Columnists

Murray Dobbin
Ousting quasi-dictator Harper means putting country ahead of party

| January 3, 2012

As we enter the new year the prospects for defeating the Harper government in 2015 seem uncertain at best. And yet if those who care about the country were musing over a new year's resolution that would be it: a dedication to this single overarching purpose. Even if Stephen Harper is soundly defeated in the next election if will take a decade to reverse the damage he has already done. If he wins a second majority, it will take a generation or more.

There is a deep malaise in Canadian democracy rooted, it seems, in a profound alienation from politics and radically lowered expectations of what is possible from government. Much of this is the result of a deliberate strategy of voter suppression employed by the Conservatives, a strategy of making politics so offensive and good government so unimaginable that millions of people simply tune out as if it has nothing to do with them.

For those who thought that this was a temporary attitude of the Harper anti-government, that there would be more civility with a Conservative majority, the evidence is in: this is a permanent strategy to keep the party in power. It will not diminish with time or with the advance of the Harper agenda. This was never about Harper being frustrated with his minority status. It is about who the man is -- a malignant political rogue, contemptuous of his own country -- and what his agenda has always been: a right-wing libertarian remaking of the nation.

That this is an extraordinary, indeed unprecedented situation facing our democracy can scarcely be doubted and many commentators normally supportive of the status-quo (like Jeffrey Simpson of the Globe and Mail) have identified pieces of the picture, denouncing Harper for particular policies, or outrages against democracy and the rule of law. Yet the true magnitude of the crisis we face is rarely declared. Until we begin to see the country -- and talk about it -- as if it has been occupied by a foreign power we will not create the political atmosphere needed to save the nation.

So far we aren't even close to achieving this political framing of the task ahead. While it is true that there is a strong push for proportional representation -- which would have prevented a Harper majority from happening -- it is a long way off given that neither the Liberals nor the Conservatives support it. In the meantime, politics as usual is still being practiced by the main opposition parties. The NDP and the Liberals are still playing the game whose rules allowed Harper to gain the power he has. Blind to the deadly threat to the civilized nation built by several generations of Canadians, these two parties still behave and plan as if they are in a simple competition for seats in a normally functioning Parliament. 

Yet with the election of Stephen Harper everything changed. No prime minister in Canadian history has come to power with such a ruthless determination to implement an agenda so at odds with the interests of the country and the values of its citizens. This involves not just a set of policies aimed at eliminating the social and economic role of the federal government. It includes, on a parallel course, a determination to change the political culture of the country to one that either supports or acquiesces to that policy agenda. (The governor general's Christmas message was about volunteerism and philanthropy, Harper's long term replacement for the state.) Working in tandem, these two political streams, if allowed to proceed for any length of time could effectively change the country permanently -- or at least for all currently living generations. Harper aims for nothing less.

If the NDP and the Liberals continue to do politics as usual, as if Harper is just another political adversary in a normally functioning system, Harper is almost certain to win again. His voter suppression tactics, permanent campaigning, financial advantage, vicious attack ads against opposition party leaders and the care and feeding of his loyal base, will again give him at least a minority and likely (given redistribution) another majority.

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Canadians, whether they are party members or not, must force these two myopic political parties, both trapped in an old paradigm, to recognize the new reality and put the country ahead of their own narrow interests. They must find a way of co-operating in the next election -- along with the Green Party which is already on side -- to rid the country of this quasi-dictator. But they won't do it on their own. Ordinary citizens will have to convince them.

Bob Rae of the Liberals is hard at work trying to convince himself and his party that they are back on the road to becoming the natural governing party. But this is sheer delusion. One more victory for the Harper Conservatives and the Liberal Party will fade from the national scene joining the Socreds in history's dustbin. He avoids the issue of co-operation with the other opposition parties but setting up a straw man: the idea of a merger between the NDP and the Liberals. That is simply never going to happen, Rae knows it and thus continues to flog this particular dead horse so that he doesn't have to consider practical proposals.

As for the NDP leadership contenders only Nathan Cullen seems to understand the new political dynamic in the country, telling the Georgia Straight newspaper that Harper is a "clear and present danger to this country." His proposal is an interesting one. He wants his own party to allow its riding associations in Conservative-held ridings to hold joint nominating meetings with the Greens and Liberals. Whichever standard bearer wins the nomination, their party runs against the Conservatives while the other two agree not to run candidates. The assumption is that enough voters will be concerned enough about another Conservative victory that they will cast ballots for the opposition party even if they would not normally do so.

