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Election 2015

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On Twitter, journalist Andrew Coyne, commenting on the John Ivison article re: the Throne Speech, says, "God what populist bilge: the NDP could write this Throne Speech. This is what's wrong with the Tories in a nutshell."

If John Ivison is correct in his speculation, it is, indeed, "populist bilge;" but this, a Throne Speech, is about politics not policy; it is about winning elections and this is Canada and "populist bilge" works. I didn't hear similar comments when Justin Trudeau or Thomas Mulcair spouted "populist bilge."
 
And here is a report that says, "The parliamentary budget office says economic growth will remain sluggish over the next couple of years, but that won't keep the federal government from hitting its balanced budget target in 2015." That's a crucial target for the Conservatives.

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More of this in this report which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Financial Post:

http://business.financialpost.com/2013/10/28/sluggish-growth-wont-keep-ottawa-from-balancing-budget-by-2015-budget-office/
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Jim Flaherty: Expect a balanced budget with a big surplus in 2015

Canadian Press

28/10/13

OTTAWA — Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says he will not only balance the budget in 2015, but the surplus will be significant.

Speaking to reporters after meeting economists in Ottawa Monday, Flaherty said the surplus that year won’t be “tiny.”

“I can tell you that the plan is to budget a surplus in 2015, and not a tiny surplus,” Flaherty said. “There’ll be no doubt that we’re balanced in 2015.”

The finance minister says the government is well on its way to eliminating the deficit by the target date despite what he acknowledges is a weaker-than-expected economy.

Flaherty was responding to a Parliamentary Budget Office report that predicts balancing the budget in the critical 2015-16 fiscal year will be a close shave, with a relatively small $200-million surplus, lower than the March budget estimate of $800-million.

As well, the office sees the following year’s surplus at a mere $1.7-billion, less than half the budget’s prediction of $3.9-billion.

But Flaherty says the PBO did not include the savings he will get from freezing costs for the public service, which were signalled in the throne speech earlier this month.

Last week, the minister announced that last year’s deficit was $7-billion smaller than projected as a result of more effective cost-cutting.

Meeting the 2015-16 target is critical to the Harper government heading into a fall election in 2015 because it would enable the Conservatives to campaign on having fulfilled their pledge to introduce income splitting for households, but only once the budget is in balance.

The report notes that the calculations may be subject to adjustments. The office notes that it did not attempt to include the impact of the throne speech promise to freeze operating budgets going forward.

The estimates, however, do incorporate last week’s surprise announcement that the deficit in the just-completed 2012-13 fiscal year was $7-billion lower than projected at $18.9-billion. As a result, the budget office says this year’s shortfall will come in at $14.7-billion, about $4 billion lower than forecast in the government’s March budget.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, who is being briefed on the state of the economy by private sector analysts, is expected to issue his updated fiscal projections in the next few weeks.

Slower economic growth next year and lower-than-projected commodity prices are the key reasons for the tempered fiscal projections, says the budget office report.

“These developments have led PBO to revise down the outlook for the Canadian economy relative to its April (forecast),” the report says. “As a result, PBO’s outlook for nominal GDP — the broadest measure of the government’s tax base — is lower, by $25-billion annually, on average, than the projection based on an average of private sector forecasts.”

The report says the economy will likely grow 2% in 2014, not the 2.5% predicted in the March budget.

As well, Flaherty’s decision to freeze employment insurance premiums is expected to cost the treasury about $700-million over the next two years, the report states.

In its economic outlook, the budget office says it expects the unemployment rate to rise slightly and that the Bank of Canada will keep its key interest rate at 1% through the first quarter of 2015.

With a file from Bloomberg


I understand that this is "good news" and, given the media attention is focused on the Senate Scandal ® the government wants to trumpet this very loudly but I think it is a mistake to forecast a substantial surplus. It is fine to say, "We will keep our promise. We will manage your money effectively," and so on, but it is always best to keep expectations low and then crow when you do better than promised.
 
This news, which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail, is both good news and bad news for the Conservative Party of Canada:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/globe-politics-insider/by-2015-harper-will-have-shrunk-government-to-smallest-size-in-50-years/article15485546/#dashboard/follows/
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By 2015, Harper will have shrunk government to smallest size in 50 years

SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

Bill Curry
Ottawa — The Globe and Mail

Published Monday, Nov. 18 2013

By the time of the 2015 campaign, Conservatives will have shrunk the federal government to its smallest size in over 50 years.

This milestone accomplishment is buried deep in the pile of fiscal numbers released over the past few weeks. As a percentage of the economy, federal taxes are now at their lowest levels in decades.

Government spending is on a similar path and is projected to hit a record low two years from now.

Finance Canada tracks government revenue as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product, with comparable data going back as far as 1958. It is a better measure than using dollar amounts when comparing historical trends because it accounts for inflation and economic growth.

In that entire period, the most recent year is the lowest level ever recorded for government revenue at 14.1 per cent of GDP. It was 16 per cent in 2006-07, the first full year under Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Total expenses hit a record low of 14.8 per cent in 2008-09 as the recession hit. Spending spiked to 17.7 per cent of GDP the next year because of stimulus, but the recent economic update forecasts a new record low of 14.3 per cent in 2015-16.

For such a significant change in policy, it has received surprisingly little attention. For fiscal conservatives, statistical proof of record low taxes can be trumpeted as a central accomplishment.

For those who see a broader role for government in the lives of Canadians, the data could bolster arguments that Ottawa’s current tax levels are outside the historical norm and could be raised to cover new spending. It could also translate into calls for future surpluses to be spent on programs rather than tax cuts.

Raising taxes is a tough sell in politics, which means the Conservatives have slowly and steadily tied their opponents’ hands.

“It’s a very interesting story and one that I suspect a lot of people are completely unaware of,” said Brian Lee Crowley, who monitors historical spending patterns as managing director of the Macdonald Laurier Institute, a fiscally conservative think tank. He credits Liberal finance minister Paul Martin for starting a trend of more sustainable spending that the Conservatives continued until the 2008 recession temporarily knocked the trend lines off course.

“Until the recession, we were on track to actually have a smaller federal government in Ottawa than America has in Washington, which is something that’s not been seen in 50 years,” he said. “I’d like to say that we have basically a strong political consensus now. We’ve had Liberal and Conservative governments pursue these policies almost without interruption now for basically 20 years and the payoff for Canada has been huge.”

The government’s response to the 2008 recession obscured the longer term trends that were locked in before the recession hit.

There are several factors behind the lower revenue, including the Conservative government’s decision to lower the Goods and Services Tax from 7 per cent to 5 per cent, the seven-point drop in the corporate tax rate from 22 per cent to 15 per cent and lower personal income taxes.

NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair has mused about reversing the corporate tax cut. Liberals, meanwhile, were highly critical of the Conservative GST cut, but have not campaigned on raising the GST in subsequent elections.

Using Finance Canada’s year-end tables and budgets, here’s how key tax sources of tax revenue have changed between 2006-07 and 2012-13:

  • Personal income tax revenue dropped from 7.4 per cent to 6.9 per cent
  • Corporate income tax revenue dropped from 2.6 per cent to 1.9 per cent
  • Employment Insurance revenue is unchanged at 1.1 per cent
  • GST revenue went from 2.2 per cent to 1.6 per cent
  • Total revenues dropped from 16 per cent to 14.1 per cent
Labour economist Jim Stanford of Unifor said Canadians are increasingly aware that smaller government and tax cuts come with consequences, such as less generous transfers for health care.

“I think the Conservatives have signaled quite clearly they’re going to channel the surplus into more tax cuts,” he said. “In that regard, I think the next election will be a pretty fundamental choice: Do we want to pay less taxes and get less back for it, or do we want to shore up the programs that are important to our quality of life?”

Bill Curry covers finance in Ottawa.


Now those who know me will understand that this is very, very good news and, l'affaire Duffy notwithstanding, confirms, for me, that Prime Minister Harper is the right man for Canada.

Those however, who, as Mr. Curry puts it, "see a broader role for government in the lives of Canadians" will find this very bad news indeed and it will convince them to vote ABC: Anybody But Conservative.

Here's the problem for the Conservatives: their base is about 20% - that's how many will vote Conservative no matter what. (That's slightly higher than the 16% that the Progressive Conservatives earned during the 1993 rout, but it's about right for the firm base because Reform took away a slice of the conservative base that year.) The Liberals have about the same level of support - they got 18.91 in their worst ever performance in 2011 and that is higher than the solid NDP base which I guesstimate at 15%. The other 45% of voters are up for grabs ... except they aren't. Why not? To begin: 45% of Canadians will never vote Conservative, they didn't in 1958 when only 53% voted for Diefenbaker's Progressive Conservatives giving them the biggest election victory in Canadian history and that being the second last time any Canadian political party achieved an absolute majority in a federal general election (Mulroney did it last, with 50.02% in 1984; Pierre Trudeau never got more that 45.4% of the popular vote.) So the CPC has a firm base of 20% and it must compete for a share of the 35% (not 45%) which is really up for grabs. Recent experience suggests that 40% gives a safe, solid majority in a five party system. So the Tories need to keep their base and win nearly 60% of the undecided - remember that 45% will not vote for the CPC, no matter what. That undecided group - about 35% of the electorate, probably includes many, many, many people who do "see a broader role for government in the lives of Canadians." That, government works and we need more government, is part of the Laurentian consensus and, Big Shift being acknowledged, it is still a very popular view.

Conservative firm base:      20%
Liberal firm base:                20%
NDP firm base:                    15%
BQ firm base:                      <5%
Green firm base:                <5%
Undecided:                          35% 
Needed to form a majority: 40%
Share of undecided          )
needed for either            )  60% (20/35 = .571)
CPC or LPC majority        )
 
Since there are three or in Quebec four parties scrambling for that 45% of the vote, the best solution for the CPC will be to toss a few grenades and get the others to fight amongst themselves.

This works, in London North Center (my home riding), the CPC candidate in the 2011 election received the same percentage of the vote as the (much stronger) CPC candidate in the previous election. He lost to Liberal Glen Pearson, but she won because the Left vote split three ways between Pearson and the NDP and Green candidates (mostly the NDP due to the "Orange Crush"). While it is hard to imagine another "Orange Crush", the LPC will be very weak going in (small war chest and *still* no actual Liberal philosophy besides win at all costs), and I doubt the Young Dauphin will come out looking very good against the likes of Thomas Mulcair in any debate, while the PM simply needs to point to a solid economic record and ask the Young Dauphin "so, how would you have done that?". The Greens will be supercharged over oil pipelines (another good reason to make oil an election issue), and chewing on the LPC from that direction.

Prediction, more vote splitting, the CPC comes up the middle with a reduced majority and PM Harper can plan his retirement with another Liberal leader's scalp on his belt.
 
In that entire period, the most recent year is the lowest level ever recorded for government revenue at 14.1 per cent of GDP. It was 16 per cent in 2006-07, the first full year under Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Total expenses hit a record low of 14.8 per cent in 2008-09 as the recession hit. Spending spiked to 17.7 per cent of GDP the next year because of stimulus, but the recent economic update forecasts a new record low of 14.3 per cent in 2015-16.

Saying the government grew or shrunk based on % of GDP is misleading as most would assume such a statement would be in reference to absolute inflation adjusted dollars.  Harping on a "shrinking" government while leaving those figures out shows the article to be biased, deceptive and uninformative.
 
The speculation about possible cuts in CF strength is, at least for now, a political issue according to this article which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Calgary Herald:

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Cutting size of military could be on the table for Harper government

BY MURRAY BREWSTER, THE CANADIAN PRESS

NOVEMBER 19, 2013

OTTAWA - When Gen. Tom Lawson was sworn in as the country's top military commander, he was explicitly told the Harper government did not want to see the Canadian Forces reduced in size or capability in the name of saving money.

Fast forward a year, however, and the uncomfortable notion of cutting the ranks of uniform members is something the Harper government could well be grappling with next month as it reviews an updated defence strategy.

"It is always an option, but the direction has not been given to us yet," Lawson said Tuesday following a speech to the Canadian Club in Ottawa.

"You have to provide all kinds of optionality to the government when affordability is an issue."

Faced with an appropriations budget that could shrink by up to $2.5 billion by 2014, Lawson has been engaged in a tightrope act of finding the savings demanded by a deficit-minded government while still preserving the military's ability to respond to unforeseen crisis.

He was directed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper to focus his cuts on overhead and a headquarters administration described as bloated in a benchmark 2011 report.

But defence experts, as well as one of Lawson's predecessors, have been unanimous in their assessment that the fiscal targets laid out by the Conservatives cannot be met without reducing some of the 68,000 full-time and 27,000 part-time members of military — or giving up some ships, planes or tanks.

Harper's original instructions could be re-examined as it looks at an updated version of the Canada First Defence Strategy, a refreshed policy that lays out expectations for the military and what equipment it needs to do the job.

Lawson said everything he has done with his staff has been built around keeping the force at its current size.

"Certainly the government has not indicated a desire to cut numbers. We will see in this review if that is one of the things they un-pin," he said.

"Everything I will be doing with the leadership team will be looking to find these efficiencies; to ensure that we are affordable, and if we cut personnel, really to do it minimally."

But retired general Rick Hillier, a former chief of defence staff, said last month that the budget targets set out by the government could not be reached without reducing numbers in the military.

"If we do this right, we can still have an agile force, we can still have a superbly trained force and we can still have a force capable in this era of threats," Hillier told CTV in an interview.

"But it's going to be smaller, you just can't get around it."

Without reducing the size of the Forces, Hillier said the cuts will come to training and operations budgets. He estimated that a full-time force of about 50,000 could be the end result.

Cutting the number of uniformed members could be political poison for the Conservatives, who rode to election victory in 2006 promising to increase the full-time strength to 75,000 members and 35,000 reserves, figures they have never come close to during their time in office.

Retired lieutenant-general Andrew Leslie, whose report on transformation two years ago laid out a blueprint for cuts at National Defence, said the uniformed ranks can be reduced, but those cuts need to be made selectively among the rear echelon.

"If you are talking numbers that relate to operational capability — young men and women who go to sea, who fly, who support the aircraft and the army — those shouldn't be lumped (in)," Leslie said.

"I think the government direction to the Armed Forces has been clear... To quote the prime minister, 'Don't cut teeth, cut tail.'"

Leslie is now planning to run for the federal Liberals in the next election.

Early last month, the Harper government rolled out a signature initiative called defence renewal, the aim of which was to save the department $1.2 billion through a combination of reorganizations and belt-tightening — money that would be reinvested within the institution.

During the briefing senior defence acknowledged that some civilian defence employees could lose their jobs, but said it would be irresponsible to speculate on numbers.


LGen (ret'd) Leslie has some credibility on this issue; his report did recommend cutting some of the bloated C2 superstructure. Prime Minister Harper did ask for cuts to the overhead but former MND Peter MacKay, held in a magic spell by his admirals and generals, chose to ignore that guidance and Prime Minister Harper did not and does not, I think, care enough about defence to have made an issue of it. But if it looks like Andrew Leslie can do real political damage then the PM may direct Minister Nicholson to cut admirals and administrators, not troops and trucks.

 
>Saying the government grew or shrunk based on % of GDP is misleading

Proponents of spending prefer to phrase it that way because it tends to guarantee a continually increasing amount of per capita spending.  (Per capita GDP in constant dollars generally increases year-by-year.)
 
I never though I would say this, but: I agree, generally, with Ricard Gwyn (who I regard as a silly, immature, insufferable twit of the worst sort) in this article (and only this article, I hasten to add) which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from The Walrus:

http://thewalrus.ca/the-contender/
walrus_web_logo.jpg

THE CONTENDER
The appeal of Justin Trudeau’s emotional intelligence

BY RICHARD GWYN

From the July/August 2013 magazine

One of the great problems of our age is that we are governed by people who care more about feelings than they do about thoughts and ideas.
—Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady

Feelings are the only facts.
—Kanye West​

WHEN Justin Trudeau announced his candidacy for the federal Liberal leadership last October, the near-universal assumption of columnists, pollsters, backroom types, political scientists, historians, and others of that ilk was that he and the party were engaged in the political equivalent of a Hail Mary pass—in other words, an act of desperation.

The first indication that such a throw might actually get caught came four months later, in February, in a report by the Toronto survey company Forum Research. It found that support for the Liberals, with Trudeau as leader, leaped upward to 41 percent, moving the party to first place from third, behind Stephen Harper’s Conservative government and Thomas Mulcair’s New Democrats, and—the hardest to credit—putting it within reach of winning a majority in the next election.

That was a reach too far. In the best of circumstances, polls are suspect. The worst circumstances for pollsters are when no election is under way or imminent, so respondents don’t much care who they say they prefer. Anyway, polls tend to give new leaders an initial upward bounce. On becoming Canada’s first female prime minister in 1993, Kim Campbell shot way up; she then called a snap election in which she cratered.

Nonetheless, the evidence kept accumulating that something more fundamental was happening than could be explained by Trudeau’s good name and good looks alone. It dawned on observers that his campaign was being run exceptionally well, casual on the outside yet tightly controlled from within, by a cadre of as few as a half-dozen, all close to Trudeau’s age. He himself worked exceptionally hard (at forty-one, he is exceedingly fit), sometimes doing five events in a single day, the last starting as late as 10 p.m. What astonished the experts was that he made no mistakes, or only minor ones, such as calling the gun registry “a failure,” then having to be reminded afterward that a Liberal government had created the program.

By the end, his contingent of volunteers numbered 12,000 and his supporters (a new category for those not yet prepared to become dues-paying members) exceeded 160,000, while his Twitter fans grew to an astounding 215,000 (he tweets and texts almost non-stop). Just as vital for the prospects of a cash-starved party, he raised the $950,000 candidates were allowed to spend on their campaigns, and another $1 million to be held in reserve for counter-fire at Conservative attack ads.

