The end of the Liberal empire

Andrew Coyne on how the former Natural Governing Party might avoid certain doom

by Andrew Coyne on Wednesday, April 7, 2010 12:58pm - 179 Comments
The end of the Liberal empirw

Photograph by Roger Lemoyne

Going into the Liberal policy conference in Montreal last weekend, the papers were full of comparisons to the Aylmer conference of 1991, or even the Kingston conference of 1960—places of lore, where deep thinkers conjured up new ideas that later propelled the party to victory.

This is how the media imagines policy is born. You close the doors, pour some coffee, and brainstorm for a few hours, like advertising copywriters on a deadline, until a new idea pops into your head. The new idea is so obviously superior to the old that you are elected. Or, conversely, parties fail to meet the media’s demand for “new ideas” and are condemned to electoral hell.

By that standard, the conference was a failure: the only “new idea” to emerge from Montreal was a proposal to freeze corporate tax rates. But perhaps that wasn’t the point. Perhaps the point of the conference was rather to educate Liberals in some unpleasant realities: fiscal, social, political. The point, it seemed to me, was to tell them this wasn’t Kingston. The country’s problems are much different than those it faced in 1960, and so are the solutions.

Which is to say: the Liberal party itself is in a vastly different place than it was then. In 1960, the intellectual winds were blowing the party’s way. The solutions it proposed—public health care, public pensions, a vast expansion of the welfare state—were on the leading edge of contemporary thinking. By 1991, they were playing catch-up, grudgingly accepting the wisdom of free trade and balanced budgets. But against an exhausted Conservative government, it proved enough.

Today the situation is far more dire. In 1960 or 1991, it was still possible for Liberals to hope that, with a turn in the political tides, they could be carried back to power in relatively short order. In 2010, that is a harder case to make. Much is made of the failings of their current leader, Michael Ignatieff, as much was made of the failings of the last, and of the one before that. But the truth is that the Natural Governing Party is in the grip of a historic political realignment, which it is all but powerless to resist.

The only surprise is that we did not see it coming long ago. As recently as 2003, it was still common to refer to the Liberal party as an unstoppable political dynasty, and to Canada as a system almost of one-party rule. Yet that impressive imperial facade concealed deep fissures. The Liberal empire was cracking up, and had been for more than 50 years.

Go back to 1949. In that year’s election, the first under Louis St. Laurent, the Liberals took 191 of 262 seats to win their fourth straight majority. More impressively, they won a majority of the seats in every region: Ontario, Quebec, the West, and Atlantic Canada. Today they control only the last.

The West was the first to go. The Liberals’ western caucus was cut to single digits in 1957, then obliterated in the Diefenbaker sweep the following year, a calamity from which it has never recovered: 1949 was in fact the last time the Liberals carried the West. In most elections since they have struggled to win a dozen seats.

But that was not so much of a problem for the party, so long as it maintained its historic lock on Quebec. The Liberals won six of seven elections from 1963 through 1980, yet only once (1968) carried the rest of Canada. The difference was Quebec: under Pierre Trudeau, the Liberals routinely racked up more than two-thirds of the seats in the province. But the Mulroney sweep of 1984 ended that, and the party has never really recovered there, either.

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  • Andre

    All parties are in a similar rut. The party of the united right is heterogeneous and starting to show signs of strain. The party of distant left faces the same question each election: do we or do we not take ourselves seriously this time. The party of the first minority is more like a dog chasing a car. So, who is left to run the country?

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

    This is how the media imagines policy is born. You close the doors, pour some coffee, and brainstorm for a few hours, like advertising copywriters on a deadline, until a new idea pops into your head.

    Too true.

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

    I agree with Andrew's general thrust. The Liberals really have become isolated to a few outposts in the country. Thankfully for them, Toronto has a lot of seats.
    However, I'd have to say we'd need to see more time past before you can officially declare them in trouble. Parties have a way of rebounding.

    • Orson Bean

      I agree with you that the Liberal brand has a lot of resilience, and that a lot of Canadians still have Liberal as their instinctive default voting option. That is the main thing that the LPC has going for it right now. But still, everything that Coyne talks about here should be of serious concern to Liberals and their supporters. They have to be careful not to whistle past the graveyard, or they may end up inhabiting it. Any political party that thinks that its existence is some sort of necessary given is a party with a serious hubris problem. No political party's existence is necessary or inevitable in the long run.

