Ten Points on The Madness

BY ANDREW POTTER

by Andrew Potter on Tuesday, December 2, 2008 1:35pm - 106 Comments

081202_harper1

Go away for a few days and all hell breaks loose. I’ve spent the last 12 hours trying to catch up, here are my thoughts, for what they are worth, though I’m sure most of these points have been made already:

1. My overwhelming sense of all this is that it is a case of an entire coop of chickens coming home to roost. For the Tories, especially Harper, he is getting exactly what he asked for. He called an election based on various contrived and entirely spurious reasons. He ran for re-election not on policies but on leadership, then decided to cut the public subsidy to his opponents. What did he think would happen?

2. For the Liberals, they should be careful what they ask for. Under Dion, they have spent the last two years tacking leftward, and are now poised to enter into a coalition with a party whose economic views are not just obsolete, but dangerous. This is very reckless for both the country and for the party’s brand. My views on this have not changed since I wrote a column in the mag a few issues ago about the notion of uniting the left: This coalition could well destroy the Liberal brand.

3. For Canada, the oldest of the roosting fowl were conceived during the sponsorship scandal. You can draw a direct line from the sponsorships to Chretien’s frantic, dying efforts to fix his legacy by changing the role of money in the federal political system. Of all the changes to the financing of political parties, the per-vote public subsidy has had the most perverse consequences, the worst of which is the flourishing of a four, now five, party system. The sponsorship scandal will continue to wreak havoc with this country’s politics for years, if not decades.

4. What is going on right now — the backroom negotiations, the Tory campaign to save themselves, etc. — is actually a symptom of the disease caused by the public subsidy. Which is (one reason) why I think Harper was right to suggest getting rid of it. Great idea. Too bad he didn’t feel like making it an election issue.

5. The behaviour by the opposition parties on this is disgusting. The closest analogy I can think of is the behaviour of Canada’s student movement since the mid-nineties. Once upon a time, students protested various social, political, and military injustices. Now all they do is complain about tuition levels. Similarly, the opposition, especially the Liberals, has spent the last 2.5 years supporting Harper in what was effectively a Grand Coalition, a point Wells has made repeatedly. Nothing worth taking the government down over, until their own financial interest is at stake. Nice work guys.

6. To a large extent, we are seeing the Europeanization of Canadian politics. I’ll be honest: I frigging hate it. But a lot of people out there have been asking for this for a while, ever since the whinging about the “democratic deficit” took off at the tail end of the Gritlock era. Majority parliamentary rule is probably the most accountable political system that exists. We are moving about as far as possible away from that ideal. The country will be worse off for it. You think we had a democratic deficit before? Now you’re soaking in it.

7. I don’t understand why various pundits keep saying that Harper’s reputation as a strategic genius is in tatters. Harper has gone through three phases over the past 10 years: Sulky ideologue, job-seeking compromiser, and pure-tactical machievel. In that period, he has faced off three times, losing once to Paul Martin, barely beating Paul Martin, and barely beating Stephane Dion. What genius? What strategy?

8. Nevertheless, I agree with Coyne: Harper’s best bet still might be to just walk away from this and let the Liberals wear this. They want to govern with the commies and the separatists? Fill your boots.

9. I think Stephen Harper’s remaining time in federal politics is numbered in weeks or months. I say 50-50 he’s gone from the leadership and gone from parliament by March.

10. All things considered, I’d rather see an election than see the coalition take power.

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  • Brad Sallows

    >He did, or at least tried to pull together the exact same coalition in 2004.

    He did not. Go read the letter again. It is a request to be consulted by the G-G in the event the PM requests dissolution following a non-confidence motion. The opposition leaders signed the request, and then the government went on to govern for over a year. At some point the Liberal/NDP cheerleading squad is going to have to admit that it is possible to draw a distinction between opposition parties being prudently prepared, and opposition parties making concrete deals to force an outcome.

  • uh huh oh yeah

    “The sponsorship scandal will continue to wreak havoc with this country’s politics for years, if not decades.”

    And think about this: the crooked, sleazy sponsorship so-called “scandal” was nothing – I repeat NOTHING – but business as usual in Ottawa. Politically motivated, stupid and pointless spending in key cities, regions and provinces, accompanied by kickbacks, is the norm and not the exception.

    AFAICT the only reason why you heard about this particular “scandal” is that a certain would-be Liberal leader with a network of loyal, um, let me use the polite term, rat cuffers, needed a lever with which to dislodge a certain sitting and fairly popular Liberal leader from his position at the helm of the political pork machine. Letters were written. Phone calls were made. Wallah. A “scandal” is born.

    The only thing really surprising about it is that anyone in the media noticed it at all. They barely said anything about the $1B HRDC scandal out of which, from the sound of it, whole rafts of people should have gone to jail for writing and authorizing fake job subsidy applications. And many other disgraceful and crooked “programs”. Maybe the media literally couldn’t stomach the thought of untangling the HRDC affair – because in their guts they knew that pulling on the thread of the crooked jobs program would expose the purposelessness and essentially corrupt nature of that entire department, which is nothing but a typical department among many others. That would lead to a shaking of their worldview for which they were simply not prepared. Trudeau’s children, and all that. Nanny knows best.

    So technically it’s not the “sponsorship scandal” which is wreaking havoc on the country, it’s just the plain, old, thieving, socialist, business as usual that’s doing it. And that crooked business doesn’t have a “Liberal” or “Conservative” brand name. It comes out of a nauseating barrel labeled “Really Big Government”.

    As the government keeps getting bigger there will be fewer opportunities for success outside of government. The power and wealth will become more and more concentrated in the hands of the leader and his closest cronies in the capital, and the people on the outside looking in will become more desperate to (a) win the leadership of their party and then (b) seize control of government, or at least a powerful position at the cabinet table. So get used to it – you are going to see a lot more “scandals” pop to the surface and a lot more conniving and deal-making over who’s the leader and who forms the government. There’s a lot at stake.

  • seaandthemountains

    I would love to debate a number of these points, but i will stick to one for tonight.

    6. To a large extent, we are seeing the Europeanization of Canadian politics. I’ll be honest: I frigging hate it. But a lot of people out there have been asking for this for a while, ever since the whinging about the “democratic deficit” took off at the tail end of the Gritlock era. Majority parliamentary rule is probably the most accountable political system that exists. We are moving about as far as possible away from that ideal. The country will be worse off for it. You think we had a democratic deficit before? Now you’re soaking in it.

    I am not sure what exactly you mean when you say Europeanization (could be a few things), but I am more concerned with the second half. You claim, that “Majority parliamentary rule is probably the most accountable political system that exists.” I disagree. and with everything that follows.

    While I genuinely like the Westminster system, and think that some of the democratic deficit critiques were overstated, or at least in their severity, there are some challenges to ‘how accountable’ majority Westminster governments. but more to the point you make, minority Westminster governments are far more accountable. and this is precisely what is being seen in here with the Harper Government. Without going in to a long winded summary, of the Westminster system (which clearly you do not need), majority governments rely on only themselves to hold the confidence of the house. And, through ratcheting up party discipline and use f the three line whip, leaders have been able to manufacture confidence, even when it might not have existed within a party’s own ranks.

    In contrast, a minority government, must retain the confidence of those who they have not ability to control (as distinct from coerce). As such there is a greater likelihood that they could lose power, and thus should be a greater likelihood that they will govern in a manner that reflects the interests (or at least wishes) as the representatives of a greater block of Canadians. To the degree that the Harper Government has ignored this basic reality, he has risked that he will be held accountable for not doing so and fall. Had he had a majority he could have implemented the same update and continued to govern unabated. Time will tell if he falls or not, but, there is little doubt his feet are being held much closer to the fire then they would be if had a majority (regardless of how you or I as individuals feel about the substance of the economic update and what is inspiring the lack of confidence).

  • http://plover.net/~bonds/adhominem.html edeast

    @Poljunkie; the comment you provide is not an example of ad hominem. Click my name for an essay by stephen bond.

    “The mere presence of a personal attack does not indicate ad hominem…Put briefly, ad hominem is “You are an ignorant person, therefore your arguments are wrong”, and not “Your arguments are wrong, therefore you are an ignorant person.”
    This insult levied by john g arises from the TJ Cooks previous comments, and the follow up points debate TJ Cooks arguments.
    “john g
    Dec 2, 2008 11:26

    TJ Cook you are a naive fool. Do you think he provides this support to Dion, his arch enemy on separation, for free???

    Quebec has just taken Canada hostage, and we’ve handed their chief negotiator a veto on every bill that comes out of Parliament.

    We’ve also ensured that the BQ will pretty much run the table in Quebec from now on. Why would Quebecors want to give up this gravy train?”

  • Austin So

    Why would Quebecors want to give up this gravy train?”

    You mean like Harper and the CPC giving Quebec $700 million that Charest promptly converted into a tax cut for each and every Quebecer?

    You guys are walking around with your heads up Harper’s butt.

    Austin

  • http://N/A DemosKracy1st

    During the election, Harper wanted to win the Quebecois heart in mind. Now they are the evil SEPARATIST. The NDP are the commies. What kind of evil plan are the socialist going to hatch. I hope it will not be putting more money into the working class or assisting the people that are loosing there jobs. Oh god please NO. I was hoping that the conservative would shine during these hard time and shoe leadership an innovation. What I see now is a minority government that tried to kill the check and balance that would protect Canadian citizen against undo hardship under a power hungry PM.

    The sad thing is, Harper will not show any sportsmanship, except that he drop the ball on trying to choke the democracy (cutting the funding to political parties) out of Canada. In an addition to doing almost nothing while the global meltdown is at are heels.

    What is happening here is the check in balance to power. Coalition could bring together the best ideas for all the citizen of Canada.

    But that will not happen, why you ask? Because political party loyalty is the number one priority, not the country. Canada is not a political party, its a collection of different people, with different background and some unique and common aspiration, conviction and religious belief.

    What the point of being part of Canada if you can’t defend what Canada is supposed to stand for. The right to not be single out base on, sex, religion, color and all that jazz.

    SO now we have a group of elected officials standing up to a minority government that tried to act like a majority. This is what the constitution is supposed to do. Protect the rights of everyone, even the ones that did not vote for the party in power.

    The danger of modern democracy and liberties , it is not to get adsorbed in our on individual independence, freedom and personal pursuit of happiness without renouncing to our common citizen duties to defend everyone right to these liberties.

    Do not forget that each citizen that cast a vote in our representative democracy is doing so to elect fellow citizen to represent and defend what we do not have time to defend ourselves. We must respect the fact that not everyone voted for the party in power and see the bigger picture when in fact we live in a country that can challenge the party in power when they do NOT represent us in fair and equal matter.

    Loyalty should be to Canada, not party. That is the essence of Democracy.

    A Proud Bilingual Métis Canadian

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