His real accomplishment, however, was that he pulled off something seldom achieved in the sedate world of Canadian politics: he convinced many Canadians to reconsider their attitude toward federal politics, not by converting them to Liberalism (although he did a fair bit of that, mostly at the NDP’s expense), but by changing their attitude to politics itself, and—since that word is now used almost exclusively as a term of abuse—by getting them interested again in taking part in the national debate.

He may have changed the game, and the precedents for such an achievement are rare. John Diefenbaker did it in 1957–58, when he persuaded Canadians that if they replaced the “natural governing party,” the Liberals, with his Conservatives, the country might not immediately collapse. The late New Democrat leader Jack Layton did it on a smaller but vital scale in the 2011 election, when he convinced a great many Quebecers that it was time to end their two decades of clinging for safety to the pro-separatist Bloc Québécois and gamble that a federalist party, his own, could be trusted.

The precedent closest to Justin Trudeau, of course, is that of a Liberal leader with the same last name, in 1967–68. Compared with what Pierre Trudeau accomplished then, let alone throughout the rest of his career, the younger Trudeau’s record is no better than interesting but iffy. He has yet to become prime minister. He has yet to win an election. And unlike his father, who from the first stood distinctively and defiantly for a “Just Society” and “One Canada,” he has yet to tell Canadians what he wants to do for them. Yet in one respect—and this, perhaps, is a harbinger—the son has already proven he can do something his father had not, at the same age, found necessary: he can sail into a prevailing wind.

The best expression of Trudeau the Father’s appeal from days past was articulated in a wonderful letter to Maclean’s magazine by an Ottawa woman named Norma Summers, who wrote, “What could we sober, Canadian squares possibly be thinking of, wanting this strange little customer for prime minister?… The whole country needs a cold shower! I, like the rest, will vote for him anyway.” The 1968 election has gone down in the history books as “Trudeaumania,” which it was indeed: Pierre Trudeau radiated pure sexual magnetism, whereas Trudeau the Son (though he resembles a Greek god and can stir up excitement among his audiences) does not. It may be easier to entertain sexual fantasies about a charming bachelor than a happily married husband and diligent father of two.

But that transformational election was as much about “Canada-mania” as it was about Trudeaumania. The success of the stylish and witty Expo 67 in Montreal had caused many in the outside world to notice Canada for the first time. By our own joyous celebration of the centennial of Confederation, we had discovered ourselves. The nation’s mood was expansive and optimistic. Essentially, Pierre Trudeau was blown into power with the prevailing wind at his back.

No such luck for Trudeau the Son. One statistic confirms the difference the passage of time has made: today only 14 percent of Canadians say they believe their children will enjoy a better life than they did. So we are not looking for a saviour. Mostly, we are looking for a good accountant. Today our proudest national boast is that our banks are boring. Indeed, if the prevailing wind benefits anyone, it would be Stephen Harper, since conservatives are assumed to be better than progressives at managing in difficult times.

In one way, the two Trudeaus are about equal in terms of their allure to voters. Trudeau the Father benefited because he fulfilled our need not to be outdone by the Americans, who had had a charismatic leader in John F. Kennedy. Trudeau the Son could be benefiting from our discomfort that we have yet to find our own Barack Obama.

The new phase he has embarked on as he leads his party into the next election will be far harder. His clumsy comments about the Boston Marathon bombings confirmed that he has only just started up a steep learning curve. Immigration minister Jason Kenney’s comment on Trudeau’s prime ministerial qualifications—“zero executive experience, zero governing experience, and zero record of putting forward substantive ideas to address the tough issues of the day”—is a view shared by quite a few others, including some Liberals. In other words, he may well catch the long pass and then, as Kim Campbell and John Diefenbaker did before him, drop it. Still, Justin Trudeau has already done something substantial; and, like his father, he has done it his way.

IN AN EBOOK published by the Toronto Star during the Liberal leadership race, reporter Susan Delacourt came up with a deft description for the centrepiece of Trudeau’s platform: “the no-policy policy.” He had spent the five months of the campaign telling voters precious little about what he would give them in terms of policies and programs. He did toss out a few thoughts: he wants 70 percent of young Canadians to attend universities or colleges or pursue apprenticeships; he is open to foreign takeovers of Canadian companies, seeing such transactions as necessary in a globalized world; he thinks we shouldn’t tinker with the Constitution. But that’s pretty much it.

Of course, the reason he avoided specifics, in addition to the fact that he is not a policy wonk, is that with two years until the next election any ideas he makes public will be attacked if they are flawed, or copied if they are good. Yet a no-policy policy is nevertheless a policy, and quite a coherent, creative one.

Its author was not Trudeau but Gerald Butts, his principal adviser, a.k.a. the backroom guy the leader listens to. They met at McGill University in Montreal in the early ’90s and became close friends. As a former principal secretary to Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty, Butts knows a good many tricks of the political trade. He combines a first-rate intellect with the street smarts that come readily to the son of a Cape Breton coal miner.

While working for McGuinty, he developed a close relationship with Matthew Taylor, a senior aide to Tony Blair, then the British prime minister. From Taylor, Butts learned the political lesson that forms the foundation of Trudeau’s governance strategy.

Early in Blair’s first term, his government poured out a mass of ambitious, clever programs and policies, all of which got instantly bogged down. Only then did Blair and his staff realize, in Butts’ words, that “their levers of office weren’t attached to anything.” So they did an about-face. They set out to earn the trust of suspicious interest groups—in some cases creating think tanks to facilitate dialogue—before asking them to buy in to the proposed schemes. It was slow, exhausting, and at times tedious, but it worked.

As Butts puts it, “The days of governing effectively by fiat are over, and by governing effectively I mean actually making things happen out there in the country.” Gaining the trust of stakeholders before bombarding them with bright ideas is Trudeau’s answer to what the experts call “public policy futility.” This phenomenon confronts pollsters when they ask people if they want improvements to, say, health care, and get a resounding yes, only to be followed by an equally resounding no when they ask whether the government should get on with making them. Government thus becomes paralyzed, not by its own incompetence, as is widely assumed, but by a deep and entrenched public skepticism about, if not outright contempt for, government itself.