  • steve

    i love this line – "But if it didn’t work for Stéphane Dion, it’s hard to see how it might for Ignatieff, whose past support for American imperialism and the Iraq war make him anathema to many on the left."

    now, i love US imperialism, and it's the only thing i respect about Iggy, but it's still a zinger.

    • Mike T.

      It would be even more damning if Stephen Harper weren't the only world leader who has never renounced his support for the Iraq war.

      (just sayin').

  • WestLight

    Someone reported that at the conference much of the talk was in the corridors and not in the formal discussions and that the subject of these corridor discussions centred around big programs like national daycare and national phamacare.

    It is difficult to see where the Liberals are going to find traction, even if the adopt Mr. Coyne's ideas. Michael Ignatieff just doesn't have the communication skills necessary for a politician to sell ideas to the voting public.

    At present the Liberals are concentrating on cheap tactics in the House of Commons, and not presenting anything larger. For all their talk of the evils of prorogation once Parliament returned the Canadian public said "Oh those bozos. They're back."

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

    The problem with Dion's carbon tax was that the Liberals planned to spend the revenue from the tax on big ticket social programs like daycare.

    Unless the Liberals can convince Canadians that they won't waste the money foolishly, they will never be able to convince Canadians to support it.

    Here in Japan, where I am currently living, the new "left-leaning" government has wiped away all the goodwill it had when it was elected last year by proposing new social programs such as family allowances. Prime Minister Hatoyama's support levels have plummeted from 70 percent to under 20 percent in less than 8 months. So much for new social plans.

  • Orson Bean

    Possibly the best line in the whole article was this one: "A panel on foreign policy dwelled mostly on past glories, when apparently we bestrode the world like titans."

    Brilliant, AC. It perfectly encasulates the delusional mind-set of the Liberal Party and the Canadian left when it comes to foreign policy. Apparently none of these people have ever travelled abroad. Those of us who have realize that we are more or less irrelevant pipsqueaks in the world, and always have been.

  • Wayne Moaha

    Liberalism is a mental disorder. That is why no one votes for these crooks.

  • SpencBC

    I'll be satisfied when the big ones end up in prison for the theft of hundreds of millions. Finally a Liberal is willing to admit the end of Liberal tyranny! I hope they die completely and are never seen again!

  • ex canuck

    Mr Coyne, you have written a serious article about a serious subject, and I congratulate and thank you. The article shows that McLeans is not utterly irrelevant and sophomoric. One did and does have fears.

    Your analysis of the fundamental reasons for Liberal party decline is convincing, but there is another perhaps more profound reason. The Liberals have undergone an utter loss of moral authority (Gomery + the arrogance of their front benchers + the abortive union with the NDP + the stale 'stars" at the Montreal meeting + +) that runs in parallel with their loss of a raison d''etre so ably documented in your article.

    It seems to me that a solution might be found to the fundamental problem, but the secondary one is much more difficult. Personalities are hard if not impossible to change.

    As a final point, I think Messrs Ignatief and Dion have been too harshly judged. They both rashly stepped into an impossible situation.

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

      Dion and Ignatieff did most certainly NOT step into an impossible situation. That's like never deciding to buy a house because the housing market is never perfect. You see, it never is!

      Chretien could ride into government simply because the conservatives were divdided in two. Plus Martin took a lot of ideas (fiscal prudence) from Manning's constant hammering. While Chretien was in power, too many Liberals had thought that they had won those governments on their own meirts solely, which is where the "lazyness" or "arrogance" had set in deeper. Meanwhile, Martin was waiting and waiting to become the next succesful Lib PM but while the knives were being sharpened within the Lib party, the conservatives reunited and caught up in a hurry.

      • ex canuck

        FVerhoeven, thank you for the historical summary which, while interesting, is just history. It is the moral collapse of the party that I was referring to. IMO, utter lack of principle, or moral stance, still governs the Liberal party, and this was what neither of the two last, and failed, leaders failed to see. Perhaps I was being too charitable with both of them.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/CTM Claudia Lemire

      Not Ignatieff, he wanted this position, it was the whole party that agreed to jump and make him leader, they thought he was the answer to all their problems, but as we can see that's not the case, it's deeper than that . (but the lack of leadership is a very big one).

