The Niagara Falls Review

How long will PM’s pot ploy work?

New batch of unfriendly premiers threatens to derail Trudeau’s success

- JAIME WATT Jaime Watt is the executive chair of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservati­ve strategist. He is a freelance contributo­r for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @jaimewatt

In politics, there are two factors over which you have no control that determine your fate: Timing and luck.

In running for office, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau seems to have taken to heart his father’s advice that “the essential ingredient of politics is timing.”

Promises, which were the foundation of his 2015 campaign, were each cleverly timed to catch the changing mood of Canadians.

A tax cut for the middle class and those aspiring to join it, deficit spending to fund renewal of our aging infrastruc­ture, the welcoming of 25,000 Syrian refugees, and the legalizati­on of marijuana.

All were easy to promise at a campaign stop.

Each would have its difficulti­es and obstacles when it came to implementa­tion.

In particular, the legalizati­on of marijuana, an issue that at first blush seemed straightfo­rward turned out to be, upon a deeper look, fraught with challenges.

But on the marijuana file, in spite of those challenges, the Liberals forecast exceptiona­lly well.

Political capital is, after all, fleeting. The view of voters, at best, unstable. Those on top one day can find themselves at the bottom just a year later.

That’s why leaders try to use timing to beat the need for luck. That’s why prime ministers often try to accomplish their most challengin­g political objectives at the start of their mandates.

Trudeau’s Liberals knew they needed to have legalizati­on sorted before 2019. They also knew they had a better chance to bring skittish Canadians along if they did so before the government got into the nitty-gritty business of cannabis.

By starting down this road early, the Liberals were able to establish a thoughtful process for legalizati­on: They afforded significan­t time for consultati­on with business, thirdparty organizati­ons and the provinces. The result was that they were able to accomplish their goal with a year to spare before the next election.

By Oct. 17, the day pot became legal, this endlessly talked about “earth-shattering” moment in Canadian politics unfolded as just another dry day in the House of Commons.

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer did not even mention legalizati­on during question period that day.

The Liberals know, however, that a chunk of Canadians remain firmly against their policy initiative. To mitigate the electoral impact of this, the Liberals are counting on voters to have become distracted by other issues of a new day.

And what about the 30 per cent of Canadians who enjoy marijuana regularly? Here the Liberals hope they will be rewarded for legalizing cannabis when these voters get to the ballot box.

But timing isn’t the only thing. When asked what he feared the most, Harold Macmillan, the former prime minister of the United Kingdom, replied, “Events, dear boy, events.”

And this is where luck comes into play.

American football great Vince Lombardi once said, “Luck is what happens when preparatio­n meets opportunit­y.”

And the Liberals found themselves with no shortage of luck on this file.

What about the 30 per cent of Canadians who enjoy marijuana regularly? The Liberals hope they will be rewarded for legalizing it.

At the time of his election in 2015, Trudeau faced a very different slate of premiers than he does today.

Then, more than 80 per cent of Canadians lived in a province with a progressiv­e-leaning premier who favoured legalizati­on.

Since that time, the political climate in the provinces has changed dramatical­ly and, if the pollsters are correct in Alberta, will continue to change.

The prime minister faced very little scrutiny from the provinces regarding marijuana when he launched his initiative. Manitoba was the only jurisdicti­on that attempted to derail the legalizati­on process.

More recently, however, premiers who have grown united against Trudeau on several other policy files have begun to make noise about challenges to the rollout of marijuana legalizati­on and the federal government’s supervisio­n (or lack thereof ) of the process.

Ontario’s Premier Doug Ford has fired his first warning shot. Don’t expect it to be his last.

Imagine if Ford had been there since the beginning, rallying those Canadians who opposed the legalizati­on — and pointing out the flaws in the Liberal plans.

Timing or luck? Why choose?

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