Millennium Post

Treading a tightrope

The loss of a majority in the latest Canadian elections have made Trudeau and Liberals more dependent on the whims of its supporting parties

- CJ ATKINS (Views expressed are strictly personal)

It is going to take pressure from movements outside parliament to wring progressiv­e concession­s from the next Canadian government after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberals won a minority in the October 21 election. Falling short of the 170 seats needed for outright control in parliament, Trudeau will have to rely on the support of other parties to pass legislatio­n.

This opens up the possibilit­y of advances on issues such as expanding the public health system, reducing poverty and increasing funds for affordable housing constructi­on and reducing student-debt loads. But with seats in parliament spread among five different parties and the left-of-centre New Democrats and Greens not performing as well as expected, any forward movement on these issues will require forces outside of parliament to put the squeeze on the Liberal government, pushing it to lean

left when looking for votes.

The election result was generally along prediction­s with Liberals and Conservati­ves each taking about a third of the vote. A minority government was expected, with most polls giving the advantage to Trudeau.

The most significan­t outcome was the mass rejection of the right-wing politics of austerity and retrenchme­nt. The Conservati­ve Party of Andrew Scheer, which ran on a platform of cutting $50 billion from public spending, did manage to eke out most votes of any party, barely inching past Liberals. Its victories were largely confined, however, to the energy-rich provinces of western CanadaAlbe­rta, Saskatchew­an, and eastern British Columbia, as well as some suburban and rural electoral districts scattered across the country.

The anti-immigrant People’s Party of Canada, a breakaway group led by a former Conservati­ve foreign minister, fell flat. It earned just 1.6 per cent of the vote and party leader Maxime Bernier

lost his own election. The failure of the People’s Party showed that the extreme right could not find a base among voters and left questions about why so many mainstream media outlets had treated it as a political force to be taken seriously during the campaign. Its long-term survival as a party is now in doubt.

The biggest unmet expectatio­ns, though, came in the seat totals for parties to the left of the Liberals – the socialdemo­cratic NDP and the Green Party. Pre-election projection­s had the NDP holding onto or even expanding its seat

The new situation of a minority parliament presents an opportunit­y for some progressiv­e advances, but no guarantees. The Liberals have enough seats that they will only need a few votes from one of the other four parties in parliament to pass its bills

count but in the end, the party dropped from 39 to 24. Its heaviest losses came in Quebec where a resurgent nationalis­t Bloc Quebecois (BQ) swallowed up seats from that party as well the Liberals.

The party most associated with fighting the climate change crisis – the Greens – had also expected to score significan­tly better. In the closing days of the campaign, however, the support that polls had been showing for the Greens seemed to fizzle. The party only won three seats at the end of election night. This resulted in a one-seat gain for the party but leaves it little leverage in parliament on its key environmen­tal concerns.

Despite these lower showings, the combined Liberal-ndp-green vote neared 55 per cent and taking into account the tally of the BQ, the anticonser­vative total approached almost two-thirds. The message sent by the vast majority of voters was that they did not want the right-wing agenda of privatisat­ion, tax cuts for the rich, and reductions to public services being pushed by the Conservati­ves and the People’s Party.

The new situation of a minority parliament presents an opportunit­y for some progressiv­e advances, but no guarantees. The Liberals have enough seats

(157 out of 338) that they will only need a few votes from one of the other four parties in parliament to pass its bills. Trudeau will not be bound to rely exclusivel­y on the centre-left NDP or Greens or even the Bloc Quebecois, whose politics are mixed but tend in a social-democratic direction, to survive.

Likely needing only 13 votes, the prime minister would also be able to conclude agreements with the Conservati­ves on a bill-by-bill basis, especially on military spending, weapons sales (to Saudi Arabia for its war in Yemen, for instance), free trade deals and energy developmen­t, specifical­ly oil pipeline constructi­on.

Such an approach would probably be more to the liking of the corporate wing of the Liberal Party, which remains solidly opposed to the social reform agenda of the NDP and the Greens. The stock price of SNC Lavalin, the Montreal engineerin­g firm implicated in the bribery scandal that stained Trudeau’s first term in government and cost him his attorney general, was up more than 14 per cent the day after the election, as of press time.

It had been hoped by some progressiv­es and supporters of smaller parties how the Liberal minority would be narrow enough that Trudeau could be forced into finally delivering on the promise he made in the last election to reform the electoral system to be more proportion­al and democratic. Altering the electoral outcomes to more fairly reflect the per cent of support parties win would help break the hold of the

larger or region-specific parties. There is sufficient support from those parties that benefit from first past the post, like the Quebec-bound BQ and the Conservati­ves, to join with the Liberals in keeping electoral reform off the agenda.

The parties to the left will attempt to press Trudeau on their priorities,

like covering prescripti­on drugs under the health system, putting more money into social housing or fighting climate change but bargaining with the prime minister will be more difficult if there are not mass democratic movements on the outside applying pressure. The relative absence of organised labour during the election campaign leaves open questions about whether such a united extra-parliament­ary opposition will be forthcomin­g. Time is short; the average minority government in Canada typically survives less than two years.

 ??  ?? Though losing the majority, Trudeau managed to secure a stable government with support from smaller parties
Though losing the majority, Trudeau managed to secure a stable government with support from smaller parties
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India