A know-nothing strain of conservatism

COYNE: The PM once was viewed as rigid but upright; doctrinaire, but with a certain integrity

by Andrew Coyne on Tuesday, August 17, 2010 6:00am - 0 Comments

Sean Kilpatrick/CP

Every week another Ekos poll comes out, and every week the media hyperventilates over whatever tiny incremental change in federal voting intentions it reveals. But in addition to party preference, Ekos asks Canadians two more questions. One: whether, in their opinion, the country is “moving in the right direction.” And two: whether the government is moving in the right direction.

In every poll, week after week, more than 50 per cent of respondents tell Ekos they think the country is on the right track, as they have for more than a year. Yet since January, nearly as many respondents—in the high 40s, most weeks—have said they think the government is on the wrong track. That’s up from about 40 per cent last year.

It’s highly unusual to see such divergence. Pollsters will tell you the “right track” question is generally a very good predictor of party preferences. Yet here the Tories are, with more than half the public happy with the country’s direction, bumping along at 30 per cent or less in the polls. Clearly, it’s the way they govern, rather than the results—their tail-gunner style of politics, notably—that is the issue.

That trend was clear even before the census debacle. But this latest outbreak of Tory truculence has accelerated the decline. Others have tried, without success, to puzzle out what on Earth the Conservatives could have been thinking. Playing to the base? But what evidence is there that anyone, outside of a small hard core of libertarians, holds any hostility to the census? A plot to starve lefty activist groups of factual ammunition? But census data is presumably of equal use to all causes, left or right.

I think my colleague John Geddes came closest in his piece last week. It isn’t just that the Tories habitually ignore the expert consensus on a wide range of issues—crime, taxes, climate change—it’s that they want to be seen to be ignoring it. It’s the overt antagonism to experts, and by extension the educated classes, that marks the Tory style. In its own way, it’s a form of class war.

You can see it in the sneering references to Michael Ignatieff’s Harvard tenure, in the repeated denunciations of “elites” and “intellectuals.” In the partial dismantling of the census, we reach the final stage: not just hostile to experts, but to knowledge.

It’s an old game, in some respects. There are echoes of the Republican “NASCAR dad” strategy, mixed with the High Tories’ instinctive distrust of new ideas and technocratic monkeying about. Not for nothing did the British Conservatives once glory in the title of the Stupid Party, and the Harper Conservatives seem content to wear the label as well.

But there’s something different going on here. The intellectuals that conservatives generally rail against are those they disagree with. But the Harper Conservatives are just as hostile to the interventions of experts on what one might suppose to be their own side. The decision to cut the GST, rather than income taxes, was made in defiance not of radical economists, but of the orthodox free-market variety. Having jettisoned principle for expediency, the Tories came to regard the “purist” in their own ranks with every bit as much disdain as any lefty egghead—more, actually.

The result is a uniquely nasty, know-nothing strain of conservatism. The Thatcher Tories, unlike their forebears, weren’t anti-intellectual: her cabinet contained some of Britain’s most fertile social and political minds. Ronald Reagan, though hardly an intellectual, did not demonize expert opinion, or pit the educated classes against the rest. Even today’s Republican party, as know-nothing as it sometimes appears, relies heavily on a network of think tanks to provide it with intellectual heft. Only in Canada have expertise and ideas been so brutally cast aside. On the level of principle, this is appalling. A society that holds education and expertise in contempt, no less than one that disdains commerce or entrepreneurship, is dying. To whip up popular hostility to intellectuals is to invite the public to jump on its own funeral pyre.

The good news is, it hasn’t seemed to work: class war is no more a winning political strategy when practised by Tories than its left-wing variants, and for much the same reason. The general public do not see the world in such stark, us-and-them tones as their would-be svengalis might hope. Their experience of society is more complex and ambiguous. People might envy “the rich,” but they also hope one day to join them. We might tell pollsters we dislike lawyers, but they’re the first people we call when we’re in trouble. We all detest “the media,” but we all consume it. More broadly, we can sense that our interests are bound up together, however much we might divide and subdivide on cultural, ethnic or other lines.

