Beyond The Commons

Beyond The Commons

Aaron Wherry covers all the goings-on in and around Parliament Hill. Follow Aaron on Twitter: @aaronwherry

Stephen Harper and Canada, a love story (IV)

by Aaron Wherry on Wednesday, February 9, 2011 9:04am - 251 Comments

Eleven years before he declared himself and his side to be “Canadians first and only,” Stephen Harper declared his allegiance to an Alberta quite apart from Canada.

The following op-ed was published by the National Post on December 8, 2000, shortly after that year’s federal election. Sorting out how he got from writing what appears here to saying what he says now probably goes as far as any question towards sorting out Stephen Harper.

Separation, Alberta-style: It is time to seek a new relationship with Canada
National Post
Fri Dec 8 2000
Stephen Harper

The latest dribblings from the mouth of Canada’s Prime Minister suggest Alberta’s wealth can be attributed to the federal government. While there is clearly no merit to the claim, we must not ignore the implied threat: If Ottawa giveth, then Ottawa can taketh away.

This is just one more reason why Westerners, but Albertans in particular, need to think hard about their future in this country. After sober reflection, Albertans should decide that it is time to seek a new relationship with Canada.

Obviously, I come to this conclusion after long watching the Reform movement and witnessing its most recent rejection by the very electorate that, in creating the Canadian Alliance, it had twisted itself into a pretzel to please.

I use the term “rejection” rather than “failure” to describe the Canadian Alliance’s fate. Many will want to attribute the Alliance’s poor showing in Eastern Canada to a badly run campaign. They are not without evidence. The CA did indeed run a weak campaign by any measure. It lacked any clear strategy, policy focus, or co-ordinated rebuttal to predictable attacks.

In the end, however, this had little if anything to do with the election result. The Alliance was devastated by a shrewd and sinister Liberal attack plan. The strategy — sometimes subtle, but sometimes blatant — was to pull up every prejudice about the West and every myth about Alberta that could be dredged.

That such an approach could even be contemplated, let alone successfully executed, shows it has an enormous market in this country. There is no reason to believe the same strategy could not be repeated at any time under any circumstances against any political movement perceived to have a Western, but especially an Alberta, identity.

For many of us, this federal election has stripped away any veneer of openness to reforming Canada. Those who conceived the Reform party, and helped nurture it through its transformation to the Alliance, have not discovered a path to power; they have hit a wall.

This is perhaps not surprising. Alberta and much of the rest of Canada have embarked on divergent and potentially hostile paths to defining their country.

Alberta has opted for the best of Canada’s heritage — a combination of American enterprise and individualism with the British traditions of order and co-operation. We have created an open, dynamic and prosperous society in spite of a continuously hostile federal government.

Canada appears content to become a second-tier socialistic country, boasting ever more loudly about its economy and social services to mask its second-rate status, led by a second-world strongman appropriately suited for the task.

Albertans would be fatally ill-advised to view this situation as amusing or benign. Any country with Canada’s insecure smugness and resentment can be dangerous. It can revel in calling its American neighbours names because they are too big and powerful to care. But the attitudes toward Alberta so successfully exploited in this election will have inevitable consequences the next time Canada enters a recession or needs an internal enemy.

Having hit a wall, the next logical step is not to bang our heads against it. It is to take the bricks and begin building another home — a stronger and much more autonomous Alberta. It is time to look at Quebec and to learn. What Albertans should take from this example is to become “maitres chez nous.”

In one policy area after another, the province of Quebec, with much less financial independence than Alberta, has taken initiatives to ensure it is controlled by its own culture and its own majority. Such a strategy across a range of policy areas will quickly put Alberta on the cutting edge of a world where the region, the continent and the globe are becoming more important than the nation-state.

It is true that any achievement by Alberta will only generate more hostility from other quarters of Canada in the short term, but it will just as certainly put them under considerable pressure to evolve and progress.

On the other hand, we should not mimic Quebec by lunging from rejection into the arms of an argument about separation. As that province has shown, separation will simply divide our population in a symbolic debate while, still part of the country, it isolates us from any allies.

Separation will become a real issue the day the federal government decides to make it one.

Neither should Albertans shun federal politics, but we must carefully guard our interests. Much about the Canadian Alliance is worthy of support, and a large number of Canadians do support it. But the CA will be under considerable pressure to rid itself of any tinge of a Western agenda or Alberta control. This we must fight. If the Alliance is ever to become a party that could be lead by a Paul Martin or a Joe Clark, it must do so without us. We don’t need a second Liberal party.

Westerners, but especially Albertans, founded the Reform/Alliance to get “in” to Canada. The rest of the country has responded by telling us in no uncertain terms that we do not share their “Canadian values.” Fine. Let us build a society on Alberta values.

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  • Thwim

    Yeah, but consider when this was written and what he's saying in it. He's essentially exhorting Alberta to become more of an independent state because it seems to him (right after this election where the CA got tromped) that there's no way Canada will take on someone with his values into federal government.

    So I somehow doubt that when he was writing this he was contemplating his own ascension to the governing party.

    • Emily

      I think that's exactly what he was contemplating.

    • Loraine Lamontagne

      "He's essentially exhorting Alberta to become more of an independent state"

      Is that like become a little pregnant?

  • billg

    You mean to tell me that 11 years later and, after being Canada's PM for the last 5 years Mr Harper may have a different attitude then he did a decade ago…holy cow…thats really….nah…its not big news, its just this journalist doing what the Liberals cannot afford to do…no biggie.
    And…TeddyBetts…he's going to be our PM for at least another 3 to 5 years, so, cant wait to see him get into longest serving territory..that should really bunch up your shorts.

    • Thwim

      I fail to see any evidence that he does, however.

  • Jenn_

    In point of fact I'm specifically saying that Harper CANNOT be compared with Levesque, if by "compared" you mean "the same as". In addition, I am specifically saying that Harper is not promoting Alberta separatism.

    It is much worse.

    • Blue

      You are either being too cute or alarmist—-what do you mean by " much worse " ?

  • Loraine Lamontagne

    Lévesque was not a separatist!!!

    The Blocs are not separatists!!! You go and tell them to their face that they're separatists and they'll spit on you. They are 'sovereignists' – and Harper is a 'sovereignist' as well, an English-speaking Bloc-type.

    • Emily

      Just a word game.

  • Poker Face

    This is the reason I vote Conservative. Heaven forbid a province should work hard and bear the fruits of its own labour!

    (Also, I find it funny how Alberta adds to the diversity of Canada, yet is being pilloried for being different by those same people who push for more diversity themselves.)

    • Emily

      The fruits of it's own labour?

      Alberta has a resource economy…a primary economy. It is the most basic kind of economy, much like those in Africa and the ME.

      Stuff that comes from the ground….oil, wheat, cattle.

      • Poker Face

        And that… doesn't require work? I have a hard time following what you're getting at. This stuff isn't free, you know.

        Do you have any idea what kinds of engineering, investment, finance, technical expertise goes into "stuff that comes out of the ground"? These are very labour intensive processes.
        Calgary is the second largest legal services market in the country (yes, bigger than Ottawa and Vancouver). Only wait a minute…. legal services don't come out of the ground! Housing and construction? Finance? Marketing? Arts and culture? (Surprisingly, we have all of these things.)

    • Emily

      Ping

  • RFB

    Jean Chretien and Martin's ties to Communist China and Triads. http://www.primetimecrime.com/contributing/2005/2…

  • jonatwitan

    hahaha….I don't know why I didn't see before that EmiLie had already quoted that same sentence. I assure you, honest mistake. I hereby stand corrected by Emily!

    • jonatwitan

      Oh, but I still think that sentence means no separation, unequivocally.

      • Emily

        Well yes, but then you think your name is cute.

