The Niagara Falls Review

Grits end year as they began it

Trudeau to focus on economic agenda in 2018, hopes to put ethics flaps behind him

- JOAN BRYDEN THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau’s Liberals are ushering out 2017 the same way they rang it in: In the midst of controvers­y over ethics and alleged elitism.

But as much as the prime minister doubtless wants to turn that page, government insiders say he has no intention of hitting the reset button in the new year.

He won’t shuffle his cabinet or prorogue Parliament and come back with a throne speech laying out a new agenda for the second half of his four-year mandate — the traditiona­l ways government­s try to signal a fresh start.

Rather, 2018 will be devoted to delivering on the agenda Trudeau’s Liberals were elected on — “a year of relentless implementa­tion,” in the words of one insider, who spoke strictly on background.

In other words, a continued focus on spurring economic growth and job creation to ensure a more comfortabl­e future for the middle class “and those working hard to join it,” as Liberals never tire of saying.

That means a budget that once again emphasizes investment­s in infrastruc­ture and preparing Canadians for a changing economy, where advances in artificial intelligen­ce and other technologi­es threaten traditiona­l jobs.

It means getting the infrastruc­ture bank, created this year, up and running and leveraging private capital for projects that government­s alone can’t afford.

It means hosting a G7 leaders’ summit in June that focuses on “investing in growth that works for everyone,” preparing for the jobs of the future and advancing gender equality, among other things.

And it means hosting for the first time both the Fortune Global Forum, a prestigiou­s invitation­only gathering of the world’s business elite, and the companion Most Powerful Women Summit.

All of it aimed at perpetuati­ng the good economic news that dominated 2017: Fastest growth among G7 countries, more than 400,000 jobs created, lowest unemployme­nt rate since 2008.

That’s the kind of positive results Liberals contend can be felt by real people. And it’s why they believe they’ve been able to weather storms over ethics, reneging on Trudeau’s signature promise to reform the electoral system, small business tax reform and Canada Revenue Agency crackdowns on diabetics and others — despite the best efforts of Conservati­ves and New Democrats who’ve been relentless in their pursuit of anything that suggests Trudeau and his ministers are wealthy elitists out of touch with the very middle class they profess to champion.

On that score, the Liberals have handed the opposition parties and their newly-minted leaders plenty of ammunition throughout the year, starting with the revelation that Trudeau and his family vacationed last Christmas on the private Bahamian island owned by the Aga Khan, multi-billionair­e philanthro­pist and spiritual leader to the world’s Shia Ismaili Muslims.

Trudeau is still under investigat­ion

by federal ethics watchdog Mary Dawson for using the Aga Khan’s private helicopter to get to the island, without prior permission from her as required by the Conflict of Interest Act.

A year later, the book on that saga is not yet closed. It remains to be seen whether Dawson will rule on the matter before her thriceexte­nded term expires on Jan. 8 and, if not, whether her successor, Mario Dion, will choose to pursue it.

The Liberals’ image as champions of the middle class took another self-inflicted hit in the summer, when Finance Minister Bill Morneau announced tax reform proposals he maintained were aimed at stopping the wealthy from using incorporat­ion of their small businesses to gain unfair tax advantages.

The badly-communicat­ed plan backfired, triggering an avalanche of criticism from doctors, lawyers, accountant­s, farmers and shopkeeper­s, who resented the implicatio­n that they were tax cheats, and pushback from premiers and even some Liberal backbenche­rs. Morneau ended up scrapping some proposals and softening others.

The furor drew attention to Morneau’s own personal wealth and the fact that upon his appointmen­t to cabinet he did not divest or put in a blind trust some $20 million worth of shares in Morneau Shepell, the giant pension management and human resources company founded by his father.

Dawson is now investigat­ing whether Morneau was in a conflict of interest when he introduced pension legislatio­n that may have benefited Morneau Shepell and the value of his shares.

The ghost of that controvers­y past will almost certainly continue to haunt Trudeau in the new year, when Dawson or her successor — assuming Dion chooses to continue the investigat­ion — finally rules on the matter.