Where, then, does this leave the Tories? Without convictions, to be sure, but also without a strategy: neither principled nor expedient. And the Prime Minister? Consider how his image has changed over the years. Once he was viewed as rigid, but upright; doctrinaire, but with a certain integrity. Over time that gave way to a more Machiavellian cast. Perhaps it was true, it was said, that he would do anything and say anything to hold onto power, but you had to admire his cunning.

But now? After so many miscues, unforced errors, too-clever tricks and utter botch-ups, does anyone still cling to the “strategic genius” view of Stephen Harper?

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  • arcticmelt

    Absolutely right. Just look at the blogs in general. The Conservative commentors will take on a thoughtful opinion, and attack it with all the vitriol they can muster if it leans away from the party line or credence.. There also seems to be the same on the other side of things but to a lessor degree that the right does it, at least in my opinion. This kind of politics, pitting region against region, right against left, French against English, patriotism vs unpatriotic and the list goes on is ridiculous in a modern society. Some of these comments are tough to digest! Isn't it the government of the day's responsibility to work towards creating a harmonious atmosphere in the country? Seems to me the concentration is more on dividing than otherwise. Great writing sir!!!

    • Observant

      So you perceive the Coalition Troika Junta's attempt to overthrow the duly elected gov't and install socialists and separatists into the belly of the gov't acceptable ..???!!!!

      If that ain't hardball politics with blood dripping all over their hands .. I don't know what is …!!!!

      • arcticmelt

        Your type makes my point exactly…Your senseless vitriol is everywhere and anywhere. A cruel partisan with a perception that you and you alone have the answers. A partisan hack that follows party line like sheep. No mind of your own. You are to be pitied, among other things!

        • Orson Bean

          Yes, it's amazing. Left-wing people are never ever partisan, nor do they ever display vitriol.

          At least, that's the case in your vivid fantasy world.

  • Pat

    I agree, in the same way I agree Chretien's failure to dump the GST was a sound decision, policy wise.

    In the same way I believe reducing the GST in opposition to what every credible economist advised was a costly policy decision designed to provide political gains. That is the kind of thing that erodes one's integrity.

    • Style

      Thank goodness the Harper government worked so hard to get the HST in place in Ontario and BC, then, greatly offsetting any harm that might have come from the GST cut. It's hard to be very negative on this government for its overall record on tax composition.

      • jon pertwee

        Yeah? Why dont you talk to a few people in BC before you shove that foot into your piehole?

        • Style

          Why? Would they argue that the HST doesn't mean Canadian governments are getting a bigger share of their revenue from consumption taxes?

  • Michael

    There's a big difference between being nasty and drawing contrasts. Political campaigning is about narratives…drawing contrasts is necessary.

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

    "At least two thirds of our miseries spring from human stupidity, human malice and those great motivators and justifiers of malice and stupidity, idealism, dogmatism and proselytizing zeal on behalf of religious or political idols" ~ALDOUS HUXLEY

    I am more and more becoming convinced that Harper thinks he is appealing to the Teabagger / Beck / Limbaugh mob to the south as if Canada doesn't even exist for him anymore. It's no secret he would sell us to the US in a nanosecond IF they wanted us. Was that Karl Rove I saw sneaking in the back door of the PMO??

    • Observant

      … and you have no fear over neocon "we Americans" patriot Iggy who proclaimed "it's your country(USA) as it is mine" …??!!!

      In 2004 he was the preeminent intellectual academic supporter of the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld regime and even advocated "lesser evils" such as "torture, assassination, denial of rights, preemptive war" … all in defence of his beloved USA and admirable Constitution …!!!!

      In 2005 he suddenly surfaced in Toronto, running as a Liberal candidate in Etobicoke-Lakeshore riding as a "born-again" Canadian wearing Liberal drag. The man is a political chameleon …LOL

      Iggy never thought of returning to Canada until his Liberal Toronto-UCC chums made him an offer he couldn't refuse … to be the next PM of Canada post-Martin .. and even all without a nuisance election..!!!