To make this dysfunction worse, the welfare state—since the end of World War II the defining contract between governed and governing—has passed its best-before date. For decades, new social programs could be implemented or existing ones expanded by passing on the costs to future generations, but we have come to the end of that road. From now on, and simply to remain solvent, welfare states will be taking more from their citizens in the form of taxes than they can provide in the form of services. Public discontent will grow, and so will public cynicism.

Reinforcing this trend is the so-called “new individualism.” In his 2000 book Bowling Alone, political scientist Robert Putnam described how collective institutions, even informal ones like family dinners, were in decline. Condos, for example, are gated communities in all but name. In one way or another, more and more people are living by themselves; inevitably, many are living more and more for themselves rather than for the larger society. All institutions, from unions to mainstream religions, are affected, but none more so than political parties. Compared with what they were in the past, our parties are tiny; Canada may have the smallest, proportionally, among all of the industrial democracies. Nor does it help that contemporary political debates focus on managerial issues rather than ideological ones; even the NDP wants to cozy up to the capitalists. Our politics, like our banks, are boring.

The new individualism has a positive aspect, inasmuch as it reflects a better-educated electorate. Not just in universities and colleges, but also from the Internet—from Google, Facebook, YouTube, blogs, and even Wikipedia—people can now learn for themselves much of what they once depended on learning from their representatives, the experts, and the media. And they can answer back, as many of Trudeau’s 221,000 Twitter followers do.

Justin Trudeau is attempting to reconnect the new individualists with the political system, offering cynics and skeptics a reason to give the system another chance. Simply put, he is trying to move Canadian politics into the twenty-first century, and the remedy he is advancing is like a mirror image of his own personality.

OF HIS FATHER’S personality, Trudeau the Son has remarked that he was “extremely strong intellectually and academically, but it left him a little short on some of the interpersonal skills, the emotional intelligence.”

Beyond the least doubt, intellectual intelligence is Justin Trudeau’s short suit. He once declared, “I don’t read newspapers. I don’t watch the news. I figure if something happens, someone will tell me.” Yes, this was back in 2001, and it was mostly a young man’s braggadocio. But his credentials to govern are indeed scanty: he put in four years as a teacher at the Vancouver school he attended; he gave instruction in snowboarding; he chaired Katimavik, the youth organization funded by his father. Even his responsibilities as a party critic in Parliament have been of the second order: post-secondary education (anyway, a provincial responsibility); amateur sport; youth, citizenship, and immigration. By the time Trudeau the Father gained the Liberal leadership, he had, as justice minister, legalized homosexual relationships and bested Quebec premier Daniel Johnson in a public debate at a federal-provincial conference.

What the younger Trudeau does possess is an abundance of emotional intelligence. Some of it came to him via life’s hard knocks: the breakup of his parents’ marriage as the entire nation watched, and the tragic death of his beloved brother Michel in an avalanche. A major share of it comes from his mother, Margaret, troubled but brave. Some part, always overlooked, he inherited from his maternal grandfather, James Sinclair, an establishment rebel and federal cabinet minister who took an uninhibited pleasure in the zaniness of politics, especially at election times.

Trudeau is exceptional at street politics, because he genuinely likes people. He in turn is impossible not to like, a carefree extrovert, forever smiling, happy to kiss babies and their mothers, happy to hug their fathers, and blessed with a keen remembrance for peoples’ names. One savvy old Ottawa hand suggests another attraction: “It’s so refreshing that he doesn’t pretend to know everything.”

Add to this another legacy from his father, which enables him to attract attention to an unusual degree: Justin Trudeau is fearless. He showed this quality when he out-boxed Senator Patrick Brazeau, a stronger and larger opponent, in a charity bout, and since then he has taken up extreme surfing. Attacks by opponents faze him not in the least; he lights up when an aide warns him that one is coming. In an actual election, he will be hard to beat, although he is quite capable of beating himself—as in the toe-curling YouTube video in which his florid rhetoric convinces a scrum of reporters (some of which may be his own young volunteers) that he can solve all of Canada’s problems just with good intentions.

His most persuasive quality in an election will be his skill as an actor, a performer, a ham. Had Bill Clinton not made the phrase his hallmark, Trudeau would probably be telling audiences, “I feel your pain.” He has the intelligence to understand that people are not moved by analysis or reasoned argument but by emotion and empathy. He has thus spotted, as many others have yet to do, a major new political trend.

At its extreme, this involves questioning the Enlightenment, and since the Enlightenment gave us the scientific method, democracy, the rule of law, and the rule of reason, it is like questioning evolution; still, it is now beginning to be done. In his influential 2008 book, The Political Mind: Why You Can’t Understand 21st-Century American Politics with an 18th-Century Brain, the cognitive linguist George Lakoff took off after reason. The brain, he pointed out, is not “a disembodied thought machine,” but rather an intrinsic part of the body. According to scientists, about 98 percent of reasoning is unconscious and reflexive. What is needed in contemporary politics (hence Lakoff’s subtitle) is a new Enlightenment that adds emotion and empathy to reason. The best expression of this view—that because of the Internet the twenty-first century differs radically from previous ones—was offered by the rapper Kanye West on Twitter in September 2012. “Feelings,” he said, “are the only facts.”

He was on to something. Some of the world’s best and brightest, its bankers and financiers, almost brought about a global depression in 2008, whereas the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street movements have managed to mobilize huge numbers of people with calls to action that are largely emotional. With no money or organization, comedian Beppe Grillo won the support of a quarter of the Italian electorate just by saying that what ailed the country was not debt but neck-deep corruption. Even Pierre Trudeau might say today not “reason over passion” but “reason and passion.”