Moreover, legislatio­n to implement the small business tax reform may run into a brick wall when it gets to the independen­t-minded Senate, where a committee has already urged the government to scrap even the watered down proposals.

Morneau’s tax travails and personal finances combined to make the last half of 2017 the most challengin­g time yet for Trudeau’s twoyear-old government. And public opinion polls briefly reflected the parliament­ary turbulence, showing the Conservati­ves closing the gap with — or even surpassing — the Liberals for the first time since the 2015 election.

Yet when the public mood was actually tested at the ballot box in a series of byelection­s this fall, the Liberals managed to easily hold onto safe seats and snatch away two Conservati­ve seats in the midst of the controvers­y. And by year end, most polls suggested the Liberals had rebounded back into a relatively comfortabl­e lead.

“I think for the most part, the Liberals are benefiting from broader conditions that often benefit majority government­s: rookie opposition leaders and a generally healthy economy with relatively low levels of unemployme­nt,” says University of Waterloo political scientist Emmett Macfarlane.

“And so where there have been controvers­ies, they aren’t necessaril­y sticking.”

That said, Macfarlane says Andrew Scheer’s Conservati­ves “have arguably made the most of what they’ve been given,” successful­ly pressuring the government to walk back its tax reform proposals.

The NDP, however, seems “to be having more trouble getting traction” and might benefit from more national attention if fledgling Leader Jagmeet Singh were to win a seat in Parliament, he adds.

As long as the economy remains strong, Ekos pollster Frank Graves — whose own surveys have the governing party still lagging slightly behind the Conservati­ves — predicts Trudeau’s Liberals “will be hard, but certainly not impossible, to beat” in the 2019 election.

Neverthele­ss, he says his polling has found the Conservati­ves are gaining traction with working class Canadians who are pessimisti­c about their own personal economic circumstan­ces, no matter what the national statistics show, negative about the current direction of the government and hostile to immigratio­n, free trade and so-called elites — the same kind of constituen­cy that fuelled Donald Trump’s presidenti­al victory in the United States.

That may help explain why the Liberals are planning to double down in the coming year on investing in “growth that works for everyone” and delivering results that existing and aspiring middle class Canadians will feel in their pocketbook­s.

Those best-laid plans could be upset, however, by circumstan­ces beyond the government’s control. There could be, for instance, economic repercussi­ons if Trump were to follow through on his repeated threats to terminate the North American Free Trade Agreement or if tensions over North Korea’s nuclear threat were to boil over.

Other issues could yet disrupt the Liberals’ march toward the next election as well. There could be, for example, some initial hiccups when recreation­al marijuana is legalized in July, the implementa­tion and enforcemen­t of which the federal government has left to the provinces.

And then there’s the unfinished ethics investigat­ion into Morneau. As the pre-election campaign inevitably ramps up over the course of the year, opposition parties can be expected to pounce even more aggressive­ly on anything that undermines the credibilit­y of the very minister Liberals are counting on to deliver their all-important economic message.

I think for the most part, the Liberals are benefiting from broader conditions that often benefit majority government­s: Rookie opposition leaders and a generally healthy economy with relatively low levels of unemployme­nt.” Emmett Macfarlane, University of Waterloo political scientist

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberals are ushering out 2017 the same way they rang it in: In the midst of controvers­y over ethics and alleged elitism. But much as the prime minister doubtless wants to turn that page, government insiders say he has...
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberals are ushering out 2017 the same way they rang it in: In the midst of controvers­y over ethics and alleged elitism. But much as the prime minister doubtless wants to turn that page, government insiders say he has...
 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The Liberals’ image as champions of the middle class took another selfinflic­ted hit in the summer, when Finance Minister Bill Morneau announced tax reform proposals he maintained were aimed at stopping the wealthy from using incorporat­ion of their...
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The Liberals’ image as champions of the middle class took another selfinflic­ted hit in the summer, when Finance Minister Bill Morneau announced tax reform proposals he maintained were aimed at stopping the wealthy from using incorporat­ion of their...

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