Cullen's plan is not the only possibility and it may be too much to expect from the inward looking institutions that political parties have become. He says he was inspired by Vision Vancouver. That's the centrist civic party which has won two landslide victories by attracting Greens, Liberals and NDPers -- defeating the right-wing business party that governed the city for decades. The argument is pretty simple: provide a mechanism to unite those who support the Canada we want and those who wish it gone will be defeated.

Some of Cullen's other policy suggestions -- like a referendum on the monarchy -- undermine his credibility and he is unlikely to win the leadership. But his belief that the NDP must put the country ahead of its potential seat count is an important contribution to the leadership debate and the political debate in general.  

Political parties being what they are it is unlikely that such a major shift will come exclusively from their own membership. But if enough Canadians concerned about the rapid devolution of their country and its democracy pressure both these parties -- or join them to do so -- anything is possible. A movement to demand such co-operation and a commitment to proportional representation as part of it, may be the only thing that can save the country. The time for that movement is upon us. If we wait till 2014 it will be too late.

Murray Dobbin is a guest senior contributing editor for rabble.ca, and has been a journalist, broadcaster, author and social activist for 40 years. He writes rabble's bi-weekly State of the Nation column, which is also found at The Tyee. He is the curator of rabble's Reinventing democracy, reclaiming the commons series.

Comments

Murray, as always, well put and convincing. The time for movement is upon us... So many people see what Harper is doing yet the voice of sanity remains powerless, stuttering in the dark. Have we become so numbed by banality that we cannot act in the face of injustice? In the 60's we were moved by the dream: How is that we have now gotten to the point where so many can remain unmoved when our very survival as a culture is at risk?

Sorry, it is not for you to answer this, nor is it here where apathy lives. All the best...

repost from: Jim Cohoon 12:29 PM on February 22, 2011

It does look like a real possibility most Canadian citizens could soon learn the hard way why a stubborn ignorance and apathy about their nation and its federal Harper Reform Government could come back to haunt them, and their children.

We have had it so (relatively) good in Canada for so long most of us have let our guard down.

Now our democratic practices are being deliberately corrupted and the once healthy well being of our civil society is being deliberately poisoned.

http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/steveharper/article/825809--travers-c...

 

Be very afraid: Stephen Harper is inventing a new Canada

A central tenet of the new reality is the repudiation of the need for anything as irrelevant as evidence, facts or rationality whenever they are inconvenient.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/second-reading/gerald-capla...

 

 

....not a chance our pols will put country ahead of party. The cynical strategy is the more Harper turns the screws on people, the better the opposition parties' chances of replacing him. They will not save us. But a suggestion when dealing with politicians such as these - more stick less carrot...the only one that can represent you is you. Come together and let's clean house.

I agree completely with Murray's perspective but how do we get activisim going? It has to start somewhere as a general opposition to the Harper government and the damage being done to Canada. Where and how do we start? I am so worried and feel helpless to do anything that would be effective. HELP!

I completely disagree. And I am very tired of this debate. The NDP ends up cricized either way. Every election it's the same thing from Liberals Don't vote NDP or the bogeyman will get you. Don't vote NDP it's a wasted vote etc. I have actually been told that I am a Harper supporter because I don't vote "strategically" because I don't support the Liberal party. In fact the strategic vote would have been NDP in the last election, but that's beside the point. I vote my conscience every time. That happens to be aligned with that of my party most of the time, hence why it is my party. I find it funny that now we are the Official Opposition everybody clamours for cooperation and a merger. The Liberals can vote in parliament properly and we can support each other, or they don't and we won't. It's that simple.

What is amazing in all this angst over what Harper has and will do to this country, there is no acknowledgement of why he and the conservatives are able to do it. Until there is some movement for constitutional and electoral reform there is very little to prevent any of this from happening. Our 19th century constitution and electoral system are profoundly undemocratic and all that was needed to demonstrate this was to give the almost unfettered power that a PM possesses to an ideologically driven individual like Harper. There are no checks or balances in the antiquated written and unwritten conventions that passes for a constitution in Canada and one need not be a Machiavellian strategist to exploit the possibilities to remake the country that are implicit in this situation. Despite this Canadians including the opposition parties remain silent on the need for real democratic reform perhaps because they feel if they get lucky and manage to grasp a 39% mandate they too get all the keys to the "constitutional monarchy"

 

Unlike the 60+% of the population who did not vote for Harper's conservatives, Harper knew full well what was possible given the options that were available in a political system that was made to order for ideological zealots in hurry. Not that much different from what happened in Germany in the 1930s where a weak constitution and the same electoral regime led to similar consequences. The Germans recognized these shortcomings and changed them in the 1950s but that seems unlikely to happen in Canada where it seems we prefer authority and certainty over democracy and choice

 

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