  • Donabooks

    Unless we have been misinformed, the Governor-General Designate, selected by the "know-nothing conservatives" is a highly-respected member of Canadian academia, while his predecessors, selected by the intelligentsia of the Liberals, were CBC news readers fortunate enough to be well-known female members of visible minorities.

    The deliberate "dumbing-down" of this country began in 1994, at the time we slipped from our status as Number 1 nation in the world to whatever rung we finally landed on by 2005.

  • Man-O-Man

    Andrew's statement "A society that holds education and expertise in contempt, no less than one that disdains commerce or entrepreneurship, is dying." says it all.

    This conservative government actually wants Canadian society, as we know it, to die. To Harper and company, this is the whole point. The Canada that everyone has known and loved for generations will be no more. Harper will, in his words, change Canada so it is unrecognizable.

    This conservative party wants nothing less than the complete destruction of all government sanctioned institutions that people have built up and depended on for so long. This government is preparing the groundwork for a for a full scale paradigm shift and they're doing much of the dirty work under the table. They introduce contentious changes deep in mid summer or at Christmas time or by slipping unrelated items into omnibus budget bills etc., all in the hope that fewer people are paying attention. When the opposition tries to get debate going this conservative government disrupts debate at every opportunity. They are rotten to the core.

    Please vote responsibly.

    • Orson Bean

      "This conservative government actually wants Canadian society, as we know it, to die. To Harper and company, this is the whole point. The Canada that everyone has known and loved for generations will be no more. Harper will, in his words, change Canada so it is unrecognizable.

      This conservative party wants nothing less than the complete destruction of all government sanctioned institutions that people have built up and depended on for so long."

      Congratulations for making the most hysterical, hyperbolic post of the day. That's tough to pull off, on these boards.

    • Observant

      The beleaguered Canadian taxpayer will make the final determination whether they want all those parasitic Liberal institutions sucking off the public teat. It's called 'democracy'.

      Perhaps provinces can pick up the 'institution' load and tax their provincial citizens for what was lost federally .. ya think??

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

    The unifying theme here is trying to use fear and scaremongering to bypass common sense. Whether it is claiming census officials will peep into windows, that the Russians are coming, that the Tamil refugees are terrorists, that Czech and Mexican tourists are illegal immigrants, that all experts are sneaky evil elitists, that we need to round up thousands of unreported uncriminals, or that spending a billion dollars on G20 security was worth it, this is the "all fear, no facts, all the time" channel.

    It’s a good thing we really suck at being afraid in this country. We do things like punching polar bears on the nose.

    • Observant

      The beleaguered Canadian taxpayer will decide what they want and don't want come the next election .. it's called 'democracy'. I trust you will accept the will of the people.

  • parnel

    With all this support for getting rid of Harper its up to us, the voters, to tell the opposition leaders to do what is right for the Country.

    Support your federalist opposition party with your votes and money. $50 can go a long way to help with needed funds to take out the Toties. I also suggest people get behind the official opposition and make sure anti Harper votes are not split.

    • Observant

      Soliciting for political contributions on this forum and website is inappropriate and distasteful to the extreme … but that's you.

      Of course, this only reveals your abject desperation in the face of rejection by most Canadians.

      • parnel

        Turns out every time I post that comment I get lots of positive feedback. All your comments go south immediately after posting.

        The opposition is not desperate. 70% and growing do not like Harper and won't vote for him. Only the dumbed down and ignorant still like him.

  • Elitistsbegone

    The automatic uncritical reverence for "liberal (L) intellectuals by everyone in Power , is what has led to the Demise of Western Cultural strength. Law and order and good educational standards Suggest you all read works by Theodore Dalrymple and then think why the Tories are correct much of the time. ps I have 3derees plus a PhD in science so forget the" redneck" crap

    • Holly Stick

      Most people get PhDs in a specific science. Yer a redneck.

      • Observant

        But the redneck is right …

    • http://www.translucid.ca/site/flacklife-the-translucid-blog/ bobledrew

      In your PhD work or your other "3derees", did you properly close off your quotations, spell "deree" with a "g" in the middle, and use proper principles of capitalization? Just wondering.

  • westmalle

    superficial over-analysis of banal trivia.

    The census change is not some ideological culture war between intellectual elites and the rest of us. The bureaucrats always want to conserve power to themselves. This is push-back from the bureaucrats. Bureaucrats work for the elected politicians, not the other way around. Having been a bureaucrat for many years I know they often forget this. Also, experts are definitely not infallible, as we learned to our horror with Dr Charles Smith.

    "Bumping along at 30 percent or less in the polls.." This so misleading because any poll that has national numbers for the Bloc are meaningless. Look at 2008 election. In all of Canada, minus Quebec , the Conservatives won 43.29% of the total vote and 133 seats; the Liberals 27.13% and 63 seats, and the NDP 20.32% and 36 seats. At 133 to 99 seats, PM Harper already has a good majority in ROC. The Conservative may not have a 16+% lead over the Liberals in ROC as they did on October 14, 2008, but it is not neck-and-neck no matter what the polls say.

    If Harper cannot achieve a national majority it is because of the enduring strength of the BQ in Quebec and for no other reason. And this is a problem for both Harper and Ignatieff.

    Harper's strategy I suspect is to concentrate on the economy because that's what the voters care about. They only way the Government will fall will be the combination of all three opposition parties against a budget or a money vote…which then allow the Government raise the coalition specter.

    I agree with what our host said last year on At Issue – there will be no election until 2012. The de facto Conservative-Liberal "coalition" on the economy will endure.

    • Observant

      Conservatives also won a 57% majority of ridings in the RoC, with 133 of the available 233 seats outside of Quebec. The RoC must elect 155+ Conservative MPs to neuter the disproportionate influence of the BQ separatists. If true and loyal Canadians fail to unite behind Harper to defeat Quebec separatism from Duceppe and Marois, that will be the disgrace of the country, or whats left of the country.

      If the Harper minority gov't survives to October 15, 2012 and completes the 4 year mandate, I doubt Ignatieff will survive as Liberal leader. Ignatieff desperately needs an election this Fall and no later than next Spring to get his Liberal and birthright kick at the electoral can. I don't think he can survive that long given his admission that the Liberal party must be "reconnected" with Canadians … meaning that the Liberal party is "disconnected" from Canadians. Polls in the Fall will decide Iggy's future.

      • parnel

        Iggy needs an election desperately, you say. Iggy has realized he simply needs to lay back and attack Harper on principles and poor governance and let the wall of shame come tumbling down. Next election will see the reformatorts reduced to their western fortress. The polls are starting to edge toward that result slowly but surely.

        • Observant

          Iggnatieff has a near-zero credibility with Canadians … and it's only the Liberal lamestream media maggots who are attacking the Harper Conservative gov't. In any next election, the Liberal candidates will stay away from Iggy like poison .. like they did with Dion … and Liberal grassroots party workers will stay home too. Iggy is political dead meat .. and Liberals don't have a viable leader to deliver their message in an election … so obvious.
          ………………………………..

          PM Harper in Toronto, yesterday: “Canadians don’t want an election, and our government is not seeking an election.

          “The next election will be a choice between a coalition government of the Liberal, NDP and Bloc Québécois, or a stable Conservative majority government for this country,”

          • parnel

            The only maggot here is you and your insane rants. You're a typical angry tory muppet.

            You may blindly allow Harper to destroy the fabric of this Country but over 70% of us want him gone. the other 30% are obviously to dumbed down to notice.

  • Margaret

    "Cunning is the dark sanctuary of incapacity." (G.K.Chesterton)

    Harper is incompetent, but he thinks he's special – and he's angry that the rest of the country doesn't treat him as especially as he thinks he should be treated.

    So what we've got as a result is a complete megalomaniac nutbar. I never EVER thought he was intelligent. Just another bully.

    • Observant

      …. as was Trudeau … as was Chretien … Canadians love decisive macho leaders who will whip-ass …. but I assume you want somebody who is intellectual, sensitive to the needs of others, and willing to listen to everybody … like Iggnatieff or Layton …. now if you could get them together in a coalition that would be peachy …. a neocon and a neocom.

