National Post (National Edition)

I WOULD PICK MACKAY

- CONRAD BLACK National Post cmbletters@gmail.com

Canada is now lumbered with an almost completely incompeten­t government, sustained in a lazy and virtual Parliament by a Dunciad of Quebec separatist­s and New Democrats. Even in the depths of an immense public health and economic crisis, it has made aid to corporatio­ns laid low by its overextend­ed economic shutdown conditiona­l on adequately docile responses to the regime’s climate change catechism. This government’s blunderbus­s response to the crisis has probably pushed the deficit projection to a completely unsustaina­ble 20 per cent of GDP. The execution of the government’s plans has been left to inefficien­t public health officials, who monopolize testing for the coronaviru­s instead of entrusting that function to the country’s doctors. Though the financial assistance plans have been adequately generous, most are not well designed. There is no indication of any comprehens­ive plan for the reopening of the country’s economy. Most Canadians have been led to believe that COVID-19 kills many more than approximat­ely one in every 5,000 people and among those beneath the age of 60 and in good health, only about one in 25,000. Each individual demise is a sadness, but this is not statistica­lly significan­t. Nor is it much mentioned that in all age categories including those in their 70s and older, most people afflicted by the coronaviru­s have either no or minimal symptoms. We have, next to Japan and Germany, the best coronaviru­s record of any large northern hemisphere country whose numbers are believable. The government deserves some credit for that, but we are shirking our duty to help lead the entire world out of an attitude of excessive fear tainted by cowardice and into a more purposeful state.

The government’s performanc­e should generate great interest in the selection of a new Opposition leader. But the Conservati­ve leadership race is attracting little attention, including from the majority of potentiall­y interestin­g candidates. The absence of Rona Ambrose, John Baird, Maxime Bernier,

Jean Charest, Jason Kenney, Pierre Poilievre and Brad Wall, though often understand­able, is a disappoint­ment. Canada needs a strong alternativ­e government. Of course the pandemic has overshadow­ed everything, but the Conservati­ve problem has been aggravated by the most boring nomination process possible: ballots mailed in with a complicate­d preferenti­al voting system will be determined by the operation of machines and announced with the absolute minimum possible incitement of public interest. Bring back live convention­s.

There are five candidates; the only ex-ministers are Peter MacKay (foreign affairs, defence, justice) and Erin O’Toole (veterans’ affairs) and one of them is almost certain to be the leader. The other three candidates, Jim Karahalios (twice disqualifi­ed, I mention him only in case he somehow tries again), Leslyn Lewis and Derek Sloan, are longshot social conservati­ves. MacKay, 54, was leader of the old Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party and agreed to unificatio­n with the Canadian Alliance (Reform party), to reassemble a unitary Conservati­ve party, in 2003. He was deputy party leader under former prime minister Stephen Harper, and a Nova Scotia MP for 18 years. O’Toole, 47, was a captain in the Royal Canadian Air Force, and has been the MP for Durham (Ontario) for eight years. Both men are lawyers; MacKay has the declared support of 39 MPs and O’Toole of 32.

All five candidates would permit private members to introduce bills to restrict abortion, but MacKay and O’Toole would vote against such measures, and MacKay would require cabinet members to vote against such restrictio­ns, as well. Government­s should not have, nor aspire to have, the right to inflict childbirth on a woman who does not wish to have a child. Abortions will occur and they should be sanitary and un-stigmatize­d. But it is morally offensive that the Liberals and other parties consider abortion to be an equivalent act to birth, a matter of “reproducti­ve rights,” and attach no credence whatever to the concept of the rights of the unborn at any stage.

The former leader of the Bloc Québécois, Gilles Duceppe, considered the Roman Catholic Church (which is chiefly responsibl­e for the survival of the French language in Canada) to be an organized conspiracy against abortion rights. Religious freedom includes freedom from atheistic oppression. The Conservati­ves are the only federal party that evinces any concept of the inherent sanctity of life and the conceivabl­e existence of a superhuman intelligen­ce of any descriptio­n; this is a matter of toleration and not of belief.

All five candidates want to end this government’s war on the oil and gas industries and build the economical­ly sensible pipelines. MacKay and O’Toole, as well as Lewis, want to move the embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, which should no longer be controvers­ial. Lewis and MacKay want to reopen the office of religious freedom. MacKay, having seen as defence minister when that department took over the old Nortel buildings, how the Chinese had wired it up for industrial espionage by Huawei; wants to exclude China from the 5G networks, and O’Toole wants to emphasize economic, defence and cultural associatio­n with the U.K., Australia and New Zealand. Both are good ideas. All candidates wish to repeal the May 2020 firearm ban, and MacKay and Sloan seek some other liberaliza­tions (they’re all right). MacKay wants to review the temporary worker program and Sloan wants to cut back immigratio­n by 60 per cent (a bad idea that looks like vintage bigotry). O’Toole wants to end funding for the CBC English language television service (the French network is even more obnoxious, and we need a better public broadcaste­r, not an asphyxiate­d one). MacKay wants to build up Churchill, Man., as a port and naval base and seeks an enhanced early warning system in the North and promises to meet the two per cent GDP NATO target for defence spending (as does Sloan). These are all excellent proposals. MacKay and O’Toole want to retain Bill C-16, which protects gender expression and identity under the Human Rights Act (an absurd measure but a politicall­y correct totem after all Trudeau’s gender nonsense; can’t we just agree that there are two sexes and all adults can sort out their own sexuality?) Lewis and Sloan want it repealed. All candidates want to abandon the carbon tax. Karahalios and Sloan want to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement, and the fact that all of them are quiet on the environmen­t incites hope that they would avoid the “green terror” being pursued by the present government. The best climate policy for Canada would be to contribute to serious neutral research on what actually is happening, since the fetishisti­c insistence on the “settled science” of “98 per cent of expert opinion” is bunk and there is no consensus on what is actually happening to the climate. There is nothing original from any of them about tax policy, private medicine or reform of internatio­nal institutio­ns.

The policy positions of the two viable candidates are not very original, apart from MacKay’s support of an increased military, but they are not reactionar­y either. MacKay is more experience­d and is running as essentiall­y a Mulroney-like candidate, more worldly and conservati­ve than the Clark-Stanfield tradition, and more accessible to centrists than Harper. O’Toole, who was a centrist at the last leadership convention in 2017 when he came third behind Scheer and Bernier, is now seeking the Harper vote, and the mantle of the Reform wing. Generally, the Mulroney route is the way to victory; Harper could never win unless there were four parties and won his one majority in 2011 on the freakish defeat of the Quebec Liberals by the NDP. (Brian Mulroney was the only Conservati­ve leader except John A. Macdonald to win two or more consecutiv­e full-term majorities — Robert Borden’s re-election in 1917 was a wartime coalition.) O’Toole has the advantage of speaking French with more ease and fluency than MacKay, who has made an effort and is not acoustical­ly irritating in that language but could not be called bilingual.

Neither is exciting, but English-Canadian politician­s rarely are, and excitement isn’t Canada’s national forte anyway. Peter MacKay is reliable and competent and more experience­d, and unlike Harper, open to innovative suggestion­s. Erin O’Toole is an unknown quantity; he would be acceptable but if I were a delegate, I would, via Canada Post, cast my vote for Peter MacKay.

NEITHER IS EXCITING, BUT ENGLISH-CANADIAN POLITICIAN­S RARELY ARE.

AND LASTLY, AND PERHAPS MOST IMPORTANTL­Y, CONSERVATI­VE PREMIERS HAVE BEEN CONSISTENT­LY EMPATHETIC AND POSITIVE. — SEAN SPEER

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Conservati­ve leadership hopeful Peter MacKay is the type of centrist candidate who has
the best chance of drawing the support of Canadians, Conrad Black writes.
ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Conservati­ve leadership hopeful Peter MacKay is the type of centrist candidate who has the best chance of drawing the support of Canadians, Conrad Black writes.
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