Beyond The Commons

Beyond The Commons

Aaron Wherry covers all the goings-on in and around Parliament Hill. Follow Aaron on Twitter: @aaronwherry

Eulogy for a government?

by Aaron Wherry on Sunday, November 30, 2008 3:03am - 56 Comments

Rob Oliphant is a slight, unimposing man, one of the rookie Liberals who fill the back row of the opposition side. His is a united church minister with a degree in commerce. He was an advisor to David Peterson’s government in Ontario and Michael Ignatieff’s campaign for the Liberal leadership in 2006. He currently represents the riding vacated by John Godfrey, another slight, unimposing man. 

In the moments before Jim Flaherty delivered the government’s economic and fiscal statement, the House was going through the motions of debating the speech from the throne. Oliphant was the last member of parliament to speak in full before the Speaker called on the finance minister. The government benches had been filling as he spoke and were full by the time he finished, but save for a few Liberals in Oliphant’s immediate vicinity, almost no one seemed to notice his remarks. Everything that has transpired since has, of course, reduced him to the stuff of footnote.

But if we are in the final days of Stephen Harper’s government, here was a crushing, if inadvertent, eulogy.

It was not, in the straightforward sense, a complete harangue. “It might surprise the honourable members opposite and perhaps some of the honourable members on this side of the House that I found a number of laudable elements in the speech as it was read. In fact, it was much less brutal than one might have expected following the heated rhetoric of the last campaign,” he said. “Specifically, I was impressed that the government seemed to indicate that, despite all evidence to the contrary, it might actually believe that government can and should be a force for good in people’s lives, and that it is appropriate for government to intervene, act and ensure that our future, particularly our economic future, is protected.”

Though it was a bit of a harangue. “What surprises me about this recognition is that it is simply not even close to what the honourable members on the other side of the House were telling voters during the election, week after week in the recent campaign,” he said. “In fact, during the campaign, the Conservatives ran against incurring deficits and un-budgeted spending while continually denying that Canada was heading toward a recession.”

He continued. “There are two possibilities as to why the government has so radically shifted its position with respect to the economy, and neither of them, frankly, is pretty. First, it is possible that it completely misread the international economic indicators visible to most of us. Second, it is possible that it failed to see that the domestic economic policies followed in their first mandate, policies of irresponsible tax cuts and bloated government spending, have left the government completely incapable of responding quickly or well to the situation. I am talking about incompetence of the highest order.”

He recited some of Mr. Harper’s claims about Canada’s escape from both recession and deficit. “If this was done truthfully but naively, it smacks of utter and complete incompetence,” he figured. “If it is not incompetence, ineptitude or mismanagement, I fear it may be a far more serious problem for the government. If it is not incompetence, it is deception or misrepresentation. The campaign run by the Conservatives was disingenuous at best and dishonest at worst.”

And then he got specific. “Voter apathy, civic cynicism and outright disgust with politicians is based on political leaders refusing to say what they mean and, even worse, failing continually to do what they say. Voters are increasingly savvy and are simply tired of politicians telling them what they think they want to hear and then turning 180 degrees and doing something completely different,” he said. “At the core of the Speech from the Throne lies bear the ethical reality that shapes the government. It is a government that will say anything, do anything, promise anything to get elected and simply cannot and will not be trusted by Canadians. The throne speech reveals at its core that the government is morally bankrupt. It has lost its moral compass.”

The denouement was a series of questions. About poverty and affordable housing, arts and education, immigration and diplomacy, soldiers and veterans. Questions, he said, his constituents wanted answered.

“Where is the imagination that is going to help the poor and those who will be displaced by today’s economic reality as it descends upon us,” he asked, “just as the government has emptied the cupboard?”

Moments after, he and everyone else learned just how imaginative this government was willing to get.

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  • kody

    I mean, look at Paul Wells regarding Obama,

    he, like the rest of the media, generally avoided like the plague any hard news stories (of which there were many), while acting like giddy school girls around the “cute new guy in school”.

    During the election I linked to a few articles by hard nosed old school journalists who wrote in pure embarrassment at the spectacle, and utter lament and the downfall of their industry they were witnessing (objectivity and credibility being the only real asset any organization that purports to report – “just the straight facts” has).

  • Ti-Guy

    the near unanimity of posts, the breath and scope, the fact that Conservatives are essentially treated like outside “trolls” around here,

    Stop lying.

  • kody

    Trust Ti-Guy to come in and make my point, in real time.

  • Ti-Guy

    Stay on-topic, Kodly. Or, if you have evidence of bias or unacceptable partisanship, present it. Stop junking up these comments sections with your unsubstantiated assertions. Kady O’Malley finds them cute, but you know, after our looooong online relationship with you and your poly-cotton blend personae, that I sure don’t.

  • Another Liberal Troll

    You’re the best moderator Maclean’s ever had tiguy!!!! Wooooohooo! Liberal par-tay at Maclean’s!!!!! Party like its 1993, babee!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Brad Sallows

    If the media and some other commentators (chiefly, bloggers) are unhappy with the way Conservatives control communications, they have no one to blame but themselves. If many of you could find a set of adjectives somewhat short of “vicious”, “heartless”, “criminal”, etc and pull back a bit from discussing Conservative governments as if a fascist police state were imminent, a more open (unguarded) communication policy might result. (It might not, but at least then it would be easier to fix the blame and demand more adult and accountable behaviour.)

    In particular, if the media see themselves as an important public institution with the role of watching the politicians, certain members could stand to pass more concrete information and less descriptive and narrative ideologically filtered fluff. I am interested to read columns which ferret out inconsistent shifts in policy and legislation that governments try to sneak through. Gossip columns and pamphleteering masquerading as political analysis and opinion, not so much.

  • http://myblahg.com Robert McClelland

    For all the talk of stimulus arent we missing the more fundamental debate. What problem is the stiumulus supposed to solve…

    Rising unemployment.
    Declining consumer and business confidence.
    Falling asset values.
    A contracting credit market.

    How’s that for a start?

  • Ti-Guy

    I’m actually all for declining consumer confidence. Once people realise that being exhorted to spend, spend, spend is what the establishment is counting on, we might see some fundamental changes.

  • Just visiting

    I am so bored with conservatives posting on and on and on, here and everywhere else on the Internet that allow open comments, about alleged media bias. Your point is made. And made and made and made. Please stop being so boring. Discuss issues.

  • Brad Sallows

    What is unacceptably high unemployment? Are you able to identify any industries/enterprises for which market forces should not be allowed to run their course?

    Should declining confidence be addressed by freeing up more of the spenders’ money, or spending it on their behalf?

    What asset values concern you? Housing? Speculative equities? Which should be artificially protected?

    The contracting credit market has already been addressed in one respect. The government offered to liquidate a substantial amount of the banks’ capital locked up in mortgages, and banks appear to have taken as much advantage of that as they felt they needed. What other credit supporting measures would you propose?

    Is it fair to assume that everything we cease to spend, spend, spend upon be allowed to die a natural market death?

  • Just visiting

    The Tory war room wannabe using the alias “Another Liberal Troll” is boring and tedious.

  • hazzard

    Why is having a liberal/left personal political view proof of partison writing/opinions? Are you trying to suggest that the 45 liberal/left journalists are by definition incapable of doing their jobs (save the opinion writers who are supposed to be take sides)? Are you also trying to suggest the 1 conservative/right journalist is somehow able to keep personal beliefs aside? Voting intention does not negate validity of one’s work. You are using that same faulty reciprocity logic in this argument; you don’t support Harper’s maneuvering ergo you must support the opposition’s maneuvering. Nevermind the continual implications that even having a contrary view is proof of inferiority and thus defence of my position is not required since you are not worthy of the effort.

  • Brad Sallows

    >Please stop being so boring. Discuss issues.

    Good point. I am so bored with progressives posting on and on and on, here and everywhere else etc, that government should “spend”. The general idea is understood. Discuss specifics.

  • http://prairiewrangler.wordpress.com/ Olaf

    First of all – I’m 24, not 21, although my studied lack of maturity may explain the mistake.

    Second of all, as I see it, Wherry is authoring a blog here, and as such has free reign to hold Harper or anyone else in contempt. It’s not necessarily bias, so much as an opinion expressed consistently. And following the shenanigans this week, it would seem that he was well ahead of the curve.

  • hazzard

    “if the media see themselves as an important public institution with the role of watching the politicians, certain members could stand to pass more concrete information and less descriptive and narrative ideologically filtered fluff. I am interested to read columns which ferret out inconsistent shifts in policy and legislation that governments try to sneak through”

    Do you even read Wells’ articles? On Martin? On Harper? That’s pretty much all he does!

  • Brad Sallows

    >Why is having a liberal/left personal political view proof of partison writing/opinions?

    It isn’t, and that applies regardless of a person’s personal views. The analysis/opinion, once set down, speaks for itself. Whether or not the human subject of an article “sneered” or was “compassionate” or dressed well or hunched over like a troll is not the kind of commentary which necessitates privileged communications access in the public interest. It is one thing to follow a partisan line of inquiry – say, to pursue only Stephen Harper and pay no attention to Stephane Dion – because in the end the writer serves the public interest (the more so, because in the example the person is the PM). It is another to prattle on about nothing of substance for several paragraphs to serve as a wrapper around two or three quoted statements or paraphrases.

  • Jim

    “How’s that for a start?”

    Good start, and how exactly are you and the new coalition going to address those?

    If my memory serves, all the parties ran on “no deficits”.

    It looks pretty certain there will be a deficit.

    If your buddies take power it’s your deficit.

    If Harper stays in office it is his.

    I suspect your deficit will be a lot bigger, and I’m not going to like the taxes.

    Since there can be only one government at a time we will have no way to compare.

    There might be a coalition but eventually there will be an election and Liberals, Dippers, and the Bloc are going to be running against each other again.

    Given a choice between all the parties, most Canadians are going to vote Liberal or Conservative, and not for your NDP.

    I can handle a Liberal gov’t, I usually know what they are are going to do, and I frequently agree with them (with Adscam being a very notable exception).