      "Give me a home where the buffalo roam .." (W.B. Hickock)

  • Tony

    Yep, and what we have seen over the past few weeks,and what we see in this article, is what Mr.Coyne and his ilk consider an intellectual debate:

    "I am an intellectual, I have discussed this issue with my friends, who are all intellectuals, and we agree that anyone that doesn't share our views must be a far-right, uneducated fanatic!"

    At this stage it has become amusing.

  • Jade_Lee

    why is Coyne going on a special retreat invited by the finance minister? Reeks to me! The conservatives continue to direct our media.

  • Paul

    Harper might be called upright by some, but based on his policies I still see him as a knuckle dragger. From his earliest days in Calgary ranting about immigrants, Natives and anyone not from the Christian right, Harper has been a Machiavellian (if not an Orwellian) prince of darkness. If we need a coalition government to replace him and to move Canadian politics forward, so be it. We Canadians need to reform the electoral system and turf clowns like him who feign leadership in the service of their own twisted morals and ideals.

    • Observant

      PM Harper in Toronto yesterday: “Canadians don’t want an election, and our government is not seeking an election.”

      “The next election will be a choice between a coalition government of the Liberal, NDP and Bloc Québécois, or a stable Conservative majority government for this country,”
      …………………………………………….

      And I always thought that neocon Bushbot "we Americans" patriot Iggnatieff was the "prince of darkness" (together with Warren Kinsella)..!!!

  • lionel john gunter

    Mr Coyne and most commenters – Blah, Blah, Blah!

  • RDB

    I think that Coyne has nailed what makes me ever more uneasy about this government – "hostility to knowledge". Judging by the number of responses in support, I'm not the only one. The Harper government is over the 4 year mark and the way its governing, it will for sure have worn out its welcome by year 6 if not before. Now if only Ignatieff had more credibility, he could put a scare into this government and get them to clean up their act.

    • westmalle

      I think what marks this Government's approach is "listens to tax-payers." It is not the experts or the pundits or the "intellectual elites" who are paying for everything.

      Lower the GST? Experts hate it, taxpayers love it.

      Child tax credit, home reno tax credit? – experts hate it, taxpayers love it.

      Long gun registry? Experts and bureaucrats love it, taxpayers hate it (waste of our money)

      Income trusts replaced by pension income splitting? Pundits say its a broken promise, taxpayers (especially pensioners like me) say right on! Good move!

      I could go on

      • Gayle

        Really?

        You do realize your post just proves Coyne's point. This government is not at all interested in what is best for the country. They are interested in what is best for the party. In order to achieve that goal, they present ill-advised policy nuggets and then spin them as being somehow good for people. They are not listening to tax payers – they are driving the discussion, not reacting to it.

        • westmalle

          As far as politics goes, the taxpayers (voters) are the country. We taxpayers want to elect the people who spend our money and run our country, not the unelected and unaccountable "experts" and the "intellectual elites." It probably pains the experts no end to learn that the "ill-advised (whose advice?) policy nuggets" as you call them are actually good for people.

          • Observant

            BRAVO westmalle !!!! …. You lose again, Gayle …LOL
            ……………………………………..

            PM Harper in Toronto, yesterday: “Canadians don’t want an election, and our government is not seeking an election.

            “The next election will be a choice between a coalition government of the Liberal, NDP and Bloc Québécois, or a stable Conservative majority government for this country,”

          • Pat

            I will have to disagree with you and your friend here. People elect governments to make decisions for the good of the country, not for the good of the party.

            I understand you are happy with the decisions this government has made, however you are in the minority. The GST cut has been disasterous and a major factor contributing to the size of the deficit. I am not sure how that is good for anyone.

          • Orson Bean

            So has somebody promised that they are going to reverse the GST cut and raise the rate?

          • Pat

            No. Why do you ask? Does that have anything at all to do with the fact the cut was good politics and very bad policy? Because I don't think it does.