        However the title here…that's you've obviously also missed…. is

        'Separation, Alberta-style: It is time to seek a new relationship with Canada'

        • jonatwitan

          Prove to me,

          A) that I think my name is cute, and

          B) that Harper chose that title for this article.

          You have obviously still missed the passage that was quoted to you twice in a row. Don't forget that the National Post is in the business of selling papers.

          • Emily

            Hey, you chose, and continue to use, the name that announces your character, not me.

            And the title refers to this para:

            'This is just one more reason why Westerners, but Albertans in particular, need to think hard about their future in this country. After sober reflection, Albertans should decide that it is time to seek a new relationship with Canada.'

            So unless English is a second language for you…

          • jonatwitan

            "You chose, and continue to use, the name that announces your character, not me"

            Not a proof that I think my name is cute, but nice try.

            And, that section you lifted out of the article says nothing, absolutely NOTHING, about separation. Again, not a proof that Harper chose the title; in fact, not even a proof that the title is an appropriate one for the article, and not just sensational for the purpose of selling copies.

            "So unless English is a second language for you…"

            Not an argument, but an attack on my person, and not even one based in anything that could even come close to resembling reality, which is unfortunate.

            And here I was trying to give you credit for something.

          • Andrew (not PorC)

            To be fair, given the Iraq speech debacle, we should make sure Harper didn't hire John Howard to pen this editorial.

  • tedbetts

    Brilliant! Well played, sir!

  • tedbetts

    Who said there weren't? But no other country had as many balanced budgets as Canada, created surpluses like Canada, and paid down its debt like we did, until Harper came along that is. When the tech bubble burst in the US, our economy slowed but we didn't go into a recession like they did. When the Asian flu hit the markets, we were untouched. Our unemployment rate was better than everyone except the US.

    I'll give some credit to Mulroney but that doesn't change the fact the Liberals were good fiscal managers. And Harper doesn't have a clue: he was advocating for – and as PM started implementing – many of the things that would have wrecked our economy and not just our fiscal prudence (as he did).

  • Leslea

    More accurate would be to say that Harper is all about Calgary and the tarsands/oil industry. The farmers aren't doing any better because of this moron of a PM. The women of Alberta sure aren't being served by his KILLING women's programs from coast to coast, INCLUDING Alberta. If you're not into the oil biz or Tarsands exploitation, he doesn't have the time of day for you.

    It's an important & not-so-subtle distinction. NOT all of Alberta is oil based. Unfortunately that's ALL that everyone outside seems to see, when it comes to our asshat of a PM.

    • RFB

      Get off your fat lazy Liberal butt and get a job, and quit acting like the Taxpayers of Canada owe you a living. Quit being a professional victim with your hand out.

  • Ben

    Hey RFB: Did you realize that all of the information you provided is from an unrespected Conservative owned media source? It's called a tabloid for a reason. Fox News is more credible than the links you provided. None of what you say is even close to being true. Provide references for your "facts" about the Liberals.

    NEWSFLASH RFB: Canada currently has a record defecit thanks to Harper. He lowered taxes and raised spending during a recession while calling his party the "Champions of the Economy". What a joke! Do you want to talk about past Conservative prime ministers as well? Brian Mulrooney sure did a wonderful job selling us out to America through NAFTA and implementing the GST. I guess you think we should have weekly parades celebrating his accomplishments!

    Rather than sit there with fake stats on Liberals, why don't you tell me exactly what the Conservatives have done for our country that is so wonderful and positive? Seems like everytime they get in power they spend all the money and try their hardest to sell us out… I guess that's to be expected from a party that cares more about immediate returns than long term investment.

  • Ben

    How can a party who labelled themselves "Champions of the Economy" for two elections in a row manage to run our country into a record multi-billion dollar debt in just 5 short years?

    Every election Harper touts fiscal responsibility as a platform, because it is supposed to be a reflection of the Conservative ideology. So why then, did harper reduce taxes and increase spending during a recession? That isn't very fiscally responsible is it?

