"What had happened to Conservatism, it now seems clear, was that the partys conscious efforts to establish itself as an omnibus party on the North American model had failed. Mackenzie King had been successful in moulding the Liberals into a model party of consensus
. To oppose King, imitate him. Tweedledum and Tweedledee must be made as similar as possible."
J.L. Granatstein, The Politics of Survival: The Conservative Party of Canada, 1939-1945.
Events of the past few months have eerily echoed those of more than half a century ago. In the years surrounding World War II, Canadas Conservative party was in desperate straits. Following the 1935 electoral defeat of R.B. Bennett the most hated prime minister in recent memory the party scrambled to find a new leader. Over the next dozen years, it tried out no fewer than four successors, none of whom managed to make a dent in the Liberals dominance in Ottawa.
The choice of John Bracken in 1942, however, was a signal moment for the party. Bracken was the former Progressive party premier of Manitoba, and accepted the Conservatives offer on two conditions: (a) they adopt his old partys name; and (b) they commit themselves to his old partys broadly left-wing, populist vision of social welfare. Hence was born the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, a new amalgam of Red Toryism and electoral opportunism.
Meanwhile, the federal Liberals were midway through their lengthy reign in power. With the exception of a brief blip in 1925 and Bennetts 1930 to 1935 administration, the Liberals governed Canada continually from 1921 to 1957, most of it under Mackenzie King. They emerged from the Second World War seemingly invincible, with King buoyed by the back-to-back victories of 1940 and 1945. In 1948, however, at age 73, King decided it was time to go and handed over power to his successor. Louis St. Laurent himself no spring chicken at 66 had served under King and, in effect, extended his old bosss policies and practices for another nine years.
Finally, there were provinces and cities. Between them, provincial and municipal governments had borne the brunt of the 1930s economic depression, responsible for the actual delivery of unemployment relief payments and for controlling the frequent riots that threatened order in the streets. They had done so with little or no active assistance from either Bennett or King, and had hopes that the brave new world of post-war Canada would mark a significant change in this respect. They were to be disappointed.
Fast forward
.
The Progressive Conservative party, having run through four leaders unsuccessfully since the departure of Brian Mulroney the most hated prime minister, etc. has once again thrown in its lot with a populist movement from the West, albeit a right wing one this time. A new name well, sort of has emerged, with members of the PCs and Alliance opting by more than 90 per cent apiece to relaunch the Conservative Party of Canada.
Will this work any more than the previous merger did? The two partners to the deal hope so, obviously, and are busy talking of how a "united right" will be able to oust the Liberals. The numbers are against them, however. Together, the PCs and Alliance won just 78 seats in the last election, compared to the Liberals 172. Of course, as proponents of the merger argue, a united force might well rob from the Liberals seats theyd won only by narrow margins last time, notably in Ontario. But combined popular support for the two right-wing parties in 2000 was just 34.7 per cent, significantly lower than the Liberals election-winning 41.3 per cent. And the new party cannot assume to carry even all its present support with it, if the reactions of David Orchard, Scott Brison and Joe Clark are any indication. (To see just how far the new "united" right is divided, take a look at www.freedominion.ca.)
More than the numbers, however, there remains the problem of image. This is hardly a love match, after all; its more like a grumpy old marriage. On some key essentials Quebec, gay rights, social welfare, etc. the two parties remain as far apart as they did at the time of their original split back in the late 1980s. And for all the "national opposition" talk, the new creation is unlikely to woo any seats in Quebec, and if led by either Stephen Harper or Peter MacKay probably precious few in Ontario as well. As such, supporters should not count on an ousting of Paul Martin in 2004.
Martin has now taken over as prime minister, after a Sinatra-length farewell by Jean Chretien. Already the former finance minister has been tub-thumping about how much is going to change, but dont hold your breath. Continuity is much more likely to characterize the new Martin era.
Why? First, for all their personal differences he and Chretien rarely clashed on policy over the past decade, and while Martin swept the cabinet clean of his predecessors cronies, theres no evidence of any radically different thinkers waiting in the wings. Second, rule one of politics: dont fix what aint broke. Because of not despite the recent opposition merger, Martin knows he only has to maintain current levels of Liberal support to win the election. As such, theres no real percentage in launching a dramatic shift in policy.
Which brings us finally to the new Council of Federation. This new initiative, launched by the provincial premiers to present a united front to the federal government, might look good in principle, but is unlikely to deliver much. As Ralph Klein has noted, any success ultimately depends on Ottawas response. And while Martin may well have signalled his intent to address provincial and municipal concerns, if that means an outflow of federal dollars hell probably follow Chretiens example once again. Expect more delays until provincial unity collapses, as it always does eventually.
New party, new prime minister, new initiative... been there, seen it, done it. |