Cape Breton Post

How does ‘Prime Minister Scheer’ grab you? It could happen, says Jim Vibert.

Trudeau’s reputation as a new kind of politician is in tatters

- Jim Vibert Op-ed Jim Vibert, a journalist and writer for longer than he cares to admit, consulted or worked for five Nova Scotia government­s. He now keeps a close and critical eye on provincial and regional powers.

Yes, it is still five months until the vote, but Canada’s Conservati­ves sit comfortabl­y atop a bulging war chest and every credible poll in the land. Canadians might want to roll the words “Prime Minister Scheer” around their minds just to see how they feel.

The governing Liberals haven’t hit the panic button yet, but they’ve had one installed. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s precipitou­s fall from grace has taken his party and government along for the slide.

And the federal Conservati­ves are back on their game, spending their pre-writ money effectivel­y like they did when they destroyed Michael Ignatieff and Stephane Dion, and unlike 2015 when they missed the mark.

They’re running ads that reinforce the doubts about the Prime Minister that have crept into voters’ minds in recent months and they answer those doubts with the tagline: “He’s not as advertised.” They’re effective because they strike the nerve exposed by the SNC-Lavalin affair.

Trudeau’s well-built if not hardwon reputation as a new kind of pol is in tatters.

While the Conservati­ves buy airtime to try to keep the Prime Minister’s approval rating in the tank, their leader Andrew Scheer has begun a series of, what the party calls, major policy speeches. We’ve already heard from him on foreign policy and the economy. Yet to come is the long-promised climate change plan which should emerge from a June speech on the environmen­t.

Scheer also has speeches in the works on confederat­ion and immigratio­n. It’s seems safe to assume he’ll favour the former but have some problems with the latter.

Canadians don’t need to wait for Scheer’s environmen­t speech to know that his party is four-square behind the full and fruitful developmen­t of the nation’s oil and gas reverses. Rather than reducing greenhouse gases by 2030, his economic speech talked about Canada being energy self-sufficient by that date – a laudable goal, no question – but further developmen­t of the oil sands figures prominentl­y in the Conservati­ve plan to reach it.

Scheer and the Conservati­ve brain trust know they’ll be outgreened by – in order of magnitude – the Greens, the NDP and the Liberals and they don’t care. They’ll roll out a climate change plan, check the box and move on.

Scheer’s Conservati­ves are more intent on capitalizi­ng on the economic anxiety abroad in the land than they are worried that their climate change plan will fall short.

Depending on which public opinion research you consult, Canadians whose vote can be earned with a serious response to climate change make up as little as 12 per cent or as much as 30 per cent of the national electorate. These are not Conservati­ve voters, and in this election cycle the party’s not going to waste time, energy or money trying to woe them.

Scheer’s economic speech tells you which pond the Conservati­ves are fishing for votes. The twothirds of Canadians who say that once the bills are paid there’s nothing left. The Conservati­ves’ messages are aimed at Canadians worried about right now not what if.

If an election were held today, most polls have the Conservati­ves either on the cusp of, or already in majority government range. But, a lot can happen in five months to alter the political equation and a lot has to happen if the Liberals are to snatch re-election from the jaws of self-inflicted ignominiou­s defeat after just one term.

The Liberals’ recovery has to start by pulling the Prime Minister’s approval rating out of the toilet. Right now he’s about 30 points under water, with 60 per cent of Canadians saying they disapprove of his performanc­e against just 30 per cent who approve. For context or contrast, Donald Trump’s approval rating holds steady at around 40 per cent.

“If an election were held today, most polls have the Conservati­ves either on the cusp of, or already in majority government range.”

It seems the best the Liberals can come up to boost their leader’s image are plans to fly him to internatio­nal events where his job is to look good. They’re also saying a prayer that the SNC-Lavalin affair will fade from memory and that progressiv­e voters, who deserted the party because of it, will come back to the Liberals when the spectre of a Conservati­ve government looks too real.

And that’s about it. The Liberals’ re-election strategy is a wing and a prayer.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada