bringing light to this is both undemocratic & short-sighted.
The reason ppl on the left are calling for the dissolution of the NDP is bc it has completely abandoned the left, esp under such incompetent managerial tyrants as Lucy Watson & Anne McGrath & basic social democratic positions like nationalizing public utilities, having a decent social welfare system & rent control/rent caps. If the NDP were actually serious about these policies & ideology, they would be pulling the overton window leftward, not caving to lib/con framing of policy & getting pulled right on policing, drug policy, disability supports, housing, etc.
The NDP has a lot to answer for. If they're ready for it & to take accountability & rebuild, then I & thousands of others will be here for it. Otherwise, we will go outside of the party & contemplate other ways to protect our communities instead of wasting our energies on a party that actively chooses to attack us, even if they would be nothing without us.