Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW

Futures market

by Paul Wells on Wednesday, April 28, 2010 12:19am - 347 Comments

I haven’t seen the strategy memo Stephen Harper received from his campaign staff within days after he was elected, but I have no trouble imagining some of the points that would have been on it. Point 1 or 2 in the Conclusions would have been something like this:

Conservatives are outnumbered in Parliament and the electorate, isolated at one end of the left-right spectrum, and will remain so for the foreseeable future. At your first sign of durable weakness your defeat will become certain and your political career will be over.

Note what this (imaginary, but I think realistic) point doesn’t say. It doesn’t say “Neatness counts” or “Friends make friends” or “Don’t upset the Speaker.” The median MP in this Parliament, if you were to line them all up in order from the most left-wing all the way to Rob Anders, is a Liberal. This Parliament’s equilibrium state is a coalition of left and centre-left parties in support of a Liberal prime minister. Stephen Harper can’t ever let this Parliament reach its equilibrium state if he wants to keep being prime minister. If you look at things this way, “Parliamentary supremacy” starts to sound like the end of his political career.

We’re heading into an unpredictable couple of weeks, but I think all of the above gives you some hints about how Harper is likely to respond to Peter Milliken’s ruling. There is a question of substance here (How did Canadian governments permit detainees to be treated in Afghanistan in the early years of this conflict?) and one of circumstance (How does a government respond to an assertion of MPs’ collective privilege?). I have a hard time mustering appropriate reverence for colleagues who don’t give a damn about the substance but who want to build observatories of circumstance. I’ve addressed the substance here and there (torture generally; the Colvin testimony); now, on the process question, perhaps it isn’t too prosaic to point out that if the Conservatives let Parliament get into the habit of majority rule, the Conservatives will not long form the government. You may think that’s a good thing. Stephen Harper will disagree.

So he will stonewall. He would rather fight an election on this question than concede. So far he has had some success at winning or avoiding elections. Every time the prospect of an election has increased sharply over the past four years, the Conservative poll advantage has increased. A few days’ brinksmanship is usually all it takes to put SNAP ELECTION? into a front-page Globe headline, and a distracted electorate starts to engage and polarize, and the Conservatives start to climb in the polls to the Liberals’ disadvantage. I think Harper’s reading of his interests will lead him to work hard to recreate that dynamic. If it works, either Michael Ignatieff or Jack Layton will be very likely to rediscover a yearning to “make Parliament work,” which in that case won’t mean quite what Speaker Milliken intended it to mean.

If he manages to scare the rest of the Commons off balance yet again, Harper’s victory will displease many Canadians but it will not be empty or meaningless. It will be the only victory he has sought since January 2006: a chance to stay in power a while longer and make a few more decisions that will cement a broadly Conservative perspective on the way the country should be governed. A few more months during which Bev Oda, not Carolyn Bennett, will be setting the agenda for a G8 summit, and Jason Kenney, not Bob Rae, will have friends on the Rights and Democracy board, and Ken Dryden won’t be opening safe-injection sites, and so on. That’s the process I tried to lay out in this article, and even though some people still think Stephen Harper isn’t a conservative because his government spends a lot of money, I’m pretty sure that article remains a handy guide to understanding what will happen next.

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  • common man

    cont`d…….It was obvious that there was some nasty stuff going on and I remember watching a Parliamentary Committee at work where the Liberal majority used every opportunity to vote down any opportunity to get to the truth. They used the WAY that was available to hide their lack of SUBSTANCE.
    They went on to win the 2004 election because the people couldn`t find out the truth. It wasn`t until 2006 that the people used their WAY to get rid of that gov`t.

    So you can romanticize all you want about how Parliament is working today. I think you`re kidding yourself if you say you would feel the same way if Harper was winning every vote there 154 to 153.

    The best way to have good gov`t is to elect competent honest people and keep reminding them they are there at the wish of the people.

  • Lord Kitchener's Own

    OK, fine, you don't care if democracy is eroded as long as it's your guys doing the eroding, and I think the erosion of democracy is a travesty in all of it's forms. (and, again, I'd feel just fine about Harper winning every vote 154 to 153. I'd hate the policies and laws we were getting, I'm sure, but that's democracy… what ISN'T democracy is when a government loses a vote in parliament and then ACTS LIKE IT DOESN'T MATTER).

    I may be naive and delusional to think that we should keep responsible government in Canada, but I can see that I should move on and stop trying to convince you that that's important.

    Nice move on the "anything Chretien can do, we can do better" argument though. I never get tired of Tory supporters trumpeting their party's ability to outdo the master.

    Chretien's Parliaments were unaccountable, secretive, and ineffectual at holding the government to account? Just you wait. The Tories will make Parliament utterly meaningless.

    I liked Chretien mind you, but I also liked you guys better when you used to use Chretien's misdeeds as a BAD example, as opposed to a foundation upon which to build. Conservatives sure can move fast from "there's a bad man who must be stopped at all costs" to "we can learn a lot from that guy". Perhaps it's just political evolution. It took Harper's government half as long to get to this point as it did the Chretien Liberals.

  • Lord Kitchener's Own

    Sorry, I'd play the whole "make vague insinuations backed by nothing and insist that your fellow commenter try to read your mind" game, but I'm busy in a back and forth with common man at the moment, and it's dangerous for one to feed two trolls at once.

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

    Not very difficult to find out what I am referring to. Just look up Derek Lee's voting behaviour for the past month. (In case you are genuinely interested in the supremacy of the House and democracy and that sort of stuff, of course.)

    Or, if you don't want to understand what Derek Lee has been up to, then just ignore it, like most everyone else. I, on the other hand, don't care too much about hypocracy.

  • Jan

    So you're dumbass routine was a rouge. Black Adder clever. You must be a free lancer – the PMO hires such idiots, they always blow themselves upearly on.

  • Jan

    I was addressing FV…not LKO.

  • common man

    Normally, I would have let this go long ago but I would like to clear up a couple things.
    I may think you are mistaken when your obsession with an independent Parliament causes you to forget that party politics controls Parliament.
    Call it Benevolent Dictatorship as they did in Chretien`s years, but majority governments just use parliament as a means to acheive their end. I used the example in 2004 to illustrate that just having the majority in Parliament does not ensure good gov`t.
    It never occured to me to question your desire for democracy or responsible gov`t. I think it was a mistake for you to question mine.

  • common man

    cont`d……As for your mention of Chretien, I`m really indifferent towards him. I just used his majorities as an example because they were recent…….if you like, just substitute any mention of his name for Trudeau or Mulroney.

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

    Too many big words for ya?

    Sent from my iPod

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

    Harper doesn't have a chance of ever gaining a Majority. His disrespect for democratic institutions, his mini-Bonaparte scheming and autocratic style of pushing a Republican Rush Limbaugh/Glenn Beck Agenda for Canadians, are now legendary and turning off most of us!

    Why do you think, Paul, thousands of us took to the streets to protest prorogation of our democratic rights by this Bush-lite "ruthless tactician"–as that great socialist rag, the ECONOMIST, put it in its condemning editorial on Harper's (lack of) Democracy!?

    Bev Oda is a Sarah Palin neanderthal who prefers wire hangers as the only true troglodyte approach to Women's Reproductive Health! She is a shamefully gender-challenged neocon whose agenda should bring Canadian women back to the Middle Ages and sharpening a Pitchfork for Harper's next Electoral disaster!

    Carolyn Bennett is a medical doctor who has helped hundreds of Canadian women and their children at her former clinic. She is in a far better position to speak on behalf of Canadian women (as are NDP politicians for that matter) than the ODIOUS MISS ODA!

    THE ODIOUS HARPER TROGLODYTES will be coming out of their caves soon and will find that Canadian women don't like being dragged back into their caves any time soon!

    They should try to read Hillary Clinton's Bejing 1995 speech and learn:

    "Women's rights are Human Rights" and human rights are Women's Rights"

    Question: Do the Harper cavemen and their female attachments understand or know how to spell "Human Rights"?
    Aye, there's the rub!