          • Orson Bean

            I disagreed with the GST cut myself. I was merely asking whether there is any viable Canadian political party out there that is actually on record as disagreeing with what the Tories did and is on record as saying they would reverse it.

  • cooper

    Given the choice to err on the side of knowledge or err on the side of ignorance, who would choose the latter?

    • Holly Stick

      Harperite conservatives, of course. Oh, sorry, was that a rhetorical question?

  • albert

    Really Andrew?
    You think there's hope for harperites, let alone hope for Canada under harperites?

    • Observant

      Sure as hell there's NO HOPE if Iggnatieff ever became PM of Canada … he's a Russian monster …!!!

  • wictorwictor

    Well at least you're honest about your petit-bourgeois ideology

    • alfanerd

      What does that even mean? How did I even state my ideology? I stated a fact: large corporations are not pro-free-market, they are pro-market-tilted-their-favor. Regulations often have the unintended (or perhaps sometimes intended) effect of creating barriers for small companies to enter a market. Ergo, large corporations are often pro-regulation.

  • http://dredtory.blogspot.com/ Sir_Francis

    Gee. It's fun to watch the mandarins of our agenda-setting media validating views they denounced as alarmist anti-Albertan fear-mongering four short years ago. What a difference a Harper government makes.

    Now, allow me to indulge. Mere hours after consolidating their hold on Phnom Penh, Khmer Rouge cadres began rounding up and shooting anyone caught wearing glasses. With typical Canadian reticence, Harper merely ignores and marginalises anyone caught wearing glasses, but the fundamental attitude towards the "decadent intelligentsia" is the same.

    Welcome to Year Zero, brought to you by the good "conservative" folks of the Khmer Bleu.

    • Orson Bean

      I think we need a new corollary to Godwin's Law. The Khmer Rouge variant.

      • http://dredtory.blogspot.com/ Sir_Francis

        I think we need a new corollary to Godwin's Law.

        Your obscurantist talk of "law" is clearly meant as an elitist attempt to thwart the just aspirations of the common folk.

        And yet, your decadent haute bourgeois imperialism will fail. For, behold—with First Citizen Harper striding majestically at the head of our Sans-A-Belt-wearing vanguard, we shall ultimately vanquish all office-holding aristocrats and their grand-taking lickspittles. Know that the works of your hands are doomed, for your time is short.

        Power to the people, in the name of Generalissimo Harper! All power to the people!

    • Tony

      Did the Khmer Rouge cancel the census?

      • Halo_Override

        They went with a basic skull count. More expensive, but it stopped the private sector from freeloading on the taxpayer's dime.

  • Canada Dad

    Excellent article, AC. Although I sometimes disagree with your politics, I admire your logic and independence.

    The silver lining of these embarrassing (for Canada) episodes will be if enough of the electorate discover who Harper really is before he manages to win his precious majority.

    • RDB

      Well, I hope Harper is really better than his public image otherwise I pity his family.

  • Norm Richards

    Let’s look at his high school photos. If there is limited change to today, I think that tells us something. Also, are we in the time of his kind or not? Do we need a guy or gal who comes from strong roots or great education and has charisma, track record in private practise and knows what he or she is talking about but is flexible and will endorse a better way? I wonder. Is change possible and can it survive the party system or be outside it without antagonizing it? Can we dream of soemthing better? Imagine if we could and it worked. Wow!

  • cheryl

    well, i never did admire his 'cunning' — brilliant strategy is fine for a strategist, the paid, party hacks who are the only ones allowed to speak to the media, a prime minister must be more than simply cunning and strategic; visionary, a leader, interested in the people s/he governs (all of them) and appreciative of the nation and what makes it unique

  • WDM

    Article of the year. If I send you my print edition, will you sign it so I can have it framed? Brilliance.

  • BJG

    Well, bergkamp, I'm not going to try to say anything new, I'm just going to second everything you've said and offer, although I'm sure you don't need the help, to carry some of the minus 25 (to date), that your comment has generated.

    • Holly Stick

      You're not helping to carry his negative votes, you're simply earning your own.

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