Stephen Harper: new ideas, old tactics

The PM wants to steal Ignatieff’s edge as the leader with an eye on the future, says Paul Wells

by Paul Wells on Thursday, January 7, 2010 9:50am - 170 Comments

New Ideas, old tactics

Michael Ignatieff’s reputation for arrogance, tailored for him with care by his Conservative opponents, never survives three minutes in his actual company. The Liberal leader is genial and accommodating to a fault, if those can be faults, and there are days in his endless battle with Stephen Harper when they probably can.

Ignatieff welcomed a visitor to Stornoway shortly before Christmas with coffee, small talk and a chuckle at the first question: does he have any New Year’s resolutions? “Keep smiling,” he replied. “Work harder.”

He will have to do much of the latter in 2010, after 2009 strained his ability to do the former. He jettisoned much of his senior staff in October and many of his assumptions soon after. He has failed to close the polling gap he inherited from Stéphane Dion. Now he will try again to be relevant. His aim is to be the guy who thinks about the future while the Prime Minister thinks only about tactics.

“I think that Canadians went through a very turbulent year. We’re still living in the after-tremors of September 2008”—the market crash that led to the recession of 2009. “Canadians were told in the first quarter of 2009: ‘The world, as you know it, is coming to an end.’ ” And to some extent, it really did: “The recovery, in lots of parts of the country, wasn’t one at all. This wasn’t a recession, it’s a restructuring.”

The effects of that restructuring are, Ignatieff maintains, the challenges of the new decade. “The markets of growth are India and China and we’re not well prepared.” Harper inherited a healthy economy from Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin, but has set about dismantling it. “This government walked away from the remains of Nortel,” Ignatieff said. “It’s selling AECL,” the state atomic-energy agency. He listed a range of challenges related to the demographics of an aging population, the stability of pension plans first among them. “We’re in a new world. And the political question is, who’s going to prepare Canada for that world?”

This is the line Ignatieff has worked out since his new chief of staff, the cherubic Chrétien-era fixer Peter Donolo, joined him on Oct. 27. Donolo replaced Ian Davey, who once helped persuade Ignatieff to leave Harvard for politics in Canada. Soon after, a selection of other senior staffers received pink slips or demotions. Donolo’s crew were on the job in Ottawa in the 1990s, an era when the Iggyites they replace were proclaiming their disdain for politics in a succession of Toronto watering holes or, in some cases, still in high school. “What they bring to the table,” the Liberal leader says of his new helpers, “is they’ve been there.”

What he brings to the table, they say privately, is much the same quality, if only Canadians can be made to see it. “Isn’t it great that we have a leader who knows a bit about the world?” one said. Ignatieff probably can’t be sold as a Chrétien-style “happy warrior,” this person admitted, but he might work as a “cool cucumber,” unmoved by the daily fray, able to see far and plan well.

“People say, ‘You’re being too abstract, you’re being too academic,’ ” Ignatieff said. “But I tell you, when I talk to Canadians, that is what they talk about. ‘Where are we going here? I’ve got a job today, but will I have a job tomorrow?’ ”

Harper, by contrast, “is a funny guy. It’s all tactics, all the time. He governs crab-like, this way, that way.” The Liberal “thinkers conference,” which Ignatieff had promised for the autumn, then for January and will now be held in Montreal in late March, is part of this process. “We need to be seen, and in reality to be, addressing these big issues.”

But all of these conversations took place before Christmas. Even then, both Ignatieff and his new cohorts understood they will not have the luxury of acting in a vacuum in 2010, any more than they did in 2009. Ignatieff spent last year doing a lot of things that seemed bold at the time and wound up biting him on the nose. He put the government “on probation” and gave Harper a licence to brag extravagantly about his “economic action plan.” He forced Harper to spend the summer negotiating changes to Employment Insurance and then faced a choice about what to do when the talks came to naught. He decided to force an election in September and found he couldn’t. He lost support anyway, merely for trying.

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  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Halo_Override Halo_Override

    I think you're probably fairly correct. Thankfully, the people who don't care also generally don't vote.

  • kcm

    Oh i see..PW thought i miss-quoted him…well i did miss the right reply thingie.

  • wilson

    China etc have been coming to us, they want our oil/gas/lumber/minerals.
    Now there are jobs that won't move out of Canada, resource based jobs.

    • Canuckistanian

      natural resources: that's why the congo is such an economic powerhouse. as long as we keep shipping value-added jobs — the true moneymakers — overseas we shall remain hewers of wood and drawers of water.

  • kcm

    Busted..

  • Bingo

    Thanks for sharing those Conservative talking points, Wilson

  • Elena

    I agree with your comments. You just have to go with what you've got, and Ignatieff is all we've got. That said, though, if Foreign Policy polled him as one of the globe's 100 top minds, I'm probably less concerned about the direction a Liberal government would take than are you. I still want to discuss grand ideas and a "vision" for Canada. We're rudderless right now, and that's unhealthy. I hope Ignatieff starts articulating his ideas soon to all of us, not just to university students. It would make my heart sing, even if it only lasts as long as Obama's popularity did. I'm desperate for any small crumb from intelligent leadership.

  • matt

    I see too much interest in big government economic engineering in the CPC's plans for the future. You don't create an entrepreneurial economy from some cabinet planning white paper, you give entrepreneurs room to innovate and stay out of their way. Why is it even conservative politicians are a bucn of economic control freaks?

  • dale

    To deal with Harper the opposition has to stop fighting him. That's how they'll win.

    It's like the Romans fighting Hannibal. Every time the Roman Legions went out to meet him on the battle field they would regret it. But when left alone he had no idea what to do. He needed a fight. Politically speaking Harper is like this. He needs a fight.

    Unfortunately the opposition parties keep finding ways to meet Harper head on in the field. They need to stop taking the fight to him. They need to wait him out. The Liberals really need to swallow their pride and take a page from his play book. Stop fighting on his terms.

    Iggy needs to be the oppositions Fabius Maximus….the one who waited Hannibal out and won.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

    Actually, you didn't. You said "if" he makes such a statement. You carefully avoided saying that those statements in particular were such.

    So do you now say that those statements by Stephen Harper were idiotic and false?

    • Orson Bean

      (sigh) Look, I'm really not uber-familiar with the history of the whole softwood lumber thing, and I really have no inclination to bone up on that just now, just I'll just have to take your word for it on that one. As for his statement about no recession, clearly that was the sort of self-serving, and patently ridiculous, BS statement that politicians sometimes make on the campaign trail. Anyone with a brain at the time knew it was BS — the global economy was clearly swirling down the toilet bowl at that time. Glen Clark did a similar thing with the whole "fudge-it budget" thing back in the 90s, which was probably a slight notch up on the sliminess scale, but whatever.

      In any event Thwim, it seems like you're spoiling to have a debate/argument/p_issing match with a supporter of Stephen Harper and/or his government. I suggest you take up your issues with such a person. I'm not such a person.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/CanadianSense CanadianSense

        You can be voting for the current gov't and object with policies. No government will have support or policies that are supported by their base 100% of the time.

        Some of us voted for the Big Red Book but left after broken promises and scandal.

  • orval

    Harper has something better than a majority. By keeping the Liberals continually on the "qui-vive" for an election, they expend energy and money on election preparedness, not rebuilding the party with new policies and approaches that might attract back some of those who have abandoned the party.

    Personally I don't expect an election before 2012.

    The Liberal Party needs to have a majority Conservative government so they can go back into the wilderness and re-emerge as an attractive and disciplined political party that once again resonates with Canadians.

  • orval

    Ignatieff wants to be PM someday. One of the things that PMs do is decide to prorogue. Ignatieff has to show he understands this. If he condemns prorogation by Harper, he harms his cause because everyone knows he would prorogue when it suited him if he was PM.

    Ignatieff also has to exercise self-discipline and learn to pick his battles while not being distracted by trifles. The current Liberal approach "oh look a shiny object!" for every daily faux-scandal is harming their interests. Arguing about prorogation, like arguing over whether Canadian Forces members turned over Afghan detainees to torturers and who read Colvin's emails in 2006, is a loser strategy because there is nothing to be done about it. It's not 2006. Parliament won't be un-prorogued. Move on.

    The political battleground is the economy. The Official Opposition has a job to do, and that is to not only debate the Government's economic plan and budget, but also to prepare an alternative economic plan of their own. Everything else is a distraction. That is their duty: showing Canadians they are prepared and ready to govern is the only path back to power. To get there, Ignatieff needs focus, determination, discipline, imagination, hard work and, above all, time. The Liberal party is in desperate need of leadership and discipline, and Ignatieff has precious little time to deliver. He is wasting time and energy by inflating procedural trivia into "great crises" and it is diminishing both his appeal and his authority.

  • David B.

    His latest trick is give Flaherty the spot light wrt to budget … perhaps they should return to work and give "MACLEANS" the balance sheets for the past 4 years so we can see where the $18B surplus, $3 B emergency fund and the $56 Billion majority deficit money went! OMG what fools the voters (36%ers) were to listen to those words
    " Just give me a chance"

  • AAnderson

    I don't think we should overlook the fact that Stephen Harper has been working in politics for more than 2 decades. Ignatieff has obviously been very successful in the academic and literary/media world, but that is not the same as governing a country full of people who enjoy HNIC and Big Brother.

    Not to say that Canadians are completely unengaged, but clearly Harper understands the methods of politics whereas Iggy is still learning, because he is new. The Liberals didn't even run anyone against him for the original nomination in Toronto Lakeshore. He's not used to opposition, and especially not the brutal kind Stephen Harper loves to unleash.

    Say what you will about Chretien, he knew how to win the war of words. Which is why he obliterated Stockwell Day in no time.

  • iffy

    wrong calgary for a few days to spend christmas and flew right back to Ottawa

  • Casual Observer

    As long as Kinsella is "helping" the Liberals in any election, Harper & Co. have nothing to fear about losing.

  • burkanuck

    It is hilarious reading all the comments by the left-wing loons here. This is just further evidence of how far left MacLeans has strayed.
    Most Canadians couldn't care less if some Taliban got roughed up by Afghanistan police forces it is only the desparate supporters of the lieberal party who are trying to make this an issue.
    I can't wait to hear the howling and the gnashing of teeth when the Conservatives get a majority. HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
    Enjoy your descent into oblivion you lieberal morons.

  • orval

    Harper knows exactly what Canadians want: Liberal government (more or less) without the corruption.

  • Josie

    "Under the Geneva Convention, governments are responsible for ensuring their detainees are treated humanely."

    The only reason conservatives don't care is because King Steve told them they don't care. I think it's clear who the real morons are.

  • Victor

    Certainly no one is suggesting FB wil be ruling Canada. It has however become an excellent network where ordinary Canadians are able to voice their opinions and concerns. Like any other medium, newspapers, etc., there will always be those that spew out ridiculous comments generally offensive to most. But I guess one of the privileges of our society, is being able to state your opinions and thoughts, without fear of recrimination or being shouted down or smeared (Mr. Colvin not withstanding…)

  • Jan

    Faux bravado. You're really fooling us there whatever your name is.

  • David B.

    It would appear our PM (King Steve) may have once have worked as a home inspector because when he does work he runs around finds nothing signs off to those who stand to make the most money from his in decisions and is not Accountable.

  • ex canuck

    Good enough article, Mr Wells, but your association with Macleans' screamers raises one's suspicions rather. Be careful not to wear your bias on your sleeve?

    The big problem I see in current Canadian politics is a particularly vacuous opposition, epitomized by the talking heads both the Liberals and NDP put up regularly in the House and on the media. Sure the role of the opposition is to oppose, but this needs finesse in order to be effective.

  • Orson Bean

    I don't condone or endorse what happened to Colvin. But having said that, anyone who goes into politics or public life, and in particular anyone who publicly sticks his/her neck out and makes controversial allegations on a matter of public policy like Colvin did, should reasonably expect to be shouted down and/or smeared. That just goes with the territory. I'm not saying it's right, I'm just saying that's the way it is.

    • Victor

      I would agree that people like Mr. Colvin certainly do need to expect some backlash and smearing when speaking truth to Power. I would add however, that we have become conditioned to have this expectation, based on the childish behaviors of our politicians, be they Conservatives, Liberals or otherwise. Where are the statesmen and women that offer grounded, seasoned and reasonable debate? Where is the back and forth, the give and take that the rest of us have to exemplify everday to solve real problems in our businesses, at our workplaces and personal lives? Our MPs don't even have the courtesy to look at each other when asking or answering questions. Responses are usually completely irrelevant to the questions asked. Or, as the current reality, debate and accountability is completely subverted by way of an uneccesary, and certainly un-routine prorogement. We as Canadians, deserve and are beginning to expect and indeed, demand better.

  • http://yappadingding.blogspot.com/ Yappa

    Harper has NOT run standard or even acceptable sessions of parliament. He has made THREE controversial and questionable dissolutions of parliament in the last 15 months, starting with breaking his own fixed election law in Sept/08.

    This prorogation was NOT done so that MPs can watch the Olympics. Parliament was prorogued because the special House of Commons committee focusing on the 2006-07 treatment of Afghan detainees had attained such overwhelming evidence that they held an emergency meeting on December 14 and then announced that they would widen the inquiry.

    It is NOT the case that Harper's use of prorogation is the same as the 104 other prorogations in Canada's history. Other than incidents in 1873 and 1926, prorogation has not been used to avoid being accountable to parliament.

    It is NOT true that Chretien's 2003 prorogation was the same as this one. In the 2003 incident, Chretien prorogued when Martin was voted in to replace him as PM, so the parliamentary agenda needed to be reset, which is the purpose of proroguing.

    • David B.

      Correct.

      Prorogations in perspective: Harper vs. Chrétien

      Stephen Harper’s 63 day shutdown of Parliamentary activity brings his total to 148 days over just four years in office, eclipsing Jean Chrétien’s 145 days of prorogation over ten full years.

      Jean Chrétien’s total includes the only longer prorogation in recent history – 82 days from November 12, 2003 to February 2, 2004 – to allow for the transition between the Chrétien and Martin governments.

      Other recent prorogations:
      • 63 days: Stephen Harper, December 30, 2009 to March 3, 2010
      • 53 days: Stephen Harper, December 4, 2008 to January 26, 2009
      • 32 days: Stephen Harper, September 14 to October 16, 2007
      • 25 days: Jean Chrétien, February 2 to February 27, 1996
      • 24 days: Jean Chrétien, September 18 to October 12, 1999
      • 14 days: Jean Chrétien, September 16 to September 30, 2002

      source: Liberal Party of Canada website

  • David B.

    Muster all hands on deck and take this issue c/w those blackened pages Mr. Harper wishes to turn tail from straight to the people of Canada coast to coast to coast the taxpayers have paid in advance for the heat and lights in our H of C so go to work like millions of Canadians do daily.

    Do not let him or his clones try to involve our brave troops into the fires back home. Our brave troops are doing a stellar job in their quest to bring Democracy to Afghanistan the very least PM Stephen Harper and Reform/Conservative MP's and Senators can do is lead by example providing the opposition's request with the truth and to do so they shall show up for work even to the point of overtime.

    Time to remind Mr. Harper "Leadership starts at top" and if he can not stand the heat in the kitchen and must turn tail and run using millions of taxpayers dollars then at least have the decency to resign in disgrace

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