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the next election

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    the next election

    Weekly Note to Supporters of the Citizens Centre
    from Link Byfield

    February 23, 2004

    TITLE: The West should prepare for an attack in the next federal election.

    Amid the swirling political dust and wreckage of the past two weeks, all that can be seen clearly is this. To hold power, the Liberals need time to formulate an attack on the West. Whether they can do this under a leader as inept as Paul Martin is hard to say, but I wouldn't rule it out.

    For a long time now, Martin has reminded me of John Turner. All through the 1970s and early 1980s, as Pierre Trudeau grew more tiresome and more hated, Liberals kept telling us about this miracle man Turner they had in reserve. He would revitalize and refashion the party. He was a policy genius, a brilliant Toronto corporate lawyer, the last finance minister to balance a budget, and a new man for new times.

    Turner just had to go on breathing while the magic of media suggestion and public frustration did the rest. And then the unimaginable happened. Turner became leader and turned out to be an overrated dud--indecisive, ill advised, nervous, unaware, rudderless. He was the exact opposite of everything we'd been told for ten years. With public expectations dashed, the Liberals were annihilated in an election 10 weeks later.

    Paul Martin looks like a John Turner replay.

    Take for instance the current sponsorship scandal. Martin had three months to figure out how bad it was and whom to blame.

    As soon as the auditor-general released her report, Martin should have fired at least six senior people--politicians, bureaucrats, corporate chiefs, advertising agencies--it hardly matters who. Voters would then think he's serious about cleansing his notoriously corrupt party. Anything short of a small slaughter leaves people thinking Martin is either clueless or compromised, afraid of what his internal enemies might reveal about him.

    Martin seems to think that as long as he sounds tough and resolute, that's good enough. It isn't. The only question now is whether some Liberal cabal, headed perhaps by the likes of Maurice Strong, can get him gagged and under control before he wrecks everything.

    All of this bodes well for the reunited Conservatives, who in one month have come within striking distance in the polls.

    However, they had better not count too many unhatched chickens just yet.

    When they pick a leader next month, they should avoid Ontario political flea-weight Belinda Stronach, and Ontario federal neophyte Tony Clement. Martin has turned out to be neither shrewd on policy nor tough politically. The Tories must pick a leader who is both, and Steve Harper is the only candidate who qualifies.

    If he wins, however, he would still carry one huge disadvantage into an election, namely that he is from the West. As we saw with Stockwell Day and Preston Manning (both of whom in hindsight are political geniuses compared to Paul Martin), the eastern electorate can be whipped into mindless loathing of conservative western leaders. The Liberals start the hysteria, the eastern media feed it, and eastern voters respond to it.

    The Liberals would certainly try the same process on Harper, though this time they might be less successful. Harper cannot be tarred as a (shudder) Christian fundamentalist, and he would head an eastern party, not a western one.

    All the same, there is an open, unreasoned prejudice in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic against western leadership and ideas.

    I think the Liberals may delay the election till next fall while they concoct some sort of anti-western, anti-oil industry, pro-Kyoto, carbon-tax program. The pitch will be to save mother earth while siphoning even more money out of greedy Alberta. This tried-and-tested election strategy was best articulated long ago by senator Keith Davey as, "Screw the West, we'll take the rest."

    Martin may not be the sharpest knife in the drawer, but Liberals are undisputed masters of divide-and-rule strategies and tactics.

    The western provinces, especially Alberta, had better brace for an attack. The Liberal mood is getting ugly.

    - Link Byfield

    Link Byfield is chairman of the Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy

    Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy
    Suite 203, 10441 - 178 Street
    Edmonton, AB T5S 1R5
    Phone: 780-481-7844
    Toll Free: 1-866-666-6768
    Fax: 780-481-9983
    contact@citizenscentre.com

    www.citizenscentre.com
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