National Post (National Edition)

Niki Ashton confronts elites, except herself

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either, if you please. Including in the Trudeau administra­tion she seems keen to oust.

In announcing her leadership bid, Ashton said “What we need is a progressiv­e agenda for system change.” And you certainly don’t find that attitude among our elites … unless you count politician­s, academics and the business community, along with artists, philanthro­pists and other marginaliz­ed outcasts.

I actually have a habit of collecting examples of elite institutio­ns pledging allegiance to constant change. And I bump into them everywhere, from HSBC airport ads promising “Tomorrow will be nothing like today” to Saint-Paul University’s bus shelter

In what sense is this a pushback against the elites, especially given the size of government today and the privileged position of its employees? If Ashton cares to examine the numbers, she will discover that those in public life are paid far better than their private-sector counterpar­ts even before you include the lavish pensions they’re making somebody else pay for. In return Ontario teachers’ unions, for instance, are absolutely crucial to the re-election of the regime that treats them so generously.

It is hard to find a more classic example of an elite backscratc­hing pact. Yet I do not believe the brave MP for Churchill-Keewatinoo­k Aski favours disrupting such arrangemen­ts by contractin­g out, school vouchers or other ways of giving ordinary people choices at the expense of the comfortabl­e lives of public-sector insiders.

Even her call for tuition-free post-secondary education at government institutio­ns, which the Post says garnered “roaring applause,” is classic pro-elite pseudodema­gogy. Presumably it includes colleges. But it particular­ly subsidizes university, which costs more, lasts longer and generally attracts those with reasonably affluent parents. How is it progressiv­e to give them an extra boost at the expense of the working class?

If the goal here is more accessibil­ity, it makes sense to offer means-tested support not subsidize the well-off. And while I’m at it, can one imagine a more complacent elite institutio­n than a government-funded Canadian university with its six-figure salaries, tenure, generous pensions and underpaid sessionals doing about half the teaching, as though feudalism had been restored while no one was looking? Does Niki Ashton want to privatize universiti­es or abolish tenure to shake up the elites? Hoo hah.

Who, one wonders, are these naughty elites that haunt Niki Ashton’s dreams? Transnatio­nal corporatio­ns? The gnomes of Zurich? The patriarchy? And what exactly are they “holding us back” from? Massive deficits to stimulate the economy? Socialized medicine? Turning our backs on any sort of war-fighting capacity? Gay marriage, abortion on demand and gender equity in cabinet?

Drat those elites. They’re everywhere. Including her mirror.

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