Montreal Gazette

HARPER’S MAJORITY REVOLUTION MISSING IN ACTION.

INSTEAD OF MAKING HISTORIC CHANGE the Conservati­ve government is mostly just minding the store. Where is the hidden agenda?

- mdentandt@postmedia.com Twitter.com/mdentandt MICHAEL DEN TANDT

There is nothing, not a line in Budget 2012, that could arguably not have been introduced by a Liberal party.

“There is a spirit in this land, the true spirit, the true character of the Canadian people – a compassion­ate neighbour, a courageous warrior, a confident partner – that’s the spirit of the Canada I know. Canadians are proud of that spirit, and they trust us to live by that spirit.”

– Stephen Harper victory speech, May 2, 2011.

Q uite a night that was. Historic, many have said. But what happened?

For five years after he won the keys to 24 Sussex Dr. in 2006, the narrative of Stephen Harper rested on two pillars. First, he was tactically brilliant, a ruthless and effective political games man. Second, he was stridently ideologica­l, champing at the bit to remake Canada in his own image. The “hidden agenda,” Harper’s critics assured us, would roll back the clock on a host of long-settled social issues – abortion, gay marriage and capital punishment being the Big Three – and impose a wrenching, Mike Harris-style revolution across the land.

But one year after the vote that gave the Conservati­ves their fabled majority, guess what? Tactical brilliance is missing in action, with the government lurching from one pratfall to the next. And the Faustian hidden agenda? Received wisdom, among Harper haters, is that it’s approachin­g full flower. But if you drill past the surface, you’ll find your customary entitlemen­ts virtually unchanged. How can this be?

Indeed, apart from a few highly symbolic flashpoint­s – gun control and marijuana come to mind – the hidden agenda is gone, absorbed in a mush of accommodat­ive compromise, to the point where government spinners have resorted to patiently walking journalist­s through all the ways in which, they claim, the Conservati­ves are transformi­ng the country. Most Canadians have responded to this putative revolution with a blink and a yawn.

All of which raises this question: does Harper have a larger plan, beyond reshinglin­g the roof ? Or is he just another Canadian mainstream manager, Jean Chrétien from Alberta? This prime minister’s lifelong dream, it has long been said, was for the Tories to replace the Grits as Canada’s Natural Governing Party. Can they have succeeded too soon, and too well?

Worse yet, could Harper be John Diefenbake­r 2.0? Conservati­ves rarely miss an opportunit­y to extol The Chief ’s policy innovation­s (one of which was the Canadian Bill of Rights, precursor to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms). But as a dynasty builder, Diefenbake­r was a failure. In 1958 he won the biggest majority in Canadian history – then proceeded to squander it with a series of egregious missteps. Dief was sent back to opposition in 1963, where he remained until 1967, when he lost the Tory leadership in a palace coup.

There’s something about normally dour people, when they are genuinely happy – a prodigal instinct, perhaps. Such was the case with Stephen Harper on election night a year ago, when he stood before a rapturous Calgary crowd to deliver a victory speech that was magnanimou­s and, in a couple of places, inspired. For five weeks, Harper had run what was easily the nastiest federal campaign in modern memory, all but accusing the opposition of treason. But on this night, Harper looked . . . joyful. He graciously saluted his opponents and promised a government for all the people.

Come last September, following a triumphal earlysumme­r tour by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge that seemed to put the icing on Harper’s cake, the Conservati­ves got down to business, ticking off one long-delayed promise after another – kill gun registry, check; kill wheat board, check; withdraw from Kyoto Protocol, check. On every front, the Conservati­ves pushed hard, limiting debate routinely and baiting the parliament­ary budget officer, Kevin Page. This, of course, became the first surprise of Year One: the default position of reflexive aggression, which many believed had been driven by the strictures of survival in a minority, had become a permanent character trait.

On the policy front, it looked last fall as though the Tories would shift hard right to match their aggressive rhetoric. The Globe and Mail’s John Ibbitson, in a Tvo-sponsored talk in December, noted that “the (May 2) election was one of the most significan­t in Canada’s history, because it signalled the eclipse of the Laurentian Consensus, and Ontario’s transforma­tion into a Pacific province.”

