Toronto Star

See-no-Duffy, hear-no-Duffy Tories build support

- Tim Harper is a national affairs writer. His column appears Monday, Wednesday and Friday. tharper@thestar.ca Twitter: @nutgraf1 Tim Harper

Pay no attention to that little man in the courtroom.

The Conservati­ve government may be stealing furtive glances over its shoulder at the downtown Ottawa courthouse, but it is mainly going about its business, flexing the muscle of incumbency.

It is shoring up its vulnerabil­ities in an election year while much of the political class — and a good chunk of the population — is talking about Mike Duffy.

It’s been relatively easy for the first six days of the suspended senator’s criminal trial, but it will become progressiv­ely more difficult as it winds its way into June and moves into more perilous waters for Stephen Harper.

For now, the government is adopting a “What, me worry?” strategy while it has that opening.

It is firming up support in key constituen­cies, bringing down the temperatur­e on volatile files and, most importantl­y, traversing the country sprinkling previously announced money, events that receive no national attention but provide valuable ammunition for Conservati­ve candidates, incumbents and challenger­s alike, when knocking on local doors in search of votes.

Shoring up support Tuesday’s announceme­nt of up to 200 Canadian military trainers heading to Ukraine will be a domestic winner for the prime minister.

The Canadians will be far from military action and the Ukrainian diaspora in this country, an important voting bloc, will applaud Harper for putting his money where his mouth is in support of Ukrainian sovereignt­y.

Similarly, the state visit of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will give Harper a chance to shine with an Indian diaspora.

More than a million Canadians trace their ancestry to India and they are concentrat­ed in key 905 and Lower Mainland ridings in British Columbia.

Modi gets a Vancouver state dinner with Harper and an official red carpet welcome in Parliament.

Bringing down the temperatur­e This remains a work in progress but the early returns are good.

The new veterans affairs minister, Erin O’Toole, has announced a series of changes on a file the government had mangled, most recently the hiring of 100 more case workers who are eventually expected to improve front line services. He has announced grants for those caring for injured veterans, increased disability allowances for permanentl­y injured veterans and extended benefits to reservists.

He has also eliminated the ludicrous requiremen­t for veterans to confirm lost limbs to continue their benefits.

This may not placate all critics. It can rightly be argued it took a looming election for a government to act as it always should have.

But it has had one undeniably positive effect — when was the last time you heard from lightning rod Julian Fantino?

The government has also cooled the thermomete­r on the question of missing and murdered aboriginal women. Calls for an inquiry persist but a national roundtable and promise of another meeting have nudged the issue off the front burner.

Sprinkling money around the country Tuesday was Christmas from Vancouver Island to Prince Edward Island.

Rare was the cabinet minister who wasn’t announcing something, ranging from $16 million pledged for Canadian Sports Centres, in ceremonies at sports facilities in Halifax, Calgary, Toronto and Winnipeg, to $10.8 million for research chairs, announced at Hamilton’s McMaster University, to almost $3 million to upgrade the regional airport in Victoriavi­lle, Que.

There was money for seniors in Ajax, for access to addiction programs for on-reserve First Nations, announced in Fort Qu’Appelle, Sask., help for the fish industry announced in Vancouver, help for farmers in Saskatoon and help for manufactur­ers of Asian-style noodles in Winnipeg.

There was a little over $9,000 to upgrade snowmobile trails in Armagh, Que., $1.8 million to fight crime in Scarboroug­h, $1.18 million to support francophon­e entreprene­urs announced in Alfred, Ont., and $2,000 to support the Willow Creek Cowboy Poetry and Music Society in Staveley, Alta.

There were wharves being fixed in Pointe-Sapin, N.B., and Ladner, B.C.

This was all previously earmarked money, but Conservati­ves believe they will be able to deliver a good news pre-election budget next week. To be sure, they will spend $7.5 million of your money to invade your television or streaming device to tell you what a crackerjac­k budget that was.

Harper will not be able to escape the drip, drip, drip of the Duffy trial. As we head toward the summer, the drip might become a flood.

The trial is beyond government control and in the hands of a scorned senator and a deft defence counsel.

But in the meantime, Conservati­ves have an election to win and to get there they will see no Duffy, hear no Duffy.

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