Waterloo Region Record

Trudeau government’s election promises assessed in new book

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — A new book arriving on the eve of the federal election campaign is offering policy geeks a comprehens­ive take on whether Justin Trudeau lived up to his 2015 vows.

At the heart of the 237-page publicatio­n — the product of work from two dozen Canadian academics — is an analysis of 353 Liberal pre-election promises and an evaluation of how many have actually been fulfilled since Trudeau’s team took office.

In short, the experts found that by March of this year Trudeau’s government had entirely followed through on about 50 per cent of its pledges, partly delivered on about 40 per cent and had broken roughly 10 per cent.

The authors say the book — which also features a deep plunge into the weeds of about a dozen key policy areas — will not only interest wonks, like scholars and journalist­s, but can serve as a primer for all voters ahead of October’s election.

“In an era of ‘fake news,’ negative advertisin­g campaigns and convention­al and social media overload, voters face a daunting challenge in providing a neutral and objective assessment of the past four years under the Liberal government,” they write in the book, published by Presses de l’Université Laval.

The English edition, titled “Assessing Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Government,” is scheduled for release Monday. The authors say their mission was to create a non-partisan, transparen­t source of informatio­n about pledge fulfilment.

For those looking to keep score, the book also provides a historical dimension. Researcher­s have retroactiv­ely examined pledge fulfilment by federal government­s dating back to Brian Mulroney’s first majority mandate in 1984.

The Trudeau government’s result is based on a platform-monitoring tool called the “Polimetre,” which is managed by Université Laval’s Centre for Public Policy Analysis.

The gauge’s latest reading — updated since March — shows the Liberals have entirely fulfilled 53.5 per cent of their 2015 vows, partially lived up to 38.5 per cent and broken eight per cent.

The researcher­s also created a Polimetre for Stephen Harper’s last majority government that stretched from 2011 to 2015. The Harper government, they found, completely met 77 per cent of its election pledges, delivered in part on seven per cent and broke 16 per cent of their promises. The Harper Polimetre was the group’s first at the federal level — and the Trudeau version was the first to be made into a book.

There are two ways to draw a conclusion on Trudeau and Harper’s promise-keeping records, said book co-editor François Petry, a political-science professor from Université Laval.

One is to combine pledges fully met with those partially kept — which gives Trudeau a score of 92 per cent and 85 per cent for the final four years of Harper’s run. Or, Petry said, one can simply compare vows fully realized — Trudeau gets 53.5 per cent and Harper 77 per cent.

However, not all pledges are created equally, he noted.

Trudeau entered the 2015 campaign having made a lot of “transforma­tive” promises, he said, in part because the Liberals wrote their more ambitious pledges as a third-place party.

In contrast, Harper made a lot of “transactio­nal” promises, which Petry described as those targeted at subpopulat­ions like parents, for instance.

The writers also stress that efforts by all government­s to deliver on promises often converge with conditions outside their control. Circumstan­ces could include the fulfilment-hampering effects of an economic downturn or a boost from strong growth, which the Liberals have seen in recent years.

In the end, however, the researcher­s found the Trudeau and the last Harper government had the highest rates of follow-through on their campaign promises of any Canadian government over the last 35 years.

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