This kind of comment comes as naturally to Trudeau the Son as his no-policy policy. Transforming it into practical politics is quite another matter. Butts talks about the need for “a structure in which all citizens can connect directly and easily [to government] if they want to,” which sounds like a sort of permanent genteel revolution, excruciatingly difficult to sustain. Trudeau offers generalities: “The Liberals must trust Canadians”; “Canadians want to again be nation builders”; “Young people are looking for something they can believe in.” So, yes, he could very well drop the ball. To compound his challenge, the three biggest issues that concern Canadians these days are economics, economics, and economics. There, he presents no serious threat to Harper.

Yet it is possible to see how Justin Trudeau could join the trio of leaders—John Diefenbaker, Pierre Trudeau, and Jack Layton—who in different ways made the country different. By virtue of his personality and, as can never be underestimated, his name, he has helped revive the underlying sense, now part of Canada’s DNA, that there is more to the country than balancing the budget and trimming the fat, or that there should be and so can be again. His is the kind of fearlessness it took, more than a century back, to build a transcontinental railway and, more than a quarter-century back, to enact a charter of rights and freedoms. The ball may yet slip out of his hands, but it is still in play.


I think Mr Gwyn, a deeply embedded Liberal insider, has it about right. The Liberals will run on M. Trudeau's emotional intelligence which allows him to parlay his undoubted charisma and genuine "niceness" into popular support for his non-policies.

It might just work in 2015.
 
IOW, Trudeau is more like his mother than his father.  Strong recommendation, that.

No wonder there has been discussion lately about empowering caucus to "retire" PMs.  Undoubtedly the LPC would like to ride Trudeau to election and then put him out to pasture as soon as decency allows.
 
Brad Sallows said:
IOW, Trudeau is more like his mother than his father.  Strong recommendation, that.

Or, as my wife, a lifelong French-Canadian Liberal put it:  Justin inherited his mother's looks and her brains. 
 
Brad Sallows said:
No wonder there has been discussion lately about empowering caucus to "retire" PMs.  Undoubtedly the LPC would like to ride Trudeau to election and then put him out to pasture as soon as decency allows.

"A Very Canadian Coup"?

But has a sitting Canadian party leader every actually been forced out by their own party, like Margaret Thatcher was in 1990? (Joe Clark actually called the leadership convention that led to his ouster, hoping for a solid mandate that he didn't get.) Isn't more the style of our party leaders  just to resign in shame once they've worn out their welcome?

I see a few scenarios for the next election:

- Harper scrapes out a win (minority or majority), and calls it a day. States that being elected PM 4 times in a row is good enough. Conservative leadership convention in 2016, and the new leader has three years to establish him/herself.
- Trudeau wins a minority. Conservative leadership convention in 2016, and the new leader gets to watch the inexperienced PM and cabinet run the country with a minority -- when the Liberals appear weak, force an election through the magic of minority parliaments.
- Trudeau wins a majority. Conservative leadership convention in 2016, and they watch to see if Trudeau actually can run the country. If yes, then you're looking at a couple terms of Conservative opposition. If no, then he will be one and done and you'll have a Conservative PM in 2019.

All of these scenarios are bad news for the Liberal Party unless two things happen -- can Justin Trudeau win a majority in 2015 AND does he have the intellect and experience to run a majority government without massively screwing up. I think the odds of both of those things happening simultaneously are pretty slim. But the possibility is there.
 
Ostrozac said:
...can Justin Trudeau win a majority in 2015...

This is the elephant in the room for the Liberals. Anything less than a majority will be seen as a failure to meet expectations, and the Liberal party has more than shown us how well they tolerate leaders who fail.
 
In this column, which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Toronto Sun, Maddie Di Muccio takes a look at how politics in ON and QC might impact the Conservatives in the 2015:

http://www.torontosun.com/2014/01/04/election-mania
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Election mania!
Ontario, Quebec votes could impact Harper Tories

Maddie Di Muccio

FIRST POSTED: SATURDAY, JANUARY 04, 2014

Two provincial elections expected in the spring could have huge repercussions for the federal Conservatives.

Just as Ground Hog Day is a sign that spring is coming, photos of Premier Kathleen Wynne showing up at the doors of Toronto homeowners with baskets of food indicates Ontarians will soon be heading to the polls.

Apparently even Wynne believes her Liberal minority government is destined to fall with her next budget in the spring.

But opinion polls suggest an Ontario election won’t change much.

The Liberal bastions of Toronto, Peel and York regions appear to be safe — which signals another minority government for Wynne.

If he isn’t able to score a breakthrough in the 905 and 416, Tim Hudak’s days as leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservative party will be numbered.

And with no heir apparent in the PC caucus, loyalists will be looking to Stephen Harper’s cabinet ranks for a white knight to rescue them.

If Hudak loses the next election, the most likely to receive calls from their Toronto-based brethren would be two former members of the Mike Harris cabinet: John Baird and Tony Clement.

Whether either would leave his plum Ottawa cabinet post to toil as the leader of the opposition in Ontario remains to be seen.

Certainly both men would feel some sense of obligation to at least consider the move for the sake of improving the fortunes of Canada’s largest province, which has been left listless under the Ontario Liberals.

However at a time when Harper’s own popularity is sagging, a loss of two of his most senior ministers would be a significant blow to the bench strength of his cabinet.

While Ontario’s election could bring unwelcome news to the prime minister, there is an opportunity for the federal Conservatives if Quebec voters head to the provincial polls.

Like Ontario, Quebec has a minority government and a moribund economy.

It’s expected the Parti Quebecois government, led by Pauline Marios, will also lose their next budget vote — triggering an election.

Which means the opposition Quebec Liberals will have a distinct advantage if the upcoming campaign focuses on Marois’ poor economic track record.

Marois has been trying to deflect attention away from economic issues by promoting her so-called Charter of Quebec Values.

She would prohibit public sector workers from wearing items that express their religious faith. Religious groups — Christians, Muslims, Sikhs, Jews — are united against this measure.

Quebeckers are split almost 50/50 on the issue but this benefits the PQ.

The segments of the population that most support the religious prohibitions reside outside of Montreal — in the ridings the PQ needs to win to retain power.

Quebec is largely a political wasteland for the Harper Conservatives; but Harper knows the province is critical to the federal Liberals if leader Justin Trudeau is to have any hope of moving his part out of third place.

Both Trudeau and NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair represent ridings in Montreal. Both have spoken out against the Quebec Charter.

In a province where local issues routinely spill over into federal campaigns, the Quebec Charter issue could leave Trudeau’s and Mulcair’s support confined to Montreal-area ridings.

That could mean a big opportunity for the Bloc Quebecois in the next federal election in rural Quebec.

In a multi-party parliament where the enemy of my enemy is my friend, a BQ resurgence would suit the federal Conservatives’ re-election bid nicely.

Harper would like nothing better than to see Mulcair lose a number of seats in Quebec.

But if the Conservatives can’t win those seats, then the odd BQ win would be better than to see Trudeau and the Liberals take them.

Indeed, what could be more valuable to Harper than to see three federal opposition parties evenly split Quebec among themselves, a result that would increase the likelihood of another Conservative majority government?


I'm not so sure that I agreed that a Liberal win is ON is bad news for Prime Minister Harper. Historically federal Conservatives have fared well when the Liberals own Queen's Park and the federal Liberals do better when the ON PCs are in power in Toronto. It's not a perfect "track" but it is generally true.

As to losing one or two ministers, even strong ones: that isn't so bad, either ~ it makes room for rising stars like Chris Alexander.

I agree with Ms Di Muccio that the CPC would be happy to see the BQ take seats away from the NDP and, thereby, deny them to the Liberals.
 
Jeffrey Simpson laments, as a charter member of the Laurentian Elites would, the rise of "small ball" politics - a form in which he suggests the NDP has now joined the CPC, certainly after considerable polling and focus groups and so on, in this column which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-debate/the-rise-of-small-ball-politics/article16566918/#dashboard/follows/
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The rise of ‘small ball’ politics

JEFFREY SIMPSON
The Globe and Mail

Published Wednesday, Jan. 29 2014

We have entered an era of “small ball” politics, in which vision is banned and large social projects are out of reach, replaced instead with a relentless focus on the costs of everyday activities.

The Harper Conservatives have practised “small ball” politics for years, concentrating on targeted promises to help people cope with the cost of living. And now, imitation being the sincerest form of flattery, the New Democrats, the country’s Official Opposition, are following suit.

Across the country, the NDP has launched what it calls an “affordability campaign,” a campaign not about the large issues of tax policy or spending, let alone the redistribution of income and grappling with inequality, but “beating the debt trap.”

In the NDP’s grand scheme, the party proposes (without outlining just how) to cap ATM fees at 50 cents, reduce overdue credit-card payments to 5 per cent over prime, bring down gas prices by stopping “illegal price collusion among oil companies,” prevent companies from penalizing consumers who pay their bills by mail, crack down on payday-loan companies, and so forth.

Was it for this that so many progressives created the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation? And was it for this that T.C. Douglas left Saskatchewan to lead the New Democratic Party. Is this what it has come to: a leftish populist imitation of the Conservatives slicing and dicing the electorate into little chunks and feeding each small bits of relief?

When the NDP plays this kind of politics, it assists the Conservatives, for it is they who insist that taxpayers need relief from the high cost of living. And which entity in Canada takes the most from taxpayers? Not banks or oil companies. Not payday-loan companies. But government, which is as it should be, since government provides services for all citizens.

It is the Conservatives who pose as the party most interested in protecting taxpayers from government. This positioning is often just that, a pose, witness to which is the way the Conservatives spend taxpayers’ dollars on advertising or spread money around the country. Nonetheless, this approach impresses many voters, since perception is often more powerful than reality in politics.

If politics is all about describing voters as beleaguered and focused only on their pocketbooks, without any concerns about the wider, collective public interest, then the Conservatives have essentially won the political debate. Or rather, they have framed the debate in such a way that the other parties must pitch their message within the Conservatives’ frame.

Put another way, while Conservatives beat up on the Big Telcos for what they claim are excessive wireless rates and rap banks for high fees, the NDP criticizes oil companies for (unproven) collusion and the same banks for ATM fees. Both parties are playing in the same political sandbox, addressing in only slightly different ways concerns about the daily cost of living, which the NDP in its current populist mode believes is politically imperative, even in an age of record-low inflation. The Ontario provincial NDP now approaches politics in the same way, offering a shopping list of promises to protect consumers.

As for the “debt trap” that the NDP defines, it has almost nothing to do with the items central to its “affordability campaign,” but rather revolves around rising house prices, stagnant incomes, people on low incomes, rock-bottom interest rates that encourage borrowing and a fragile job market, among other factors.

Obviously, the NDP test-marketed this “affordability campaign” with the usual pre-campaign marketing techniques of focus groups and the like. It might well be that since the Conservatives and NDP have both decided that only “small ball” politics works (where the federal Liberals stand on many issues remains a mystery) we should now settle in for a prolonged bidding war between parties as to which can offer more protection against the assailants of the middle-class.

And there seems, judging by these two parties’ assessment of the electorate’s anxieties, little appetite to address issues of longer-term importance, such as the aging of the population for which the country is ill-prepared, the inadequacies of the health-care system that yet another report from the Health Council of Canada has underscored, the distressing amount of poverty, and anything else that might appeal to a sense of wider, collective interest.


I recommend reading Shopping for Votes by Canadian journalist Susan Delacourt in which she explains why and how the CPC and now the NDP "slice and dice" the Canadian electorate in order to focus their campaign promises (and subsequent policies) where they will do the most partisan political good.

As Mr Simpson points out, the Liberals cannot join the CPC and NDP in this "small ball" game because they don't have any balls policies to throw out towards Canadians, except for blowing marijuana smoke at us.
 
I could do without grand schemes that never actually accomplish anything but deceive voters.

Liberal red book promise to abolish the GST - ignored as soon as they got elected, result nothing
Conservative promise to reduce the GST - acted on in stages as conditions permitted, result GST lowered by 2% from 7% to 5%.
 
And there seems, judging by these two parties’ assessment of the electorate’s anxieties, little appetite to address issues of longer-term importance, such as the aging of the population for which the country is ill-prepared, the inadequacies of the health-care system that yet another report from the Health Council of Canada has underscored, the distressing amount of poverty,

In the spirit of Jonathan Swift I suggest that Mr. Simpson's problems will solve themselves.  A poor healthcare system will result in fewer elderly.  Fewer elderly will both reduce health costs and poverty.  I perceive no reason for concern.  >:D
 
In this video, which is 90% about foreign affairs, John Ibbitson gives, I think, a good overview of the 2015 Election at 1:09:30 to 1:17:50. "They must, must win in the 905," he says, and I agree.
 
 
According to this article, which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail, Elections Canada has "mapped' the redistributed ridings against the 2011 poll-by-poll results to show how the parties would fare if we all vote the same way in 2015:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/tories-will-benefit-big-from-2015s-new-electoral-map-elections-canada-data-shows/article16630731/#dashboard/follows/
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Tories stand to benefit from 2015’s new electoral map, Elections Canada data show

CHRIS HANNAY
Ottawa — The Globe and Mail

Published Friday, Jan. 31 2014

If everyone who voted in the 2011 election cast their ballots for the same political parties in 2015, the Conservatives would pick up 22 of the 30 seats that are being added in a riding redistribution, Elections Canada calculations show.

Those calculations indicate that, no matter how the parties are doing in the polls, Prime Minister Stephen Harper may be starting the next campaign with an electoral advantage. The Official Opposition NDP would pick up six ridings and the Liberals two.

The House of Commons is growing to 338 seats for the next election, scheduled for Oct. 19, 2015, based on the redistribution of seats that happens every 10 years after a census. Most of those new seats are in rapidly growing urban and suburban areas in British Columbia, Alberta and the Greater Toronto Area.

Only 44 of the 338 ridings are unchanged from 2011. Voters can check their address on this website to see what riding they are in for the next election. The redrawing of ridings was done by independent commissions in each province.

Elections Canada broke down the results of the 2011 election by polling division – the individual neighbourhoods that have their own polling stations – and mapped those results on to the new ridings. In a small number of cases where a polling division would straddle a riding line, the agency broke down the polling division data into individual addresses.

Darrell Bricker, CEO of Ipsos Public Affairs, warns that past vote isn’t always a perfect predictor for the future.

Conservatives have been trailing the Liberals in the polls, but as suburban populations boom across Canada – and with those groups more likely to vote for the Conservatives – the party is presented with a favourable map heading into the next election.

“This shows potential. The question is whether the Conservatives can realize their potential,” Mr. Bricker said in an interview.

Election Canada’s transposition of votes shows that, in the 338-seat electoral map, the Conservatives would have won 10 of Ontario’s new ridings, or 83 out of a total of 121. The Liberals would have picked up three of the new seats and the NDP would have picked up two.

The New Democrats would have won two seats in Saskatchewan, one in Regina and one in Saskatoon, while losing by only a hair in a rural riding in the north of the province. Saskatchewan’s new electoral map drew ire from many Tories, as the new districts are separated into urban and rural ridings. The province’s current ridings encompass both urban and rural areas and are typically won by Conservatives. Long-time Liberal MP Ralph Goodale would retain his seat in the new map.

NDP House Leader Nathan Cullen said Friday he felt confident about the party’s chances in the Prairies. “The obvious [opportunities] are in places like Saskatchewan, where they won’t have these pizza-pie, gerrymandered seats.... Into Alberta, we believe there’s some incredibly strong opportunities for us, and certainly into British Columbia."

In Alberta, the Conservatives would have picked up all of the new seats, while the NDP would have held on to their Edmonton seat to prevent a clean sweep of the province by the Tories.

In British Columbia, which gains six seats in the new map, the NDP would lose one of their 12 seats and the Conservatives would pick up seven.

In total, if the 2011 election had happened under the new electoral map, the Conservatives would have 188 seats, compared with 109 for the NDP and 36 for the Liberals. The Bloc Québécois would have kept the four seats they won and Green Party Leader Elizabeth May would have kept hers in B.C.

Conservative spokesman Cory Hann said in a statement that the party will be presenting the “strong, stable leadership of Prime Minister Stephen Harper” in 2015.

Mr. Cullen said the NDP were already preparing for the next election. “We’re bringing in the best from across Canada and the United States, borrowing from some of [President Barack] Obama’s team,” he said, later adding: “They’ve been with us for a while now and we're picking up and using a lot of their best tactics.”


Now, if, and it is a huge IF, we all vote in 2015 as we did in 2011 then Elections Canada suggests we would have another solid (188 seat) Conservative majority. I doubt it.

Back in August of 2011, just a few months after the last general election and long before the Senate Scandal I predicted this:

Conservatives – 163 seats
Liberals –            60 seats
NDP –                60 seats
BQ (revived) –    20 seats
New QC Party –  20 seats
Greens –              5 seats
TOTAL              328 seats  (ten seats are "up for grabs")

I'll still stick with something like that. I'm still guessing that there may be two QC nationalist parties ... one centre left and one well left of centre. I think the NDP will see their seat count fall to nearly half of what they won in 2011 and I cannot imagine the Liberals doing anything less than 100% better than they did in the last election.

The CPC will, I think, lose a dozen or more of their current seats and pick up 20 to 25 of the new ones for a net gain of 5 to 10 seats, giving them a slim (slimmer than now) majority.
 
I wonder if the Americanization (Obama-ization?) of the NDP is a plus or a minus in the calculus?

Will the NDP attack the CPC for Americanizing Canadian politics?  How about the Liberals?
 
I've voted in every election since I was able and I'm 60 now. I have voted nothing but Conservative.

I'm disappointed on how they are handling the firearms file.

I'm infuriated how they are treating veterans.

I will be voting again this time. However, my ballot will be a write in for Libertarian, Rhino or 'None of the above'. Depending how I feel that day.

They have a little over a year to sort themselves out and get me back on board.

I'm not holding my breath on this last option.
 
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