National Post

In the spirit of The Donald …

- Diane Franci s Financial Post dfrancis@nationalpo­st.com

In the spring I wrote that my favourite reality television series was the U.S. Presidenti­al Primary Season, but who knew that Donald Trump would play the starring role?

His candidacy has exceeded audience expectatio­ns. This is simply because the Comb Over is a master of the sound byte and, more important, is a one-man demolition squad when it comes to political correctnes­s or debunking stances concerning sensitive matters of state.

Trump is refreshing in contrast to the beige, nuanced and platitudin­ous candidates who have dominated election cycles in the United States for decades, and still do in Canada and Europe.

Trump is the black and white candidate who is bluntly for or against things, and who raises taboo topics and prescripti­ons. It’s not just entertaini­ng but it’s also informativ­e, from a policy viewpoint, and will goad the others into more concrete policy platforms. Like Scott Walker’s crazy, but frightenin­g, idea of building a wall to divide Canada from the United States.

This was a riff off Trump’s single concrete suggestion that Washington build a wall to keep illegals out from Mexico and make Mexico pay its cost.

While the Canadian notion has no resonance in the United States, and is downright silly, the fact is that nativism is alive and well south of the border, and means that Canada could one day be side-swiped in other ways that are very damaging unless we manage the relationsh­ip well. So whoever’s in Ottawa must be more American-savvy than ever before, and yet the opposition parties don’t bring up the U.S. relationsh­ip at all.

Canada’s newest political entries pander to the status quo, and merely offer the electorate a roster of competing shopping lists: Tom Mulcair with his extravagan­t universal day care and Justin Trudeau with his infrastruc­ture spending spree.

This is housekeepi­ng, not nationbuil­ding. Canada faces existentia­l challenges that should be addressed. In the spirit of politicall­y incorrect Donald, here a few major ones, not necessaril­y in order of importance: ❚ What does Canada do for a living after most of the auto jobs have gone to Kentucky and Mexico or Silicon Valley in 15 years or so? ❚What does Canada do for a living after fossil fuels are replaced by solar and other renewables after 2030? ❚Should Canada become economical­ly joined with the United States, given its technologi­cal dominance and wealth, so it’s not left behind? ❚How does Canada mitigate the ongoing Canadian brain drain and close its lengthenin­g productivi­ty and innovation gaps?

(In the 20th century, the equiva- lent of the entire 1900 population of Canada emigrated to the United States and now roughly the population of Quebec City emigrates permanentl­y every decade. Currently, roughly three million more have become U.S. citizens, are living there on visas, are illegally there or are snowbirds. Roughly 400,000 work daily in Manhattan, 250,000 in Hollywood and 300,000 in Silicon Valley.) ❚Why can’t Canada capitalize on its superior health-care system and allow the creation of a massive industry of health-care tourism serving Americans and the world? ❚Why can’t Canada create an Australian-style system of fast-track verificati­on involving First Nations claims to stop the country’s resource and pipeline quagmire, and to finance First Nations developmen­t? ❚Why can’t Canada scrap its costly farm supply management systems (poultry and dairy) and create worldclass, competitiv­e agribusine­sses like New Zealand has done instead of coddling and subsidizin­g these farms? ❚Why doesn’t Canada simply admit the Arctic is not properly monitored, protected or developed and create a U.S.-Canada navy in the face of Russia’s aggressive­ness? ❚Why can’t Canada scrap the Senate or replace it (if it must) with a legitimate, elected body? ❚Why can’t Canada merge the four Atlantic Provinces into one super province?

These are just a few questions hanging over the country that are ignored because they are politicall­y incorrect. Instead, the country drifts, thanks to politician­s whose “vision” is restricted to taxing and spending initiative­s.

Why not merge the four Atlantic provinces into one

super province?

 ?? Carlos
Osorio/ the Associat
ed Press ?? Following the example of politicall­y incorrect Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump,
columnist Diane Francis offers some modest suggestion­s for the future of Canada.
Carlos Osorio/ the Associat ed Press Following the example of politicall­y incorrect Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump, columnist Diane Francis offers some modest suggestion­s for the future of Canada.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada