Vancouver Sun

HOW PROGRESSIV­E VOTERS CAN TRULY WIN IN FUTURE ELECTIONS

NDP, Greens need to work together to avoid vote-splitting, writes.

- Jeffrey B. Meyers

Justin Trudeau’s Liberals have won a minority government. They hung on in Québec, Atlantic Canada and Ontario sufficient­ly to forestall a Conservati­ve government of any sort.

Sadly, for my home province of B.C., it was not one of those rare elections where our vote was decisive. On the whole, however, progressiv­e Canadians like me have some reason for cautious optimism.

Although it’s clear that the NDP was badly damaged in Québec by a resurgent Bloc Québécois, it is also clear the party has not been nationally decimated.

It’s equally evident that although the Greens did not have a major breakthrou­gh, the party will, like the NDP, have some influence over the new Liberal minority.

The results are probably somewhat of a relief for Jagmeet Singh, whose late campaign enthusiasm, debate performanc­es and principled responses to hecklers make the case for him to remain as NDP leader and perhaps run again in the next election.

Similarly, Elizabeth May’s Green party continued to draw national support and to make gains even within the confines of an electoral system inhospitab­le to it.

Whether she will retain the support of her party and two-person caucus is uncertain.

SUPPORTING THE LIBERAL MINORITY

Over the next several weeks and months, however, everything will depend, for the NDP and Green leaders, on how influentia­l they can make themselves and their parties in exchange for supporting a new Liberal minority.

The Bloc’s gains in Québec are bad news for all Canadians, because it gives a boost to Québec’s controvers­ial secularism law and emboldens other provinces to subvert Charter of Rights and Freedoms protection­s by invoking the notwithsta­nding clause.

This backlash against principles of religious freedom and equality of individual­s, regardless of religion, is equally reflected in the extreme anti-immigratio­n politics of Maxime Bernier, who lost his seat.

Thankfully, the Conservati­ve party has not been infiltrate­d by ultranatio­nalism or extreme-right politics in the same way as the Republican Party in the U.S. or the Conservati­ves in the United Kingdom.

Although Andrew Scheer’s days as leader are probably now numbered, the Conservati­ves will have to remain vigilant if the party is to avoid becoming a home for the far right. The longer it stays in Opposition, the more difficult that will be.

It is difficult to imagine Trudeau’s minority government relying on the Bloc to prop them up, and this makes it likely that the NDP will play that role. There is every reason to believe that the result might be a stable government that better reflects the contempora­ry values of Canadian voters than the previous Liberal majority.

However, what remains troubling about the outcome of this election is that Trudeau and his party managed to maintain the support it has.

Despite broken promises on nation-to-nation negotiatio­ns with Indigenous peoples, proportion­al representa­tion and the environmen­t, Trudeau has only been lightly rebuked by voters. Even revelation­s of photos featuring a younger Trudeau dressed in brownface and blackface did not ultimately end his viability as the highest-profile leader in the country.

There are many possible reasons for this.

One of them is that voters have simply forgiven Trudeau for his political conflicts of interest, broken campaign promises and history of racially insensitiv­e costumes.

Another is that citizens simply no longer expect much of their politician­s when it comes to personal integrity and ethical conduct. If accurate, that would demonstrat­e an alarming degree of voter cynicism.

More likely, however, is that the Liberal campaign strategy of scaring potential NDP and Green voters into a strategic vote for their party worked again, particular­ly in Ontario. This strikes me as a problem. Progressiv­es should not have felt that they had no option but to vote again for Trudeau’s Liberals, despite their disappoint­ment with his leadership.

ANOTHER OPTION

There might have been another option, and there still might be next time.

The NDP and the Greens should change their behaviour as parties. Specifical­ly, before the next election, the leaders of both parties should agree not to run candidates against each other for the express purpose of avoiding future vote-splitting.

In order to do this, the leaders of both major left-leaning parties would have to negotiate a protocol, based on a combinatio­n of external and internal polling data, as to how the country’s 338 ridings would be divided between the parties.

If neither Singh nor May were open to this, their leadership should be challenged by someone else within their party interested in forming a government in the next election. This is the only conceivabl­e way for Canadians to see a genuine alternativ­e to the left of the Liberals in the next election.

Dishearten­ingly, the current accommodat­ion that appears to have been at least begrudging­ly accepted by both the NDP and Greens, even before the first ballot was counted, was achieving kingmaker status in a minority government led by the Liberals.

This might be a reasonable strategy under the circumstan­ces, but it is hardly the stuff of visionary leadership.

If May and Singh had held a leaders’ summit before the writ was issued, things might have turned out differentl­y.

Minority government­s have much to recommend them. In the absence of a clear majority, a country needs leadership willing to negotiate and compromise to govern. However, the progressiv­e left should not content itself with aiming to be a junior partner in Liberal minority government­s. In the next election, they should seek to propose a principled, but realistic, alternativ­e to the Liberals — one that can truly compete for power.

Jeffrey Meyers is a lecturer in the faculty of law at Thompson Rivers University. This article originally appeared online at theconvers­ation. com, an independen­t source of news and views, from the academic and research community.

None showed much humility, clarity or honesty . ... Like the campaign itself, which was empty, angry and dirty, so was its immediate aftermath. We now have the weakest field of leaders in memory.

Andrew Cohen

The progressiv­e left should not content itself with aiming to be a junior partner.

 ?? SEBASTIEN ST-JEAN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Justin Trudeau will remain prime minister in a minority Canadian government following Monday’s federal election, but many progressiv­es are looking to the New Democrats and Greens for an alternativ­e, writes Jeffrey Meyers.
SEBASTIEN ST-JEAN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Justin Trudeau will remain prime minister in a minority Canadian government following Monday’s federal election, but many progressiv­es are looking to the New Democrats and Greens for an alternativ­e, writes Jeffrey Meyers.

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