    If history is any indication, the ONLY party in Canada that can be trusted with the economy are the Liberals!!! Ideologically, what I've just said is the biggest oxymoron paradox ever! But in reality it's unfortunately the truth! Every Conservative government in the history of Canada has plunged our country into debt!!! The Liberals have an amazing track record of digging us out after the Conservativs were in power. Mulrooney is a perfect example!

    Harper uses big polarizing issues to win elections because he would rather divide the people of Canada and then conquer, instead of trying to bring everyone toegher… how sad.

  • Mike T.

    I thinkyou mean the conservatives.

  • hollinm

    ted….I am merely quoting the results of polling that has been going on since 2008. Polls are suppose to represent what the population would do if an election were held today. Obviously they are not perfect but turn out usually to be reasonably accurate.
    I know its tough to watch as Ignatieff 's leadership polls are even below Duceppe these days. That big bus trip and all those townhalls aren't helping him much.
    You are right the Conservatives are polling around 33% but the problem is the rest is being spread among four left wing parties.

    • Holly Stick

      Polls are for dogs.

      • hollinm

        Of course they are. Tell Nik Nanos that whose polls have been virtually bang on in the last couple of elections.

  • Jay

    How did we end up with a seperatiste as prime minister?

  • Holly Stick

    What gets me is the plain nastiness of Harper's writing. This is a guy who writes in an op-ed to be published in a newspaper: "The latest dribblings from the mouth of Canada’s Prime Minister suggest Alberta’s wealth can be attributed to the federal government…"

    That is just repulsive.

    And the fakey attempt to appear smart "…If Ottawa giveth, then Ottawa can taketh away…"

    Sounds like a snotty litle basement dweller writing on a political blog. Doesn't sound like a grownup, much less a leader.

    • JamesHalifax

      Holly Schtick wrote:
      "Sounds like a snotty litle basement dweller writing on a political blog. Doesn't sound like a grownup, "

      holly….you do realize you just described the majority of your own contributions to this site…right?

      No offense though…..I'm sure your basement is lovely.

      • Holly Stick

        I'm not writing an op-ed for a newspaper. If I did do so, unlike Harper, I would be more professional and less b!tchy.

        • Mary in Calgarym

          Sorry, Holly, but I second Jame's comment.

  • chet

    "Progressive" ground rules:

    Harper proclaiming his love for a Canadian province: Bad

    Iggy proclaiming his love for the US (while sneering at Canada from abroad): Good.

    It's good to know where liberals stand on such things.

    Thanks for clearing this up for us Mr. Wherry.

  • Guest

    Harper's letter reads like a self-indulgent, fact-free, clueless, Sarah Palin-style, rant. But Harper got in.

  • Leo

    Bravo M in C!!! Said with such eloquence!!!

    • Mary in Calgary

      Thanks, Leo. I now know that if you compose and post a comment off into the digital forest, that someone might actually read it even if you're not there to see it, lol.

      I actually discovered that the American ex-pat population in Calgary is closer to 90,000+ now. It's grown somewhat since I last heard the stats. Oh, and I'm not one.

  • marlene stobbart

    Reading the op-ed of Dec, 2,000 I had to give my head a shake for the words didn't make any sense, at least to me. Alberta. north versus south, there is that but Alberta itself is a province to be proud of – with its hardworking people. But, the op-ed was rediculous.

  • L. Williams

    Do not for a moment fool yourselves into thinking that Harper has any love for Canada. Imo, he never did have and he does not now. All that has changed is that he recognizes he must play to the rest of Canada in the hope he'll do it well enough to succeed in attaining his coveted majority. He can't tolerate Quebec any more today than he could when he wrote the above article; he can't stand Ontario and Ontarians – probably even more so than Quebec and Quebecers; and of course we all know he thinks of Maritimers as being little more than a drain on taxpayers – and by taxpayers he means mainly Alberta. No, Harper has not changed his spots; he's just a little better at covering them up. What many of us in B.C. find interesting is that he (Harper) and many Albertans often try to include this province when they refer to 'the west'. We are not part of Harper's, or Alberta's, west. In fact, we pride ourselves on not sharing their views of Canada or themselves. Albertans have long been a very unhappy, discontented people who have blamed Canada for any and all of their perceived sleights, particularly by 'the east'. Also worth mentioning for those who haven't noticed: the only provinces Harper hasn't coerced into paying the HST are the prairie provinces – Manitoba, Saskatchewan & of course Alberta which has never had a provincial sales tax. Nice going Mr. PM, particularly as the HST has increased the feds intake by who knows how much. So don't delude yourself – Harper has effectively put the screws to most Canadians – and he loves it!