    But this whole coalition thing is not palatable to me because I don’t trust the NDP or the Bloc.

    i might even send the Liberals money again just to get those other two out of government.

  • Brad Sallows

    >Do you even read Wells’ articles? On Martin? On Harper? That’s pretty much all he does!

    I have a subscription; I read all the columnists; I peruse their blogs at least monthly and in most cases weekly. I am satisfied with the balance at Macleans. I expect whichever party is in government and in particular the PM to receive a disproportionate share of critical attention. I also expect that to apply to a party which may imminently be the government, and to its prospective PM.

    >Wherry is authoring a blog here,

    Yes, but his views aren’t the issue if he’s just a blogger, leaving aside the argument of how closely the magazine’s blogs should reach toward the standards of the print edition. One point is that whenever someone “bores” us by reminding us how tight-lipped the Conservatives have become, it is fair to “bore” back with a reminder that a sense of proportion in some quarters might help. The other point is that with the privilege of professional access comes the obligation of professional reporting. The former is dismissable if it really does tire you; the latter stems from the general criteria which separate “professional” from “not-professional”.

  • Belcher

    Unemployment is at a 30 year low. Inflation is low and getting lower. The government is in surplus, the GST has been cut, PSAC just negotiated a pay increase for its large membership. Demand for Canada’s vast natural resources will not decline anytime soon. The pension system is solid, our banks are too Scottish – yeah, I said it – to have gotten caught up in the subprime mess. Christmas shopping is up over last year in Canada and the States.

    If this is what the greatest financial collapse since the 1930s looks like, you’ll forgive me for being skeptical that this is all hype by the lib-left media, sort of a financial 9-11, designed to manufacture consent for breaking open the federal wallet to spend, spend, spend our way out of a phantom recession.

  • http://deleted Sandi

    Jerry Jackson – we you aware that there’s a movement amongst the CPC supporters to get Jim Prentice as leader?

    I don’t know why it cam to mind – but with all this crisis, economic stuff and Flaherty the same thing over and over again, I remember Al Sharpton saying “they want people to tighten their belts when all they’ve done is left them in their underwear”, or something like that.

  • Jim

    I saw the Prentice thing this morning and without a name behind it I call it BS.

    A brand new Blogger that wants to appear to be a Blogging Tory, but isn’t actually on the Blogging Tory list.

  • T. Thwim

    Unemployment is at a 30 year low. Simply wrong.
    Inflation is low and getting lower. Dangerously so. Signifying a slow-down in the economy and leading some to fear the possibility of deflation.
    The government is in surplus Only by Deficit Jim’s accounting, which books the value of assets yet to be sold in this down market — even though which assets are to be sold is not yet decided. And even if so, it is only barely in surplus, maybe, despite having had a surplus of 12 billion dollars only two years ago.
    the GST has been cutAt the wrong time, when stimulus was not needed.
    PSAC just negotiated a pay increase for its large membershipRelevant how?
    Demand for Canada’s vast natural resources will not decline any time soonSee Obama re: Environmental action and “dirty” energy.
    The pension system is solidAssuming you’re not under the age of 25
    our banks … [didn't] get caught in the subprime messWell, they did, but not as badly, this is true.
    Christmas Shopping is up over last year in Canada and the United StatesJust Black Friday shopping, actually. We have yet to see how Christmas as a whole turns out.

  • Brad Sallows

    >Unemployment is at a 30 year low. Simply wrong.

    If it isn’t strictly true, it must be pretty close. Statscan reported a “32 year low” back in March.

    Inflation rates have certainly been lower in the past decade, with no fears of “danger”.

    We’ll know whether the FY 2008-2009 constitutes a deficit soon enough. Will it be a lot of money? Not even by the worst projections. It’ll likely be less than any of the past decade’s surpluses that were freely spent by the governments of the day. Just think – if they’d paid down debt, we’d be less worried about a deficit, particularly one in the low single figures as measuring in billions of dollars.

    What are the grounds for believing that the GST cut hasn’t already made the current situation better than it otherwise would be?

    Demand for resources should be expected to decline because so much of our resource-based income is based on exports.

    Everyone who supports Canada’s pension system seems to believe it is sustainable. In any event, if you’re under the age of 25 there is a lot of time for many things to happen between now and the time you’ll draw from CPP.

    Canadian bank profits are down, but they aren’t posting losses yet. In view of the fact that people have been criticizing bank profits as “excessive”, does that mean this year will just be “fair” as opposed to “outrageous”?

  • kody

    “discuss issues”,

    Yes, of course, silly me.

    “The Harper government is ‘sheer madness’ [actual words used from another left wing fever pitch post above]….discuss amongst yourselves”.

    The problem is the entire premise of these “discussions” are invariably from an anti-conservative, big government will hold our hand and save the day, perspective.

    It’s as if there is only perspective in existence and all else is not even debateable but……

    “sheer madness”.

  • kody

    Meanwhile, sales this Thanksgiving ROSE 3% over last year.

    There’s a term making the rounds on those eeeeeevil conservative blogs,

    it’s called

    “disaster socialism”.

    The left pines away for the next cataclysmic disaster to justify the need for the nanny state to hold our hands.

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