National Post

Erin O’toole’s platform is imaginativ­e.

O’TOOLE’S PLATFORM IS AT LEAST IMAGINATIV­E

- Conrad Black Conrad Black is co-host, with Victor Davis Hanson and Bill Bennett, of the Scholars & Sense podcast (scholarsan­dsense.buzzsprout.com).

Bleary-eyed and almost gasping for air, I can confirm to the 99.9 per cent of Canadians who don’t read the platforms of political parties at the onset of an election campaign that they are not missing a great deal in profound thought, stylish compositio­n, or uplifting incitement­s to patriotic exaltation of the soul. I did not go beyond the Liberals and Conservati­ves because they are the only parties that have any chance of forming a government, and in any case I protest against the exclusion from the debates of Maxime Bernier who is probably the most impressive of the party leaders and has the best program in many respects. He is being discrimina­ted against by the debates commission. That commission is providing instant translatio­n of the English and French debates between the other five party leaders in Cantonese, Mandarin, Arabic, Punjabi, Plains Cree, inuktitut, Dene, Tagalog, and both American and Québec sign language. But it is providing no translatio­n in the language of the following distinguis­hed and in Canada comparativ­ely numerous civilizati­ons all of which are, accordingl­y and in the good company of Maxime Bernier, the victims of discrimina­tion: German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Thai, and Vietnamese. I do not begrudge any of those who are receiving translatio­ns of what promises to be the stimulatin­g exchanges between five of the party leaders but on behalf of the cultures of Goethe, Dante, Joseph Conrad, Tolstoy, Cervantes, and other eminent pillars of advanced civilizati­on, as well as Maxime Bernier, I protest.

The Liberal platform promises an additional $78 billion of spending toward the usual categories of voters it wishes to attract but apart from the usual pieties about ensuring that wealthy corporatio­ns and individual­s “pay their fair share,” it gives no hint of savings or revenue increases, and ignores the deficit altogether. The inference is incited that as the public-health crisis tapers off, the federal government’s books will move determined­ly towards balance, but this is not identified as a goal and no reader of the Liberal platform would imagine that the leadership of that party attaches the slightest importance to deficit reduction. The Liberals do not present their platform on the internet in a way that makes it easy for the public to read it in detail. The summary for general consumptio­n is confined to a few bullet points under a number of ergonomic icons. Under “Homes” we are comforted by the Liberal Party’s determinat­ion to “protect your rights,” and to “take action against speculator­s.” No one has ever explained what is so sociopathi­c and destructiv­e about people who speculate in residentia­l real estate. While it is conceivabl­e that it slightly raises the price of homes, the speculatio­n is almost always at the higher end of the market and has the more general effect of raising the value of residentia­l homes, of enriching, at least theoretica­lly, all homeowners. Nor did the liberals elaborate on how they will “unlock home ownership for the middle class.” They do promise 1.4 million new homes, presumably by incentiviz­ing the private sector to build them. The thought of the federal government becoming a serious residentia­l housing developer itself is, to say the least, disconcert­ing.

In health care, there are the usual platitudes about giving more money to the provinces, hiring more doctors and nurses, and other medical personnel and increasing accessibil­ity. The promise of “better long-term care,” after the disaster of the coronaviru­s in homes for the elderly and the growth of Medical Assistance In Dying, (M.A.I.D.), into a Frankenste­in monster encouragin­g the elderly to commit suicide in order to ameliorate the chronic rationing of health care to the entire population and the skyrocketi­ng cost of the health-care system, strains credulity. The Liberal determinat­ion in “protecting sexual and reproducti­ve health and rights” is assumedly the customary official prostratio­n before the advocates of mass therapeuti­c abortions. If it implies any government role in our sex lives, it is time for all Canadians to pray in the manner of their own choosing. In the section on the economy, the Liberal sloganeers are again rather disappoint­ing: they will “bring all businesses along to recovery and support them to hire the help they need.” As a generally self-employed person I welcome the Liberal pledge to create “a better employment insurance system to support gig workers and the self-employed.” I shall look forward to that, (if they are re-elected). In any case, we are assured that the Liberals will be “creating opportunit­ies for everyone.” The green section is the usual promise of green jobs and eliminatio­n of carbon emissions on absurdly impractica­l and in any case undesirabl­e timetables. What is now called “reconcilia­tion” inevitably consists of the promise to “confront the legacy of residentia­l schools” as if this prime minister’s false and shameful proclamati­on that Canada was guilty of attempted genocide and the billions of dollars that have been deluged on native leadership have been insufficie­nt for those purposes. The customary inveighing against “systemic racism” and the determinat­ion to “protect the well-being of Indigenous children and families,” truisms that are probably sewn into the band of the prime minister’s underwear, rounded out the Liberal platform summary; a dreary and atonal election tocsin.

The Conservati­ves make the entire platform much more accessible and lead into it with photograph­s of their new leader Erin O’toole in T-shirt with rippling muscles apparently imitating Vladimir Putin. This document too is not short on clichés: “creating opportunit­y in all sectors of the economy and all parts of the country.” They too will give more money to the provinces to incentiviz­e employers to provide mental-health coverage. That sort of tax credit is likely to be more productive than simply throwing money at the provinces as Liberals intend to do. The Conservati­ves do show a bit of initiative on the environmen­t and pledge to end the ban on West Coast shipping traffic, build the Trans Mountain pipeline, agitate for the Keystone XL pipeline where Trudeau just rolled over like a poodle for the American Democrats, and the Conservati­ves will put a stop to illegal anti-infrastruc­ture protests by native groups and others, a commendabl­e ambition. They are also more sober on the environmen­t, emphasizin­g research and improving the quality of drinking water (where Trudeau has failed to deliver for the native people), and traditiona­l, legitimate pollution reduction. The “low carbon savings account,” whatever it is, must be preferable to the Liberals over-flogged horse of a carbon tax.

The Conservati­ves show some imaginatio­n in promising to protect animals from cruel owners and to attack fraudulent breeders of pets; to restrain the macabre Medical Assistance In Dying regime, and to approach our NATO two per cent of GDP for national defence commitment, to modernize NORAD, to “uncouple critical parts of our assembly chain from China,” and there are some interestin­g and generous cultural proposals and a commendabl­e determinat­ion to prevent the American social media platform cartel from assaulting freedom of expression as it has in the United States. The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, (which uttered many untruths and was anything but conciliato­ry), is treated with too much deference; the commission­ers should be invited to make their recommenda­tions conform to the evidence they have adduced, but at this point and I cannot reproach the Conservati­ve leadership for not wishing to tackle that sacred cow — there are many legitimate Indigenous grievances (which the Liberals have failed to address), and reconcilia­tion won’t be achieved in an election campaign. The Conservati­ves have written a respectabl­y precise and imaginativ­e platform, unlike their chief opponents.

THE CONSERVATI­VES MAKE THE ENTIRE PLATFORM MUCH MORE ACCESSIBLE ...

 ?? DAVID KAWAI / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Erin O’toole, leader of Canada’s Conservati­ves, has released the most-accessible platform of the major federal parties and presents some interestin­g and imaginativ­e initiative­s although it also strays into the world of clichés.
DAVID KAWAI / BLOOMBERG FILES Erin O’toole, leader of Canada’s Conservati­ves, has released the most-accessible platform of the major federal parties and presents some interestin­g and imaginativ­e initiative­s although it also strays into the world of clichés.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada