Policy

Election 2019, the Liberals: Unique Strengths vs. a Weak Opposition

UNIQUE STRENGTHS VS. A WEAK OPPOSITION

- Patrick Gossage

With less than a year to go until the 2019 federal election, the convention­al wisdom has it that the race will be Justin Trudeau’s to lose. Veteran Liberal strategist Patrick Gossage, who served Trudeau’s father as press secretary, looks at the strengths and weaknesses of the field as it stands, and which variables could shift over the coming months.

Going into this election year, the Liberals may prove to be the beneficiar­ies of a divided Conservati­ve vote on the right, and a shrinking NDP vote on the left. The relative weakness of the two main opposition parties looks to strengthen the Liberals’ hold on the progressiv­e centre, where elections are usually won in this country.

The Liberals also enjoy the advantages of incumbency, including

the prime minister’s standing on the world stage.

For example, Justin Trudeau’s oneon-ones with world leaders during the G20 in Argentina in early December highlighte­d an incumbent’s advantage in leveraging foreign policy issues for positive resonance at home, not just with his Liberal base, but with voters at large.

There’s an important electoral attribute in which Trudeau enjoys a significan­t advantage over his opponents—his retail game on the campaign trail. Canadians saw this in 2015 and will be seeing it again in the fall of 2019.

It played well at home that Trudeau spoke to Russian President Vladimir Putin on the capture of Ukrainian vessels and to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, the incarcerat­ion of Raif Badawi and the war in Yemen.

And then there’s an important electoral attribute in which Trudeau enjoys a significan­t advantage over his opponents—his retail game on the campaign trail. Canadians saw this in 2015 and will be seeing it again in the fall of 2019.

Politics also abhors a vacuum and with the defected People’s Party Leader Maxime Bernier, neo-conservati­ves now have somewhere to go. It is possible that this brand of populist conservati­sm may appeal to as many as 15 per cent of the Conservati­ve core vote, although in a Nanos-CTV poll in December, Bernier’s People’s Party polled at less than 1 per cent. However, its potential under a well- organized and funded Bernier could split votes away from the Conservati­ves to the benefit of the Liberals, especially in Ontario.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s bungling of Francophon­e affairs and Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer’s awkward ambivalenc­e on the situation only stands to reinforce Liberal dominance in the province, as well as in Quebec.

Add to that an NDP that has lost its way under the notably absent Jagmeet Singh and we are looking at a rare political landscape of two weak opposition parties. Which is not to say that Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer and Singh can’t surprise to the upside. Low expectatio­ns could work to their benefit.

The premiers who lined up for the cover of Maclean’s last November against the carbon tax are also a potential foil since Liberals have defined the climate change issue for Canadians and none of these premiers, particular­ly Ford, have put plans in the window that match the simplicity or generally agreed effectiven­ess of the federal “tax polluters” approach. Ford’s environmen­t minister, Rod Phillips, did release a plan at the end of November to meet the 30-30 targets of the 2015 Paris Accord, reducing emissions to 30 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030. However, as Phillips acknowledg­ed, Ontario had already reduced emissions by 22 per cent under the previous Liberal government at Queen’s Park.

Ford, who has made Scheer appear to be a minor player at his side, may also prove to be a polarizing figure come election time. His government’s direct attack on the poor, on minimum wage workers, on migrants and the marginaliz­ed may in fact motivate liberals and moderates.

Centrist politics, long the winning lane in Canadian politics all other factors being equal, does indeed seem threatened. But Trudeau will run on inclusion, not division. He will fight right-wing, anti-immigrant sentiment, prepostero­usly licensed by Donald Trump’s continued ranting. It has found a new ally in Scheer, who seems to feel he is on to a defining issue and tweets, in near-Trumpian fashion, accordingl­y.

Ford, who has made Scheer appear to be a minor player at his side, may also prove to be a polarizing figure come election time. His government’s direct attack on the poor, on minimum wage workers, on migrants and the marginaliz­ed may in fact motivate liberals and moderates.

In a recent Public Square Research poll only 10 per cent of respondent­s listed immigratio­n as a concern. The Liberals know that most Canadians are open to all kinds of immigratio­n—so many having been directly involved in bringing over Syrian refugees. It’s unlikely the Conservati­ves are on to a major election issue here.

The issues of youth unemployme­nt and indigenous living conditions seem to be reduced as threats to the government—although both are far from solved. The youth vote will have to be worked on again since it played so strongly in the 2015 victory. However, again the opposition leaders have little to offer either in appeal or platform to threaten the genial and appealing Trudeau.

The other issue that the opposition has not found a way to exploit is the one that sank Kathleen Wynn— a tendency among Liberals to lecture the public and tell them what to think. Never a tactic employed by my old boss, Pierre Trudeau. His Liberalism was all about expanding

choices. The core strategy that Doug Ford pumped away at was hammering the “elites and left-wing radicals” and speaking to bread and butter issues the “people” cared about. However, Scheer has not yet found a way to connect as the real opposite of Justin Trudeau, whose star quality remains a formidable asset.

The Liberals do have their share of broken promises, notably on electoral reform and balancing the budget by 2019 after three years of stimulativ­e deficits. Trudeau ditched electoral reform and a budgetary balance is nowhere in sight. But neither resonates as a ballot box issue.

Finally, it is hard to predict what events and issues may arise in the next months to threaten the Liberals. So far, there have been few real gaffes and a few big wins. While the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement was a major accomplish­ment it is not a done deal until passed by the legislatur­es of all three countries and may not be something Liberals can take to the bank months from now.

The sad financial situation of oncerich Alberta unable to get its oil to market has taken the Liberals as far as they can go since the government now owns the pipeline that will solve the problem and are trying to get it built.

There is little electorall­y for the Liberals to gain in Saskatchew­an or Alberta in even the best case, and nationally blaming the Liberals for the collapse of oil prices and a reduced future for the oil sands industry does not have a lot of traction. It’s like Premier Ford’s witless blaming Trudeau’s carbon tax for the closing of GM’s Oshawa plant. In any case being pro-pipeline and pro-carbon reduction does smack of inconsiste­ncy but is not a problem the opposition can easily attack.

The other question worth pondering is the role of the media, including social media. Trudeau completely dominates social media. Some of his Facebook posts get a million views. Scheer’s negative attitude to media while Trudeau announces a fund to help sustain reporting could not provide a greater contrast.

Obviously, the media will not be bought. But the press gallery, which sets the media agenda nationally simply have not been provided with enough meat by the opposition parties to even begin to reduce the space the activist Liberal government occupies. The public does not pay a lot of attention to the endless bickering and attacks that dominate question period, and this seems to be where the Conservati­ves devote most of their energy. Granted, it is smart not to put out a detailed platform too soon but to get more attention sooner than later will take a lot more than the Conservati­ves endlessly saying what they won’t do.

The only time Trudeau’s popularity took a real hit in the polls was following his overdresse­d India trip. The Liberals would do well to watch out for this kind of hubris or arrogance. It’s been called the Liberal kryptonite.

Patrick Gossage was press secretary to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau from 1976-82. He is the author of Close to the Charisma: My Years between the Media and Pierre Elliott Trudeau, and founding chairman of Media Profile, a Toronto media consulting and PR firm.

 ?? Adam Scotti photo ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly meeting with other party leaders in November 2018 on the situation of Ontario francophon­es following program cuts by the Ford government.
Adam Scotti photo Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly meeting with other party leaders in November 2018 on the situation of Ontario francophon­es following program cuts by the Ford government.

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