• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

PM Harper; why he won...

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    PM Harper; why he won...

    Here’s why Stephen Harper really won
    Margaret Wente, From Thursday's Globe and Mail, Published Thursday, May. 05, 2011 2:00AM EDT

    Thanks to the central Canadian punditocracy, I now know why the Conservatives won an overwhelming election victory, and why the Liberals were pulverized. It was those nasty attack ads on TV.

    So powerful were they that they persuaded millions of gullible voters to rise up against Michael Ignatieff and vote for someone else. Mr. Ignatieff himself blames them for his demise. Fellow Liberals think their leader was just too darn high-minded to strike back. “This is a blood sport,” griped Jim Karygiannis, one of the last Liberal MPs standing. “There is no Mr. Nice in this business.”

    Liberal-minded opinion-mongers have been twisting themselves into pretzels to explain Stephen Harper’s completely unexpected whopping victory. They’re obsessed with the attack ads. Besides, they say, the Conservatives just got lucky. They reaped a windfall from the collapse of the Bloc Québécois and unexpected vote splits. Another reason is that Mr. Harper successfully appealed to “voter fatigue,” “fear” and an uninformed electorate that’s sadly oblivious to the destruction of democracy in Ottawa.

    Anyway, they argue, it really wasn’t such a victory after all. Mr. Harper, they say, failed to broaden his base (even though he conquered Fortress Toronto, where he’d always been shut out), and won only 40 per cent of the popular vote (just like Jean Chrétien and Bill Davis). One commentator compared his win to George W. Bush’s “stolen” election of 2000.

    If you want to understand why Mr. Harper loathes the mainstream media, look no further. But if you want to understand why he won, you’ll have to look elsewhere. One problem is that the media demonize the very qualities that have made him a success. They hate him for his micro-managing, control-freak ways. But those same qualities have been crucial to his success. Without them, he’d never have survived five years in the bear pit of minority government.

    In fact, the Conservatives won because they did the sorts of things the Liberals used to do. They built broad coalitions among disparate groups. Take the so-called ethnic vote. When the Liberals courted new Canadians, it was smart. When the Conservatives do it, it’s sleazy. During the campaign, the CBC assembled countless panels of ethnic people to express their disgust at this condescending and divisive tactic. Amazingly, however, ethnic voters seemed glad to have important cabinet ministers show up in their ridings. They liked the focus on stability and a strong economy. Besides, the Liberals hadn’t been around for years.

    The Conservatives’ years of efforts paid off spectacularly. To get results like that, you need a long-term strategy, passion, and someone willing to drink 15,000 cups of tea. The Liberals no longer have any of those things.

    The Conservatives profited from vote splits. But they were also able to get out the vote where it mattered. They were focused and had ground troops who worked hard. For this, they’re being accused of running a soulless and technocratic campaign. (When Liberals ran things this way, they were called “professional.”)

    As for those attack ads, it was Jack Layton, not Stephen Harper, who dealt the crucial blow when he brought up Mr. Ignatieff’s miserable attendance record in Parliament during the leaders debates. “If you are going to apply for a promotion, you at least ought to show up for the job,” he cracked. It stuck. Iggy never recovered.

    Plenty of Harper critics think that Monday was a sad day for democracy. Personally, I think it was a great day for Canada. The Bloc, which squatted in Ottawa like a toad for 20 years, is gone. Mr. Harper has forged a historic new alliance between the West and Ontario, and he didn’t need Quebec to win. Quebeckers’ mass infatuation with the NDP may not last longer than snow in April, but their ability to hold federal governments to ransom may be gone for good.

    For the next four years, Canadians will enjoy a blissful reprieve from non-stop political theatrics and dysfunctional minorities. They will have a clear choice of competing political philosophies. Critics warn that our politics will become polarized between left and right. But if Mr. Harper aims to turn the Conservatives into the Natural Governing Party, he’ll have to govern as a moderate. That’s bad news for armies of political experts, CBC panellists, Margaret Atwood and the Toronto Star. I almost feel sorry for them.

