Policy

The Conservati­ves and PostPandem­ic Politics

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The Conservati­ve Party of Canada has chosen Erin O’Toole to lead it into the next election. But the context of a pandemic that has killed thousands of Canadians and drasticall­y realigned the country’s fiscal margin of manoeuvre demands a new perspectiv­e. Herewith some invaluable free advice from Earnscliff­e Principal and strategy maestro Yaroslav Baran.

When a new party leader ascends the stage, it is normally against a jubilant landscape of excitement and renewal. Some party rebuilding is required (after all, leadership contests are often catalyzed by election defeat) but Canada’s politics and economy have been blessed with protracted relative stability, allowing new leaders to focus internally and cultivate a vision and brand without external encumbranc­es. No more. Erin O’Toole takes the helm of his party in an inverted environmen­t: his party is strong, solvent and largely united, but the surroundin­g policy environmen­t is unstable and unpredicta­ble.

In a transforma­tion of the status quo unleashed by a viral outbreak that became a global pandemic, today’s chief political concerns are contagion, unemployme­nt that neared five million working-age Canadians, a $343 billion deficit, and paralysis of entire economic sectors—unimaginab­le dynamics just a year ago.

How, then, does a new party leader begin his work? What are the opportunit­ies, if any, to begin building? Following are nine prescripti­ons for the new leader.

1. 2. 3.

Unite the caucus, and quickly. Despite the euphoria, leadership races are also divisive and expose fault lines. The biggest in this race were between the harder-edged “take back Canada” types (embodied first by Pierre Poilievre and later by O’Toole) versus a more moderate conservati­sm represente­d by Peter MacKay. The divide is more about style and tone than it is about actual policy, and it cannot be allowed to fester. This is best done by reaching across camps and welcoming the strongest MPs into the shadow cabinet, regardless of whom they supported in the race. Magnanimit­y and outstretch­ed hands are the most effective political salves.

In a transforma­tion of the status quo unleashed by a viral outbreak that became a global pandemic, today’s chief political concerns are contagion, unemployme­nt that neared five million working-age Canadians, a $343 billion deficit, and paralysis of entire economic sectors.

Do not obsess about the fiscal. With an economy struggling to recover from the pandemic, and a deficit hovering around $343 billion, Conservati­ves will have to suppress their instinctiv­e urge to proclaim gimmicky (and unrealisti­c) timetables on how quickly they will rebalance the books. In the short term, the economic message should centre on job growth and labour force reintegrat­ion. These are a precursor to levelling off the support spigot anyway, so why risk the political exposure of sticking to an old script unsuitable to the times?

Recognize that values will be the strongest contrast point with the Liberals. Counterint­uitively, the most rewarding policy battlegrou­nd will

economic outlook are respected. And built on regular people. This means competing for blue-collar and middle-class voters who feel left behind, and building an entire election strategy around that. Harper did this successful­ly in 2006. It’s largely competitiv­e with the NDP, but it works.

6. Work to bridge West and East. Despite the prime minister’s promise of building a Nirvana of federal-provincial relations and the all-hands-on-deck fed-prov unity necessitat­ed by the COVID-19 pandemic, things are decidedly more fractured and adversaria­l than when Trudeau took office. O’Toole has the political experience and knows the players well enough to take this on. His style is more consensual than confrontat­ional. He is ready to make deals rather than waste time in ideologica­l battle. He also has the strongest network of experience­d advisors in the land. Here, he can naturally shine. 7. Remember the North.

The issue set of Canada’s territorie­s is a natural collection of strengths for a Conservati­ve willing to put in the effort. Between Arctic sovereignt­y, addressing centuries-old marginaliz­ation, tech connectivi­ty, sustainabl­e resource developmen­t defined by Indigenous participat­ion, modernizin­g the North’s energy profile, and environmen­tal conservati­on, the North is a perfect opportunit­y to demonstrat­e a modern and sophistica­ted conservati­sm in a contempora­ry context.

8. Focus on what you stand for, rather than what you stand against.

Too many conservati­ves today focus on the latter, translatin­g into a perception that they are always angry and always outsiders. That, in turn, fuels a self-perpetuati­ng cycle of outsider status that prevents the Conservati­ve brand from being seen as mainstream. The cycle must be stopped. Opposition­al 9. conservati­ves tend not to have an understand­ing of how the power game works, tend not to have taken the time to develop a coherent worldview, and tend not to have a firm grasp of the ideologica­l and philosophi­cal underpinni­ngs of their thinking and what they are trying to achieve. O’Toole must take care that that tone and approach not become the dominant one for his caucus.

Resist a negative campaign. There is a time and a place for everything. Given their recent controvers­ies and polling, the Liberal Party will be flailing and running an aggressive­ly negative campaign. This is a guaranteed opportunit­y to drive contrast. The angrier and more accusatory his opponents become, O’Toole should reinforce his composure and positive messaging. Such contrast is noticeable, and will play in his favour.

One view holds that bolstering Canada’s conservati­ve movement means aggressive­ly cultivatin­g it as something very distinct—a sharply separate worldview and agenda to compete with the Liberals’ practice of fusing their ideals and interests with a “Canadian” identity.

An alternativ­e approach is more incrementa­l and humbler: Work to shed the remaining baggage that makes conservati­sm anachronis­tic and stodgy—particular­ly to young voters. Recognize the fiscal and policy circumstan­ces of our times, and leverage the Liberal Party’s self-inflicted wounds against it rather than competing with an alternativ­e worldview. Make the contrast less about policy difference­s, than about values and style. This is the winning road for O’Toole.

Contributi­ng Writer Yaroslav Baran, Managing Principal of the Earnscliff­e Strategy Group in Ottawa, is a former chief of staff to the Government House Leader and senior communicat­ions strategist on numerous Conservati­ve campaigns.

 ?? André Forget, CPC photo ?? “Now the real work begins,” new Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole declares in his late night victory speech at the party’s leadership meeting.
André Forget, CPC photo “Now the real work begins,” new Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole declares in his late night victory speech at the party’s leadership meeting.

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