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/CTM Claudia Lemire

    And Herb I do not know anymore who could be the next leader (Bob Rae is not an option at all, will never get enough votes in the west) Leblanc, Kennedy? I am not sure!

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/frenchie101 frenchie101

      Not Kennedy, he screwed up with Dion

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

    Former Liberal MP Dennis Mills used to campaign vigorously for the flat tax, complete with postcard-sized tax form.

    We get to a postcard-sized tax form by eliminating all but a few exemptions, eliminating special tax credits for kids in sports or for renovating your house, eliminating deductions for donations to political parties, eliminating credits that try to direct investment towards the industry flavour of the day, and so on; a change to a single rate tax has essentially nothing to do with reaching that goal, and should not be mistaken for simplification of the tax system.

  • Gord

    The Liberals can talk all they want about new policies and directions but they must account for their past actions. More than any issue, the demise of the Meech Lake Accord caused mostly by Liberal party operatives like Clyde Wells, Sharon Carstairs and, of course, Pierre Trudeau in ealry 1990 has irreparably damaged the party in Quebec. The Accord’s failure led to the near disatrous referendum result in 1995 and, ironically, to Mr. Chretien’s desperate promise that the federal Government would respect many of the principles that formed part of the Accord despite its failure to become law. What’s more, it gave rise to Mr. Chretien’s decision to boost federal advertising in Quebec, a poor consolation prize for Quebecers who supported Meech Lake. Of course, this, in turn, led to the sponsorship scandal, an outright embarrassment to Quebecers and another big black eye for the party in Quebec. For its “principled” stand on Meech, the party’s support in Quebec has since tanked and they have gained nothing in the West. to offset these losses. Unless and until a new Liberal leader apologizes to the people of Quebec for the party’s role in killing the hugely popular (in Quebec, at least) Meech Lake Accord, the party has little chance of wide electoral success. Of course, it would also take a sea change in thinking by the party’s aging elite and a very bold leader to suggest that the great Mr. Trudeau and his group might have really messed things for Canada and the party in 1990. For Liberals, the sooner this can be done the better, Quebec people have long memories, just ask any Conservative.

    • Orson Bean

      Thanks for the historical reminder, that's an interesting angle. I guess one way of looking at the killing of Meech Lake is that it was one of the last great spasms of hard-core Trudeau Liberalism.

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

    The Liberal Party has got to get its act together quickly. It is refreshing to see a party open itself to a discussion of all policy options, given our embarrasing current government.
    If a progressive or compassionate idea was to errantly find its way into Conservatiuve Party headquarters, alarms would sound, barriers would descend and the Prime Minister and Cabinet would be isolated in the Panic Room to find the best way to negatively spin things for partisan advantage, or claim it as a heretofore unidentified portion of Canada's (i.e. the Conservative Party's!) Economic Action Plan.
    Harper is fortunately hampered in his desire to achieve national credibility by the need for him to constantly reassure his wealthy, knuckle dragging, neanderthal Calgarian base that the Earth is still Flat.

    • Orson Bean

      That last sentence perfectly encasulates the mind-set of the Liberal Party of Canada when it comes to Alberta. To me the interesting question is: are they deliberately writing off Alberta by believing drivel like this, or do they think that they can continually insult Albertans and hold them in contempt yet somehow get them to vote for them anyway?

  • Liberal in Exile

    Good piece, AC, but as you know, the core problem faced by the Liberals is our ridiculous first-past-the-post electoral system. With the right wing united, and centre/progressive votes dispersed amongst LPC, NDP, Green Party and BQ, there is no plausible arithmetic leading back to LPC parliamentary majorities; even gaining parliamentary minorities will be very difficult. And the fact is, recent elections show that these several parties are all here to stay. It is daydreaming to imagine that Green Party voters will return to the Liberal fold. The NDP, likewise, will keep its 12% to 15%, and les electeurs du BQ, ben, hostie, ils vont continuer avec ca, n'est-ce pas. Which is why the LPC should indeed become the party of democratic reform; I've been advocating this for years. I can't figure out why Ignatieff hasn't got onto this. I used to think he was a smart guy. Can't he do sums?

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

    Since when is signing on to the farce of carbon credits and the whole global warming farce a way forward? Global Warming is the classic grab for power by Statists of the Right and the Left, giving Government control over every area of life and a bottomless pit of taxes passed on to the naive voters by big industry. The fact that Andrew Coyne is considered by anyone in this country to be for individual rights and free enterprise shows how far we have fallen as a self reliant society of individuals. A "guaranteed income"? Who guarantees it Andrew? "Democratic Reform"? The answer is smaller government not democratic reform. Politicians not stripped of their ability to tax and spend will always "grow" government. Big Government is the antithesis of democracy since it always pits one group forcing another group to pay for things they want. You're a light weight as an intellect Andrew.

  • James Wolfe

    I hadn't realised that the Liberal Party was having a tea party last week – I must have been watching American Idol when it was happening.

    The issue of corporation tax is fascinating. If I am not mistaken, I recall the last Liberal administration (that of Monsieur Martin) proposing reduction of same in its last budget. It never reached the books because Mr Layton's party demanded its removal as the price for its continued support, thus keeping a weak and discredited government in power for far longer than this country deserved.

    If reduction of corporation tax was a good idea then, why is it not today?

    • Orson Bean

      Because the Liberals are grasping at straws.

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

    Methinks that Coyne, being a very Conservative guy, has a death wish here for the Liberals himself.

    That's what it's all about.

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

    The party of individual rights
    The party of taxpayers.
    The party of consumers

    If they had these values, they wouldn't be Liberals, they'd be Conservatives. Liberals have been working against individual rights, either as taxpayers, consumers or in any other guise, for the last half-century.

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

    Andrew, you've done it again! An exceptionally good article.

  • ddd

    One very very easy thing the Liberals could do, at the cost of a few socks, is to not, just stop ragging on the west. Every election in memory, the last few days when they have seen their Ontario numbers soften, was to dig up some tripe on how threatening Alberta is to everyone.

    Just stop. Hand out socks. If that doesn't work, fire some people.

    The Liberals are not a national party. Period. Until they get that through their heads, they will be fighting with the NDP for 20% of the vote.

  • CLN

    Neo-con ideas appeal. Who wouldn't want to pay less? That is until you realized that the privatization campaign is making you pay more for services which you used to enjoy for free because your tax dollars funded them. With the retirement of baby boomers and the demand for more services, it is a matter of time before activist government is in vogue again. When you are faced with footing most of your medical bills out of pocket with limited income, you start to ask yourself what can the government do for me.

    • Orson Bean

      I would be fascinated to hear you explain to us how, with a shrinking tax base and swelling aged boomer population, we are going to be able to afford Activist Government version 2.0. How are we going to be able to afford gold-plated, 100% government-funded health care when Generation X and Y are the only people in the workforce paying taxes? Do you think these people are going to put up with 90% marginal tax rates?

  • Barb

    Liberals and NDP are socialists. Socialism will eventually lead to communism, and then to totaltarianism. Canada's media is very corrupt always trying to sway the populace toward socialism. By the way nothing is free…someone some where will have to pay. I prefer to pay my own way rather than give up my freedom. Hopefullly the masses are waking up.

  • The Real Solution

    Your joking right? Communism…Totalitarianism… Corrupt Canadian media…LOL…good one Barb!

    Unite the left and send this Conservative Kindergarten Class now running the country back to school!

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

    Mr Ignatieff would do well to read Jeffery Simpsons book The Friendly Dictator – I watch Harper manipulate the voting public and it appears he is using this for his playbook. Having said that we as voters and canadians need to look less at the Leader we elect than the team behind the Leader – I think our future depends more on a good plan rather than a strong and controlling leader like we have now – Harper is not known for his listening skills or his ability to handle dissent well. Mr Ignatieff has had lots of practice lately and I think that is a good thing. People are becoming more active atleast cyber-wise in politics – CAPP is a good example. People Power is what the leader of the British Conservatives is pushing. We do not need expensive Nannying by the government and NIMBY's are losing their edge. If you do the math on Harper's Conservatism you will find that being a neo-con stops at his chequebook – There is room for the Libs to move to the right – Harper has vacated that field

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