    • Mary in Calgary

      You seem oblivious or unaware of the sheer numbers of Albertans, retired or otherwise, who comprise B.C.'s population.
      They may have moved there for a more moderate climate, but their values don't change crossing the Rockies.

      • Ecological Collectivist Union

        You seem oblivious, or unaware, of the values and ideals of MOST BCers. Sure if your in Golden, Fort St. John or Kelowna (where you Albertans tend to congregate and where most self-respecting BCers tend to stay away from) Albertan values of instituting a corporate autocracy, and raping the land for all it is worth, are highly valued. Fact is, in the 2008 election, Cons received only 44% of the vote which means 66% voted against Conservative psychopathy. Due to our undemocratic electoral system the Conservatives received over 65% of the seats in BC. Welcome to Conservative Albertan democracy.

        Bottom line, BCers do not consider themselves as part of Harper's "West". So you can just take the entire West Coast out of the West.

  • cyberclark

    RFB (5 days ago) The Liberals inherited a massive debt from the Conservatives and Canada was on the watch list from the new IMF. We were told to get it under control or they would.

    The Liberals did all the things you mention but, it was done to save the dam country from a massive Conservative screw up!

  • cyberclark

    Albertans are stuck dumb by Conservative BS! This crew has marshaled you into the lowest resource royalty in the world! Bar none! The last election they put in a "new royalty regime at the 11th hour.

    This regime did nothing except reduce our revenues by changing our take from US dollars to Canadian dollars a loss at that time of 18% and still, Albertans lapped it up!

    Now, they are further reducing royalty on one side while on the other they are "increasing their vigence" and putting out more fines for the benefit of the press. In truth, it is retro; further reductions by which no amount of fines could save us from. Still, Albertans lap it up!

    They came to power Liberal bashing on the back of the National Energy Program. At the time the economy crashed, and commodities tumbled. Oil prices were 10.00 per bbl when considered in today's money. People mortgages their homes to buy in to new oil service business. Inflation and interest ran to more than 25%. People lost homes and businesses and the Conservatives managed to spin it all off as being the total fault of the NEP. Incidentally, it was not forced on Alberta; Alberta agreed to it as a means to increase Canadian Ownership. Still, Alberans lapped it up!

    In 2006 they looked to Oregon to build a new, private heath care. http://albertathedetails.blogspot.com/2010/12/alb… What they did was adopt the Oregon system and made it meaner and leaner. The Capital Health Authority (sister to the US Capital Healths) made a list of what services to delist off health care in Alberta thereby forcing people into the private system. Again, Albertans slept through it.

  • wilson

    31% of Canadians reside in Western Canada.

    The LPC holds 8% of the seats in Western Canada

    Ignatieff should read the Firewalls letter,
    to understand why Liberals have become the Toronto Party,

    having not lived here, reading about us is the only way he has to understand us.

    • Emily

      Alberta has fewer people than Toronto.

      You have now made Alberta into all of 'the west'…..which it is not.

      And you've made the city of Toronto into the ROC, which it is not.

      • Mary in Calgary

        …and you've missed Wilson's point, which was a very good one, in order to obfuscate or concentrate on delivering an unnecessary divisive and polarizing style barb that contributes nothing to the discussion.

  • http://atruelovestory1.blogspot.com/ marengo

    really a true love story… it is amazing one..
    http://atruelovestory1.blogspot.com/

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