  • JamesHalifax

    Jan wrote:
    "All it's takes for people like you, is to be given a little rope."

    thanks, Jan, I was expecting that.
    I suppose pointing out a fact you don't like automatically makes someone a racist or bigot eh? How very Liberal of you.

    The "student" in question, could have been a fat white woman and it would have made no difference. The fact is she is an NDP plant who pretended to be something she is not.

    I mention her body type and colour for a very simple reason……..it makes her easier to point out.

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

    And, yes, yet another prescient column (sometimes going against my instinctual social responses) by Paul WELLS!

    I've watched him during a conference/seminar held by Macleans out west and he was simply BRILLIANT! Of course, I don't always agree with him…..but I do respect his opinion and that's why I keep on reading this prescient prince of Macleans County!

    P.S. the Economist was damn right about Harper being a "ruthless tactician" out to destroy, diminish and degrade what's left of our Canadian Parliamentary Democratic institutions…..bahumbug! Please God, I pray every day, for the Lord to take Harper away…..from Canadian politics and into the arms of the Tea Partyers. Amen.

  • JamesHalifax

    Sorry doug, my degrees are Accounting and Finance. I took Psych as a "gimme" because easy marks are still marks.

    As for the "big words" to which you refer…….they would be more appealing if you could manage to arrange them in such a was as to be even slightly interesting. I don't care if you are right or not, but geez man, please don't bore me.

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

    If all you got left is ad hominem and abuse, you got nothing.

    And if degrees are proof of prowess, well, I ain't got any of those either. Too bad.

    And you got nothing but the ability to add numbers.

    My miserable ability to arrange words obviously remains able to interest you, because you seem to be the only one reading this thread at this point.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/tigerinexile Ben (The Tiger)

    Have the past three years (since the Roberval by-election victory of 17 Sept. 2007 and the permanent loss of Bloc support for the Tories) simply been a Jedi mind-trick by Harper on the various leaders of the Liberal Party of Canada?

    Yep.

    Hey, it's worked so far…

  • Out There

    The Liberals have called for an inquiry, and are willing to include the time that they were in power in the scope of said inquiry.

    If all of this has been a cunning strategic ploy to back the Liberals into a corner before springing a trap, this will have wasted enormous amounts of time and money so that Harper can play chess when everyone else is playing checkers.

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

    This is what I'm talking about. You guys hate Harper. Then when someone comes along and tries to defend him from a common sense perspective, on that doesn't simply assume that he's evil, you guys make the PMO hack accusation.

    If your premise is that Harper is good for nothing, then you have no credibility. You're obviously at odds with the Canadian electorate.

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

    Perhaps the government needs more coercive powers to enable them to weed out these enemies of the state?

  • Mike T.

    It's been suggested, it has never been apparent. And the problem is going to be when the stuff was known and how long it was hidden, not when it happened. That puts Harper, most likely, in the worser position.

  • Ross Downham

    Deflect and Diffuse. The key ingredients in Confuse. Atta boy Steve!!

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

    And yet, more people *don't* want Harper as leader than any other as well.

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

    False dichotomy. Wanting to be sure that our government is supporting our soldiers in upholding the Geneva Conventions, which we've signed on to.. to be sure that Canadians are acting in a civilized manner no matter their opponents doe not equate to a "gloved hand and a silver platter." We treat them in a civilized manner because it says much about who we are.. not what we feel about them.

    And if we're ever going to actually win this new theatre of warfare, it will only come about because the citizenry our opponents hide among no longer support them, because they see a better way.

  • Jan

    Chet must be Harper's pollster. This explains everything.

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

    Could lose a seat in Simcoe Grey

  • Jan

    I'm sure you prefer an Ann Coulter event.

  • JamesHalifax

    Don't worry, Jan. My response to your comment was deleted by a "correct thinking" administrator who decided I can not write something that is inherently true and verifiable.

    Almost reminds one of the Human Rights Commission. Truth is no defence.

    Interesting. Guess that's why I watch CPAC instead of the CBC.

  • JamesHalifax

    Don't worry too much about the Liberals. I'm sure they made sure any incriminating docs were destroyed before they had to pack up and leave their offices.

    They're corrupt, immoral, and they are thieves…..but they are not stupid.

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