The Liberals will never be the same

Andrew Coyne predicts there will be neither a coalition nor a merger, only the destruction of the Liberal party

by Andrew Coyne on Monday, June 21, 2010 8:18am - 232 Comments

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

There are some things you say that you can never take back. It doesn’t matter whether you meant what you said. You said it, and from that moment things can never be the same. This is how it is now, I think, with the Liberal Party of Canada.

For the past several weeks, various figures, mostly on the left of the party, have been openly speculating about the possibility of forming a coalition government with the NDP after the next election. Not a mere non-aggression pact, such as the one between the Ontario Liberal and New Democratic parties 25 years ago—the object of some pointed public reminiscing by Bob Rae—but a full-blown coalition: common program of government, New Democrats in cabinet, the works.

This mounting fever of speculation having gone unchallenged by the leader—after much thought, Michael Ignatieff eventually allowed as how a coalition could not be ruled out, though he had appeared to do just that a year ago—it should not have been entirely surprising to find some willing to go further still. As long as we’re talking about forming a coalition after the election, why not a coalition before the election—divide up the seats, agree on a slate of candidates, the works? In which case, why not merge the parties altogether?

When the news broke that indeed such a project was being discussed, and not just by anyone, but by senior figures in both parties, including former leaders Jean Chrétien and Ed Broadbent, the general reaction was incredulity. You want us to believe a story whose only named source is Warren Kinsella? Later, when the truth of it could no longer be denied, it was derided as old news. Hadn’t Roy Romanow been talking this way for years? Yawn.

I’m sorry. When a former prime minister lets it be known that he has given up on the party he led to three majorities, and wants to merge it with another party, that is not something that can be dismissed, or forgotten. It may be unwise, it may be unworkable, but that does not mean that people in both parties—serious people, not fringe cranks—are not thinking about it, or that they will not persist in the endeavour. This cannot be without consequence. The prospect having been raised in such a spectacular fashion, it cannot be unraised. A chain of events has been set in motion, with a momentum and a logic whose endpoint, I predict, is neither coalition nor merger, but the destruction of the Liberal party.

Consider first the implications of a simple coalition—a coalition struck not in the chaotic aftermath of an indecisive election, but anticipated well in advance. For left-leaning voters tempted to stray into the NDP camp, there is no longer any reason to stick with the Liberals, as they have been traditionally admonished, just to keep the Conservatives out: the coalition can see to that now. Indeed, as Chantal Hébert has pointed out, all the more reason to vote NDP, to strengthen its hand in coalition talks. Meanwhile, right-leaning voters will consider the spectacle of a cabinet filled with the likes of Libby Davies and Pat Martin, and recoil.

The same split between left and right will be played out within the party. The Liberal party is not a party that forms coalitions. It is one. It is not a party of the left, but of the left and right: a cumbersomely broad tent that, so long as the party remained in power, or near it, could nevertheless be kept aloft. The likelihood of an extended stay in opposition, with the attendant need to define itself more sharply, could be predicted to expose the party’s divisions. But so stark a choice as a coalition-merger with the NDP is sure to crack them wide open.

And as Liberal support continues to bleed away, this can only grow worse. The left will take this as further evidence of the necessity of striking some sort of deal with the NDP. The right can be expected to push back just as hard: though it is unlikely to prevail, it can probably forestall any decision until after the election. But what are the party’s chances in an election in which it is so painfully divided?

And what is the NDP’s likely response to that calamity? It is true that it was the NDP that first approached the Liberals about a coalition, in the parliamentary crisis of November 2008. And, to be sure, the NDP has benefited handsomely from the recent resurgence of interest in the idea: it is the centre of everyone’s attention, no longer merely a party of protest but potentially taking a hand in government. But that does not mean it will remain committed to the project—or that it ever was.

I do not think it is the ambition of the present NDP leadership to play helpmate to the Grits. Their aim is to replace them. It has served their purposes to keep the coalition talk alive, not least for the mischief it causes inside the Liberal party. But if the Liberal slide continues, the Dips will have less and less incentive to agree to anything. Rather, they will raise their demands, and raise them again, until at last they walk away from the talks outright, and leave the Liberals to collapse.

It is a dismal fate for Liberals to contemplate. But by not firmly quashing any talk of coalition as soon as it got started, Ignatieff has lost control of events, as surely as he has lost control of the party. I fear it is too late now.

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  • scissorpaws

    Dion was the high water mark for the Liberals. Principles, a worthy cause, and a willingness to reach out to other parties, most notably the Greens, in order to fight for the salvation of the planet. Ignatieff, even by the cynical ground rules he obviously entered politics, missed his chance with the '08 Coalition. He's a clown who began his reign knowing nothing of what he's doing and has proved, for an academic, surprisingly ineducable, a man who apparently believed that entering politics was nothing more than divorcing yourself of all principle, if you happened to have any. That said, most of Mr Coyne's arguments were also made regarding Reform and the PCs – who are still not comfortable bedpersons. I personally liked Dave Orchard, remember him? It's arguable that Canada is too large for anything but an unwieldy Big Tent party and as Harper proves himself capable of outLiberalling the Glibs – $Billion for the G-Whatever? Just watch me. – it becomes less and less significant. If the coalition does happen there will be a new leader, new dynamics and a new game. But it'll just be a game. The country lost when Dion lost.

    • Orson Bean

      You lost me when you said you liked David Orchard.

  • cooper

    We don't need Fox north, we have the Mclean's rag endorsing the neo-c0ns. Odious, lacking in credibility and good judgment. this government is horrific and it appears you are too.

  • JMG

    I don't expect the Liberals to collapse, but the headline seems an accurate prediction – they'll never be the same. Canadians have historically been flexible partisans, but it seems that partisanship is on the increase lately. While I wouldn't accuse the Conservatives of having principles, they have a clearer sense of purpose and ideology than the Liberals, who seem to have lost any sense of what they stand for. I'm not sure if that means the Liberals will become our Liberal (or Free) Democrats, and it's further worth mentioning that both of the two largest parties are much weaker than they have been historically. The polling space occupied by the Cons and Libs has dropped from from around 80% prior to 1993 to about 60% today. The difference is largely made up by the Bloc and the Greens – I'd say that the medium-to-long-term fortunes of the Greens as a place for vote-parking may have more to do with the Liberals' fate than anything else (and I also tend to think that their support is systematically underestimated in polls thanks to the Greens, who have never won votes remotely close to the level showing up in pre-election polls).

  • Zorba

    Andrew seems to be going to bat for Harper and the Cons we are terrified of losing power the same way they got it – a joining of forces.

  • Henry

    Mr. Coyne should delve into the journalistic archives and read the editorials of the dire predictions of the death of the Canadian Liberal Party, following the election of lion Brian!
    Woops, once Brian's PC sell out of the country to the US became fully apparent i.e. filtered past the biased media (yes you Pamela), and the Libs sorted themsleves out enough to choose an electable leader, back in for a long hall they went! The Liberals should be called the Canadian Phoenix Party. (Just a note, Kennedy should be barred from any future Lib leadership convention, he is lacking in political expediency cognitions).

    • Orson Bean

      Reality check:

      1. Funny how Chretien and Company didn't do anything to reverse or abrogate "Brian's PC sellout of the country to the US". FTA and NAFTA remained intact. Of course, Chretien promised to rip 'em up. But he lied.

      2. That Chretien fella was only back in for the long haul because he had the unprecedented luxury of running against a hopelessly divided right 3 times in a row. It's sorta like me claiming to be a boxing champion because I can beat up a 4 year old kid.

      Get real.

  • http://www.thepolitic.com Mark Peters

    The one element Mr. Coyne does not mention is the Liberal penchant for power. Yes, those within the Liberal party who are decidedly Left or Right will gravitate toward the obvious poles, but I suggest the Centrists of the LPoC will also gravitate to the CPC because the CPC is very close to forming a majority government, and Power has a strong Siren song. Liberals who want a seat in government will go blue much more quickly than they will go orange.

    The foundering of the LPoC would mean successive CPC majority governments.

  • AltaInd

    The Liberals may or may not be the same again but they certainly continue to act the same. Iggy's screw Alberta and BC support of banning tanker traffic from Kitimat is his little NEP. Why doesn't he start with tankers already operating in the St. Lawrence and the Atlantic coast?