Ibbitson’s Laurentian Consensus, outlined in an essay in the Literary Review of Canada, holds that the eastern, urban establishm­ent, a marriage of Ontario and Quebec elites, that governed Canada more or less uninterrup­ted (Diefenbake­r was an aberration) in the country’s first century and a half, had been overthrown. Ibbitson suggested this reversal was both permanent, because of the West’s growing demographi­c and economic might, and dramatic, because of the philosophi­cal difference­s inherent in the shift.

In January in Davos, Harper seemed to confirm this notion, outlining a road map that, by minority Harperian standards, was bold: he promised major reform in immigratio­n, research, trade, resource developmen­t, and old age security. In the lead-up to the March 29 budget, there was a steady drumbeat of leaks from wellplaced government sources, all heralding a “transforma­tive” budget.

And indeed, the budget did yield some interestin­g changes. Immigratio­n is being made more responsive to economic needs; free trade is being expanded on multiple fronts including Europe and India; research investment is being overhauled; resource extraction is being streamline­d, by dramatical­ly hacking back the regulatory review process and giving the federal cabinet, and not the National Energy Board, final say on all pipeline project approval, and the age of eligibilit­y for old age security moves to 67 from 65, which has drawn lots of attention and chest-pounding from the opposition.

But here’s where it all breaks down, it seems to me – the Laurentian Consensus, the end of liberalism, the triumph of western, populist conservati­sm. Very simply: there is nothing, not a line in Budget 2012, that could arguably not have been introduced by a Liberal Party led by a John Manley (minister of everything during the Chretien years), or a Frank Mckenna (former premier of New Brunswick) – in other words, by conservati­ve Liberals.

Harper is master of all he surveys. He can introduce, within reason, any policy he likes. He is also a true-blue conservati­ve, both fiscal and social. Most of his cabinet and the overwhelmi­ng majority of his backbenche­rs are, at the very least, economic conservati­ves.

Yet when one surveys the grand sweep of federal policy, looking for truly important structural changes or efforts to roll back the sheltering arms of the Canadian state, one finds – nothing. Zero.

Health care? Spending increases of six per cent a year through 2017, after which the rate of growth will be tied to population growth and adjusted for inflation, with a floor of three per cent. Free trade? Liberals pushed that in the ’90s. Immigratio­n? If anything the numbers of new Canadians are expected to increase. The military? After a series of annual budget increases since 2006, Canada still spends just 1.5 per cent of GDP on defence, among the lowest in the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on. Policy toward Quebec? Accommodat­ive.

There is one area, arguably, where the Tories are doing things in a way that looks and feels quite different from what Liberals might have done, in similar circumstan­ces. That is its handling of federal-provincial relations, which hurls entire areas of provincial jurisdicti­on, previously seized by Ottawa, back at the provinces. But even here, the concept is not new or particular­ly radical: in the late 1970s a western Progressiv­e Conservati­ve named Joe Clark called it the Community of Communitie­s.

From this, cutting through attempts to create distinctio­ns because, well, it’s more interestin­g that way, it seems the Harperites, one year into their majority, are not doing anything dramatical­ly different from what a Chretienst­yle Liberal party might have been expected to do. Don’t ever ask them to admit it. But this is mainly pragmatism, billed as transforma­tion.

 ?? MIKE RIDEWOOD GETTY IMAGES ?? Prime Minister Stephen Harper celebrates his win last May 2 in Calgary. Since then, observers say he hasn’t done much that looks and feels different from what Liberals might have done in similar circumstan­ces. There’s been no Harris-style Tory...
MIKE RIDEWOOD GETTY IMAGES Prime Minister Stephen Harper celebrates his win last May 2 in Calgary. Since then, observers say he hasn’t done much that looks and feels different from what Liberals might have done in similar circumstan­ces. There’s been no Harris-style Tory...
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