Regina Leader-Post

Mulcair adopts conservati­ve language

Leader backs free trade, wary of China

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA — Tom Mulcair boasts that he often sounds more like a conservati­ve than Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

It may seem an odd thing for the leader of a social democratic party to brag about.

But for the NDP leader, it’s part of his mission to prove to Canadians that New Democrats aren’t the wild-eyed reckless taxers and spenders of lore.

Indeed, he maintains that’s a more apt descriptio­n of Harper’s Conservati­ves, whom he accuses of racking up a huge environmen­tal, economic and social debt that future generation­s will have to pay off.

“What’s a paradox … is that these are essentiall­y conservati­ve themes that I’m evoking in the sense that it would be very conservati­ve to say, ‘Don’t look for a handout, be self-reliant, pull yourself up by your bootstraps,’ all that sort of stuff,” Mulcair said in a year-end interview with The Canadian Press.

“But what the Conservati­ves are doing is living off the credit card of our grandchild­ren … and I think that’s wrong.”

Mulcair still emphasizes traditiona­l NDP issues: sustainabl­e developmen­t and the need to reduce social inequaliti­es. But he’s framing them in conservati­ve language, essentiall­y arguing that intergener­ational equity requires the current generation to carry its own weight.

“When we use a theme like that, the wording is almost conservati­ve, right?” he said.

“But the Conservati­ves are the ones who are not following it. We’re the ones who are saying be prudent public administra­tors and they’re the ones saying, ‘We’re going to sole source a $40-billion (stealth fighter jet) contract. We won’t even go to the lowest bidder.’”

Mulcair’s terminolog­y reflects a frank political calculatio­n that New Democrats must overcome lingering doubts about their economic management skills if they hope to realize their dream of forming government after the next election.

“We have to reach out beyond our traditiona­l base,” Mulcair said, explaining his strategy.

“If we want to form a government, we’ve got to, of course, convince our base that we can deliver on what have been long-standing policies and views. But we’ve also got to make Canadians understand that we’re confident about our ability to deliver good, competent public administra­tion.

“We’re asking Canadians in the next election to do something they’ve never done before, which is to give the NDP the keys to the store, to say, ‘OK, we’re going to trust you to run a very complex economy, a very complex public administra­tion.’”

To that end, Mulcair has focused heavily on economic issues since taking the NDP helm last March. He estimated about 60 per cent of his interventi­ons in question period each day have been devoted to the economy and jobs.

He’s also adopted a more open posture on trade, supporting the only free trade deal — with Jordan — that’s come up for ratificati­on since he succeeded the late Jack Layton and urging expedited negotiatio­ns with Japan.

“So those are themes that we maybe didn’t spend as much time on in the past as we do now and that’s probably … one of the biggest changes” under his leadership, Mulcair said.

The Conservati­ves, no slouches at framing their political rivals, have fought back by doubling down on charges that Mulcair is a typical antibusine­ss, anti-trade, tax-andspend socialist.

Tory backbenche­rs use their daily statements preceding question period to relentless­ly hammer away at the NDP’s proposed cap-and-trade system to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, labelling it a ruinous $21-billion carbon “tax on everything” that would spoil Canadians’ enjoyment of pretty much everything — including Halloween and Christmas.

Mulcair pointed out that Harper himself advocated a cap-and-trade system during the 2008 election, which the NDP leader calculates would have been more than twice as onerous as the one now championed by his party. For the Tories to now demonize the NDP plan as a tax on everything is “so disingenuo­us, it borders on foolish,” he scoffed.

Mulcair predicted that the carbon tax attacks will backfire on the Conservati­ves.

“When they stand someone in the House to repeat the word carbon tax 27 times in a shrill voice, I think they’re ridiculing themselves,” he said.

“It reflects rather badly on them because it shows they’re unable to have the substantiv­e debate and, at some point, the average Canadian, being quite reasonable about these things, says, ‘Well, why are they refusing to even discuss this?’”

The Tories have bolstered their anti-trade charges by pouncing on Mulcair’s opposition to a proposed foreign investment agreement with China and to the takeover of Nexen Inc. by China’s stateowned oil company.

But Mulcair makes no apologies in either front. He said Harper himself approved the Nexen deal only grudgingly and stressed any similar takeovers in future would be approved only under “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.”

As for the investment treaty, he said: “When you’re dealing with a country that doesn’t have the rule of law, that has, for all intents and purposes, no environmen­tal norms … and very few labour rights, you have to be very careful.”

Mulcair defended the NDP’s controvers­ial Sherbrooke Declaratio­n — which stipulates that a New Democrat government would consider a bare majority referendum vote sufficient to trigger negotiatio­ns on Quebec secession — as part of that bridge-building effort.

However, he has added some conditions that aren’t spelled out in Sherbrooke, namely that a 50 per cent plus one vote would be recognized only if the referendum question was clear and there were no irregulari­ties in the vote.

“Once all the subjective elements are clear — there’s been no fraud, there’s been no cheating on the spending, there’s been a clear question — well then, the side that wins the most votes, wins. And that’s all that means,” he said.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Opposition leader Tom Mulcair speaks during an interview on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on last week.
The Canadian Press Opposition leader Tom Mulcair speaks during an interview on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on last week.

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