  • Michel Brazeau

    I'm not a Liberal supporter nor for any other party per se. I suppose I lean towards conservatism but that doesn't necessarily mean the party(ies).

    As to the fact that the Liberal party may even disappear or get absorbed into the other two parties, I won't hold my breath.

    I heard the same story when Brian Mulroney won his overwhelming majority 1984. "Mulroney and the Tories won the largest majority government in Canadian history. They took 211 seats, three more than their previous record in 1958. The Liberals won only 40 seats, their worst performance ever." (Wikipedia).

    The editorials at that time said that the Canadian political landscape was going to change and become a two-party system like the British experience – a conservative (rightist) party & a labour (leftist) party with a nearly non-existent Liberal party winning only a few seats in each election.

    Well………….. guess what? The landscape did change… but it went back to what it was before. A dominant Liberal party under Jean Chrétien, an ineffective Conservative presence and the usual number of New Democrats (in the vicinity of 20 – 25 – 30 seats).

    So, Mr. Coyne, don't trumpet or prophesize the death or just barely living state of the Liberal party. It'll come back and take its rightful, God ordained (sarcasm) place in government.

  • Jose M. Ruiz

    Like the Liberal run under Cretin

  • Blue Bloc

    This is true. It was true when the Liberals were last in power and look what happened. But we have an ineffective opposition now, so they may as well get on to finding their feet (as the new Conservatives did) and at least offer an alternative again.

  • radha

    Absolutely Andrew we hope that there is a evolution to our 'infantile' democracy or all the democracies for that matter. There is one thing that is the variable when you and I are gone from this world that is human thought for better or worse what is this country and indeed this planet will be in the short and long term? And your thoughts may live or may die with you?

  • http://twitter.com/eyeontheuvss @eyeontheuvss

    The Liberals are already gone in the West, outside a few parts of Vancouver. In my home riding of Okanagan Shuswap the Liberal candidate came fourth, behind the Green candidate. Rural BC, and most of rural Saskatchewan and Manitoba, is typically a battleground between the Conservatives and NDP. Will eastern English-speaking Canada follow suit?

  • hosertohoosier

    No. In the east, the Liberals have strongholds in the GTA, Montreal and the Atlantic Provinces. Lets think for a moment about the interests of those regions of the country, and whether the NDP can effectively represent them. The key industry in the GTA is the auto industry (not everybody is an auto-worker, but there are a lot of spillover effects), the key industry in Montreal is aerospace and the key industry in the Maritimes is oil.

    All of these industries are export-oriented (even if the auto industry and aerospace benefit from strategic government support). The NDP position on trade would be an absolute disaster for the core industries of all three regions.

    Secondly, there are specific aspects of each constituency that are important. For Anglo Montrealers it is important to have a government that is strongly federalist but able to credibly compete in a referendum. On a question as important as national unity, I find it unlikely that Montrealers would turn to the NDP. Indeed, the NDP has seen its potential for growth among social democrat francophones – precisely why the NDP opposed the clarity act. Further, the NDP position on Israel is problematic for the large number of Jewish Liberal supporters in Montreal.

  • JMG

    In what respect is the key industry in the Maritimes oil? Like the Irvings? In fact, the only petroleum resource in the Maritimes is Sable natural gas, and its influence on politics in Nova Scotia is none existent. Your comments about export-oriented manufacturing industries providing poor support for the NDP rather belies support in places like Windsor (what do they make there?), to say nothing of areas dependent on forestry and mining (e.g. BC, Northern Ontario).

    The biggest obstacle to NDP growth in Quebec has little to do with the micro-issues you mention, and much to do with the relationship between the Quebec labour movement and sovereigntist groups. Quebec, after all, has the highest level of unionization in the country, followed by NL, Sask, Manitoba, and BC. While Newfoundland is an anomaly there, the others are the strongest bases of NDP organization in the country. The NDP's main problem has been Ontario; notwithstanding Bob Rae's government, it has never provided a strong base of support on a consistent basis, outside of the most heavily unionized and/or resource-dependent areas. Growth there depends on connecting with a wider constituency in the GTA (and its 56 seats) outside Oshawa, Hamilton, and the Toronto downtown core.

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