Vancouver Sun

Despite favourable conditions, Tories continue to slide in polls

Conservati­ve Karma: Harper refuses to listen to criticism of his governing style; the public may return the favour by ignoring good economic news.

- Andrew Coyne

The Conservati­ve slide continues. Postelecti­on polls put the party above 40 per cent. By last spring, they had fallen to 30 per cent. Year- end polls have them somewhere in the upper 20s.

A Nanos poll for the Institute for Research on Public Policy shows 56 per cent of Canadians rate the government’s performanc­e as poor or very poor, a 23- point increase from last year. Ekos, likewise, finds 46 per cent of respondent­s, a slight plurality, saying the country is “moving in the wrong direction.” But fully 52 per cent say the government is on the wrong track.

As the party’s support dwindles, its isolation grows. The same Ekos poll shows just nine per cent of those who supported other parties listed the Conservati­ves as their second choice. Perhaps more tellingly, 48 per cent of Tory supporters refused to make a second choice. They are down to the hardest of the hard core.

The slide predates the Senate scandals or the election of Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader, though each has surely helped to make it worse. Yet throughout this period, as the party was losing a third of its support, the economy has continued to improve. Indeed, by many measures the country has never been more prosperous, as I’ve argued more than once.

Real wages, household incomes, average net worth: all are at or near all- time highs. Unemployme­nt is back below seven per cent: not as low as in the boom years of the last decade, but lower than at most times in the past 40 years. The proportion of the population on “low income” is the lowest it has been since Statistics Canada began collecting data on it.

The paradox remains: How could a government presiding over such a strong economy be so unpopular? It is unusual enough for a governing party to fall, and stay, below 30 per cent in the polls. But to do so in good times? Unheard of. And while government­s sometimes are obliged to take a hit early in their tenure, traditiona­lly the time for taking tough decisions, it is hard to think of what the Conservati­ves might have done on the policy front to make them so unpopular.

It seems, rather, to be almost entirely to do with their no- prisoners approach to politics. The criticisms on this front are well known; the point is it is wholly selfinflic­ted. The Conservati­ves are in such odium neither by bad luck ( as governing in bad times usually amounts to) nor necessity, but by choice. They aren’t an especially bad government. Arguably they’re more competent than most. But

They aren’t an especially bad government. Arguably they’re more competent than most. But they seem almost to have gone out of their way to alienate people.

they seem almost to have gone out of their way to alienate people.

So: it’s not the economy, stupid? People don’t necessaril­y vote with their wallets? At any rate, with numbers like these the Tories are toast, right?

Not so fast. These are polls, not an election. Much can happen between now and voting day. ( Officially, Oct. 19, 2015, though you never know . . .) And, with regard to the economy at least, much of what happens could be to the Conservati­ves’ advantage.

They’ve already signed one big trade agreement, with Europe, which won them the best press they’ve had in years ( before the Senate scandals enveloped them again). Others may follow, notably the Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p. Assuming continued economic growth — and there are signs the recovery is picking up speed, notably south of the border — they will almost certainly be able to report a balanced budget before then, making way for the tax cuts promised last time out: income splitting for couples with children, and a doubling of the amounts that can be socked away in Tax- Free Savings Accounts.

Moreover, by late 2015 unemployme­nt will most probably have fallen further, possibly to near six per cent. On its own, this argues powerfully for the Conservati­ves’ chances: Since 1957, no majority government has ever been defeated when unemployme­nt was below seven per cent.

As it is, we have lately been provided with several examples of how strong the urge is to stay with incumbents: Voters in British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario all returned the governing parties to power, though each had trailed badly until shortly before election day. Add a divided opposition, with leaders who are untested or unloved, throw in another 30 seats in Conservati­ve- friendly territory, and the odds would still seem to favour the Tories.

And yet: the scandals are not going away. The RCMP will continue to investigat­e the Senate mess, with charges likely ( though possibly not before election day). At some point, too, the auditor general will report the findings of his examinatio­n of senators’ expenses — the same senators who so lately sat in judgment of three of their fellows for abusing theirs.

On another front, later this spring the trial of Michael Sona, the only person to be charged to date in the robocalls affair, gets underway. His lawyer has suggested Sona is being made to take the blame for a much larger plot. Whether that is true or not, the Conservati­ves’ handling of the whole matter has been so strange that its return to the headlines can hardly be a welcome developmen­t.

A weakened government emboldens its critics, within and without. The Northern Gateway pipeline, for example, is likely to meet with fierce resistance, even after its approval by the National Energy Board. Publicsect­or unions, ordinarily a convenient punching bag, might find a more sympatheti­c public this time out. Meanwhile, the unrest on the backbenche­s will surely continue, not least since the prime minister is sending every signal of his determinat­ion to carry on exactly as before, of which the return of Dimitri Soudas as party director is only the last.

All of the things that have combined to bring the government to its current state, in other words — the scandals, the polarizati­on, its own nastiness — remain in place. In all likelihood, the Conservati­ves will have a good story to tell about the economy in the next campaign. The question is: Will anyone be listening?

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has shown a strange unwillingn­ess to change course in the way his government operates, especially the harsh tone, despite clear evidence the public doesn’t like what it sees.
ADRIAN WYLD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has shown a strange unwillingn­ess to change course in the way his government operates, especially the harsh tone, despite clear evidence the public doesn’t like what it sees.
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