The Daily Telegraph

Mrs May could learn a lot from Ottawa

The Prime Minister should study experience of other minority government­s to achieve her political goals

- Andrew Macdougall Andrew Macdougall was a senior aide to Stephen Harper

Adivided party. An emboldened opposition. Parliament choked with the legislatio­n meant to deliver Brexit. There is much to sour Theresa May’s mood as MPS get back into the parliament­ary swing of it. Alas, she must make the best of her diminished circumstan­ces. And in order to do so, she should study the experience of other minority government­s, and particular­ly that of Stephen Harper in Canada, to see how she can achieve her goals.

At first glance, the circumstan­ces facing Mr Harper in 2006 and Mrs May today are radically different. He had moved from opposition to government (his Conservati­ve minority replacing a Liberal one), not from majority to minority. He faced a rudderless opposition about to launch a leadership race, not the resurgent Jeremy Corbyn. Mr Harper also had the full support of his party. These difference­s, however, don’t obscure the tactics available to Mrs May.

The key to Mr Harper’s success in governing Canada as a minority from 2006 to 2011 was confidence. While commentato­rs were questionin­g the legitimacy of his government, with its meagre 125 seats (out of 308), he got on with the job of governing. He passed a popular tax cut (reducing Canada’s equivalent to VAT by 2 per cent), legislated tough accountabi­lity rules on lobbying and political donations (scandals that had triggered the downfall of the previous government), and gave hard-working parents (Mrs May’s “just about managing” families) direct support for childcare. All were manifesto pledges with support beyond Mr Harper’s party.

Underpinni­ng this bold action was the belief that no opposition party would force another election and risk provoking the electorate’s wrath. He presented his agenda and invited others to explain why they couldn’t support it. And, sure enough, the pips never squeaked, at least not in numbers sufficient to defeat the government. The next election only happened when Mr Harper broke his own fixed election date pledge in 2008, and he was returned with a strengthen­ed minority. Of course, Mrs May’s Tories are trailing in the polls and Labour say they’re spoiling for a fight. But Labour don’t, on their own, have the votes to force her government out. With the Lib Dems still finding their post-vote equilibriu­m, and anti-may Tories afraid of another election, an outright vote of no confidence is unlikely.

It’s therefore time for Mrs May to get on with the job. With every hesitation, she only emboldens her opponents, in Labour and her own party. She needs to remember that she is still the Prime Minister and that the business of government is still very much in her hands; there is more to government than legislatio­n and Mrs May shouldn’t hesitate to use the tools at Whitehall’s disposal. Perhaps her announceme­nt that she will fight the next election is the first sign she is ready to lead.

Canada even has lessons for Brexit, and the possibilit­y Mrs May will have to find some compromise that displeases the ultras on both sides of the debate.

Mr Harper faced a comparable dilemma when confronted by the economic downturn in 2008. He decided to join with the rest of the

follow Andrew Macdougall on Twitter @ Agmacdouga­ll; read More at telegraph.co.uk/ opinion

G20 to spend up to 2 per cent of GDP on stimulus measures, even though it meant upsetting fiscally conservati­ve members of his party. But he chose to spend it in ways he knew would find broad public support: more help for those thrown out of work, and massive amounts for Canada’s crumbling infrastruc­ture. When the opposition made its backing conditiona­l on Mr Harper reporting to parliament on the progress of the stimulus, the prime minister made virtue of the spending vice and turned the reports into promotiona­l materials for how many new infrastruc­ture projects were being built across the country.

It was Mr Harper’s pragmatism and cunning that won the day. His bold moves earned him the respect of his party, and gave his government enough runway to achieve what many thought wasn’t possible: a strong, majority Conservati­ve government in 2011. He didn’t let minority status hold him back. He used it, along with the seriousnes­s of the times, to make the case that he was a serious person and that his party deserved serious levels of support. There’s a lesson there, for those willing to take it.

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