« Je prends de grands risques et je propose des solutions très claires qui sont aussi importantes que les crises auxquelles nous sommes confrontés. »
— Avi Lewis
In a packed room of labour activists and NDP supporters, one leadership candidate broke from the pack by doing something unusual: proposing concrete, transformative policies rather than relying on biographical storytelling.
The Policy Difference
While most candidates at the Canadian Labour Congress-sponsored forum stuck to safe territory—sharing personal stories and making general commitments to workers’ rights—Avi Lewis presented specific policy proposals that would fundamentally reshape how Canadians access essential services:
Public Options for Essential Services
Lewis outlined a vision for public alternatives in three key sectors:
- Food: Public grocery options to compete with oligopolistic chains and lower prices
- Mobile Services: A public telecom provider to challenge the Big Three and reduce costs
- Housing: Massive expansion of public and non-profit housing to address the affordability crisis
”As Big as the Crises We Face”
The approach represents Lewis’s core political philosophy: incremental solutions are inadequate for the scale of challenges facing Canadians. Housing unaffordability, food inflation, and telecommunications costs aren’t just market failures—they’re symptoms of an economy designed to extract wealth from working people.
Labour Movement Response
The proposals resonated with labour activists in the room, many of whom have grown frustrated with the NDP’s retreat from bold economic policy in recent years. Lewis’s willingness to name corporate power and propose public alternatives signals a return to the party’s democratic socialist roots.
Political Risk and Reward
By staking out the most transformative policy positions in the race, Lewis risks being labeled unrealistic or radical by political opponents. But he’s betting that NDP members are hungry for a candidate who offers more than incremental change—they want a leader who understands that the crises facing working people demand solutions that match their scale.
The question now is whether boldness will be rewarded at the ballot box, or whether party members will opt for safer, more incremental approaches.