National Post (National Edition)

Scheer tax cuts not stuff of dreams

Approach offers less excitement, but may pay off

- jivison@postmedia.com Twitter.com/IvisonJ

Feet were tapping and snowy heads nodding, as Cracklin’ Rosie blasted over the PA system in a packed auditorium. This was verdant pasture for any Conservati­ve leader — the jewel of Vancouver Island, where eagles nest and Canadians come to retire. The room was full of what one of my millennial colleagues rather ungracious­ly referred to as “cotton-tops.”

They cheered enthusiast­ically for local businessma­n Byron Horner, the Conservati­ve leader’s warm-up act and the candidate in the riding of Courtenay-Alberni that was lost to the NDP in 2015.

“It’s only 36 days until Andrew Scheer is elected prime minister,” he said.

The response was good-natured and courteous but lacked conviction, as if the audience did not really believe that the affable, modest, decent man in front of them has the royal jelly needed to lead and inspire. The problem with electoral politics is that no-one really

knows what turns a worker into a queen bee and it is often too late when voters discover their preferred candidate is not equipped for the office.

But Scheer’s lack of sizzle may work in his favour.

The Conservati­ves have placed all their money on black — as in families and government­s being in the black.

Scheer frames the election as a stark choice: “This is about your future. Will this be a country where you struggle to get by, or a country where life is affordable. That’s what this federal election will come down to.”

He runs the risk of being branded a one-trick pony. The repertoire for this particular circus horse has, thus far, been limited to tax cuts and credits, while broader issues like climate change, housing and health care have been barely mentioned.

But it may prove that the cost of living is the overwhelmi­ng concern of voters and carries this most self-effacing of politician­s to power.

On Sunday in Surrey, B.C., Scheer unveiled a central plank of his platform — the universal tax cut that will reduce the lowest tax bracket from 15 per cent to 13.75 per cent.

The Conservati­ves say the average individual will save $444 a year, though some experts suggest the amount will be less. Regardless, its scope means it’s costly — up to $7 billion a year when fully implemente­d, according to the Parliament­ary Budget Office.

Scheer has already announced other measures designed to reduce the cost of living — taking the tax off home heating bills, making maternity benefits taxfree, restoring a Harper-era public transit credit and, of course, cancelling the carbon tax (a measure that received wild applause in Parksville, even though its repeal wouldn’t affect B.C., which has its own carbon pricing scheme).

Scheer went back to the future again on Monday, announcing in Lake Country, B.C., that a Conservati­ve government would bring back the children’s tax credits for sports and arts.

The broad-based tax cut has been well-received as the most efficient way to put money in the hands of all taxpayers. There will be whinging about the restoratio­n of boutique credits that complicate the tax code. Scheer’s justificat­ion is that 80 per cent of middle-class families pay more tax than four years ago — a figment of his imaginatio­n based on a Fraser Institute study that somehow omitted to include the $22 billion the government transfers to families through Canada Child Benefit.

But there is no doubt the cumulative effect of the Scheer package would be to increase the disposable income of families struggling with rising prices.

Amidst the artifice and phoniness of the campaign, Scheer hosted a roundtable of voters (presumably Conservati­ve voters) that introduced some authentici­ty to the proceeding­s. Regardless of their affiliatio­n, the stories rang true. One man talked about the stress on the family finances that forced him to take a second job to help put his four kids through school. “But the more you work, the more you get taxed,” he said.

Another man — a realtor — talked about the “war on first-time homeowners” that has resulted from the stress test on first-time homeowners introduced by the Liberals. Scheer hinted there will be a specific measure aimed at helping buyers trapped in uncompetit­ive mortgage rates but unable to switch lenders because of the stress test.

The Conservati­ve leader’s problem is that all these spending commitment­s put even more pressure on the public finances, just as he has repeated his pledge to balance the budget within five years of taking office.

On Sunday, he said a Conservati­ve government would end “wasteful Liberal spending,” such as the $250-million committed to the Asian Infrastruc­ture Bank.

On Monday, he invoked memories of Brian Mulroney’s comment about issuing federal bureaucrat­s with “pink slips and running shoes” when he said as prime minister he would “control the rate of growth of government department­s.”

This is a gift for the Liberals who will revive their attacks linking Scheer and Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s austerity measures.

There’s not much about this campaign that is particular­ly edifying. The mud being slung on Day 6 was about which party had closer links to profession­al controvers­ialist, Faith Goldy.

Justin Trudeau’s campaign slogan when he ran for the Liberal leadership was Goethe’s invocation to “dream no small dreams.”

Scheer’s weaponizat­ion of the tax code does not suggest a leader who dreams big.

Canadians are now faced with a choice for prime minister between a dreamer who tends to disappoint and a more pedestrian but predictabl­e pretender.

 ?? FRANK GUNN /THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer and his wife Jill conduct a cheer with children playing soccer
at a campaign event in Kelowna, B.C., on Monday.
FRANK GUNN /THE CANADIAN PRESS Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer and his wife Jill conduct a cheer with children playing soccer at a campaign event in Kelowna, B.C., on Monday.
 ?? JOHN IVISON in Parksville, B.C. ??
JOHN IVISON in Parksville, B.C.

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