    #2
    Truly, the Conservative donations and base... have been the driving force to WHY Canada has a Majority Conservative government for the next 4 years:

    Last 4 Quarters (L4Q)donations:
    $17,420,369 Conservatives
    $6,601,244 Liberals
    $4,358,728 NDP
    $1,292,137 Green
    $642,549 Bloc


    Number of personal contributions L4Q:
    145,410 Conservatives
    69,055 Liberals
    52,208 NDP
    13,583 Green
    6,807 Bloc


    1. In 2011 Q1, supporters of the Conservative Party contributed more money to the party than they had in any quarter since the Accountability Act came into effect at the beginning of 2007. Their contributions in 2011 Q1 surpassed their contributions in 2008 Q3, the previous record quarter, by 16%.



    2. In 2011 Q1, supporters of the Conservative Party contributed more money than the supporters of the four opposition parties combined. This has been true in 16 of the 17 quarters since the Accountability Act came into effect at the beginning of 2007. The only exception was 2009 Q2 when the Liberals held their “leadership” convention and the bulk of the registration fees for the convention were counted as contributions.



    3. In 2011 Q1, supporters of the Conservative Party contributed 2.8 times as much money as the supporters of the Liberal Party, 3.8 times as much money as the supporters of the NDP, 18 times as much money as the supporters of the Green Party and 38 times as much money as the supporters of the Bloc Quebecois.



    4. In the four quarters ending 2011 Q1, supporters of the Conservative Party contributed 20% more money to the party than they had in the four quarters to 2010 Q1.



    5. In the four quarters ending 2011 Q1, supporters of the Conservative Party contributed more money than the supporters of the four opposition parties combined. This has been true for all 17 four quarter periods since the end of 2007.



    6. In the four quarters ending 2011 Q1, supporters of the Conservative Party contributed 2.7 times as much money as the supporters of the Liberal Party, 3.9 times as much money as the supporters of the NDP, 14 times as much money as the supporters of the Green Party and 29 times as much money as the supporters of the Bloc Quebecois.


    THE elections Canada rules:
    Corporations can NOT donate to any political party in our CDN federal system. ONLY personal donations: Credit card or cheque ONLY (NO CASH over $20) $1100/person per year maximum allowed to the federal party and $1100/year to the local electorial district association.

    Since the 2007 Elections Canada changes; Canada has a very different democracy. Hard work and a broad network of people... win Federal elections in Canada.

    In my opinion... this is truly a good thing; one positive change the Liberals helped bring to our Canadian federal democracy, implemented by the Conservatives... and truly why Canada is the best democracy in the WORLD!

    God Bless Canada!!!

    Comment


      #3
      Margaret Wente's piece says it well. Seemingly, few in the media can bring themselves to realize that Harper and the CPC actually won on merit.

      Sure, their record shows lots of flaws, but overall, Harper's decisive leadership style was the reason the election went the way it did.

      Comment


        #4
        So if money buys results TOM how come you couldn't get elected to the CWB? pockets not deep enough?

        Comment


          #5
          Soon it wont matter who gets elected in the CWB kangaroo elections because we will have our freeeeeeeeeedom.

          Comment


            #6
            I love it Tom you can't argue facts, and the proof is in the money! And in the voice of an 85 year old new Canadian Gramma who determinedly walked herself to the ballot box and without any prompting from her family changed the way she voted last time, then advised her family overseas: "I watched the debate and he was the only one worthy of my vote!"

            Comment


              #7
              Grassfarmer,

              Teams win elections... money most often shows commitment... especially when many folks are involved that build relationships and a community spirit.

              I have learned much over the past 15 years.

              Comment


                #8
                Teams work. Calling. Pushing wheel chairs. Organizing. Working at the polls. Posting. Reminding. And doing it for ALL voters, no matter the political bent.

                Comment

                • Reply to this Thread
                • Return to Topic List
                Working...