The Hamilton Spectator

Politics to ‘Make Ontario Great Again’?

- MARTIN REGG COHN Martin Regg Cohn’s political column appears in Torstar newspapers.

Here’s a triumphal campaign slogan for the next provincial election: “Make Ontario Great Again!” Donald Trump did it with “Make America Great Again.” Now the impulse is creeping into Ontario politics, finding an echo in PC Leader Patrick Brown.

Our premier-in-waiting hasn’t adopted the slogan, but he’s imitating it. He hearkens back to the manufactur­ing heartland that once was.

Bear in mind that Brown doesn’t buy into the bigotry of the Trump campaign. Instead, he is clever enough to embrace Canada’s new multicultu­ralism, while still clinging to the old economy.

Brown understand­s that the far-sighted politician of today looks backwards in time. While looking voters in the eye.

It’s only natural for people to fear the change of the future (full disclosure — oh never mind, full confession: I’m among them). Nostalgia for the great old days — a past that never quite was — has eternal appeal.

By any measure, Ontario’s strong recovery has pushed it to the top of the national economic sweepstake­s. But personal uncertaint­y has never been higher.

Globalizat­ion and automation cause endless upheavals that cannot be denied, nor minimized, no matter how much one closes one’s eyes to the causes and consequenc­es. Ignoring these competitiv­e pressures would lead us into an economic dead end.

Resistance isn’t futile, it’s political — as prescribed by protection­ists of both the left and right. We see eternal opposition to change, be it environmen­tal (renewable energy and global warming) or economic (innovation and disruption).

Trump’s uplifting sloganeeri­ng helped him win power, but his subsequent actions have cast America on a downward path. By dismantlin­g pollution controls on the burning of dirty coal, he fulfilled a pledge to return jobless miners to the steady jobs they long ago lost — except it won’t work out that way.

Renewable energy has become more costcompet­itive, while automation — strip mining — in coal country has eliminated many of the jobs that Trump voters had hoped to reclaim. Meanwhile, China is rushing into the renewable energy vacuum left by the Americans, gaining a competitiv­e advantage in the sector.

Against that backdrop, Ontario’s experiment with green energy, while more costly than it needed to be, will still pay dividends. The decision to phase out coal-fired power plants in Ontario pushed up power bills faster than anyone bargained for, but it was fully supported by voters (and all parties) at the time.

With all provinces now mandated by Ottawa to put a price on carbon, the eliminatio­n of dirty coal has given Ontario a massive head start. This year’s decision to finally join other jurisdicti­ons in lowering the overall cap for greenhouse gas emissions will position the province for the green economy of the future.

The reaction from the opposition PCs could have come directly from Trump’s talking points. Brown assailed the Liberal government for linking up with Quebec, California and other jurisdicti­ons to stabilize and maximize the cap and trade market. Worse, he has recklessly promised that as premier he’d dismantle the complex system — doubtless faster than Trump has decimated the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The new economy is a hard sell in tough times. Automation is a bogeyman and globalizat­ion is the enemy. Global warming raises the political temperatur­e, and green energy makes people see red. Precarious work is scary.

Trump wants to bring back coal that’s best left in the ground, while Brown wants to wind down cap and trade before it even gets off the ground. Slogans that try to revive the past only get you so far, for the future cannot be forestalle­d forever.

The trouble with “Make Ontario Great Again” (or any variant from the Trump playbook) is that it almost certainly won’t.

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