Judy Rebick

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Judy Rebick in 2005.
Judy Rebick in 2005.

Judy Rebick (born 1945 in Reno, Nevada) is a Canadian journalist and political activist.

Rebick first gained national prominence as president of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women from 1990 to 1993. She subsequently appeared on CBC Newsworld as cohost with Claire Hoy of the political debate series Face Off. When that show ended in 1998, Rebick continued as a freelance journalist for a variety of media outlets, and was part of a group of media activists who launched rabble.ca, a web magazine and discussion forum.

With Jim Stanford, Svend Robinson and Libby Davies, she helped lead the New Politics Initiative, a movement that worked both inside and outside the New Democratic Party to refocus it as an activist party. The NPI's platform was rejected at the 2001 NDP convention in Winnipeg, but it captured the imagination of many New Democrats. She helped to wind down the NPI in 2003, claiming that many of its ideals had been embraced by new party leader Jack Layton (whom Rebick had voted for in the 2003 NDP leadership contest).

She first became active with the Ontario New Democratic Party in the mid-1980s, in an internal group called the "Campaign for an Activist Party". She headed the CAP's slate for the party executive in 1986, on a platform of making the NDP more "movement-oriented" and involved in extra-parliamentary politics. Though the CAP generated a significant degree of grassroots support, it was opposed by the party establishment (including party leader Bob Rae) and failed. Rebick lost her bid to become party president, losing to Gillian Sanderman by a margin of 818 votes to 361.

She ran as the NDP candidate in the suburban Toronto riding of Oriole in the 1987 provincial election, finishing third, well behind Liberal Elinor Caplan.

Rebick was a Trotskyist activist in the 1970s active with the Revolutionary Marxist Group and its successor, the Revolutionary Workers League. She quit the RWL and the Trotskyist movement in the early 1980s and refocused her efforts on the broader feminist movement. She was particularly active in the abortion rights issue, as an activist and spokesperson in the Ontario Coalition for Abortion Clinics and a supporter of Dr. Henry Morgentaler.

Her latest book is Ten Thousand Roses: The Making of a Feminist Revolution (2005) ISBN 0-14-301544-3 published by Penguin.

Rebick is currently the Canadian Auto Workers–Sam Gindin Chair in Social Justice and Democracy at Ryerson University in Toronto. She is the former publisher of rabble.ca.

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