Harper Keystone XL And Health Care: PM's Tactic Is To Get In Front On Hot Issues

CP    
First Posted: 01/19/12 06:01 PM ET Updated: 01/20/12 07:57 AM ET

OTTAWA - Building a storyline that sticks helped the Conservatives sink two successive Liberal leaders and they are using the same strategy early in 2012 on a pair of major policy debates facing Canadians.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper's team has attempted to leap out in front of its opponents and shape the narrative on the hot-button issues of health-care funding and oil pipeline construction.

When Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver came out guns blazing' over "environmental and other radical groups" and foreign interests who he said were trying to hijack the domestic debate, discussion immediately shifted away from the very concerns environmental groups have been voicing.

Critics and stakeholders were left struggling to poke holes in the government's logic — the involvement of Chinese interests in the process, for example) — rather than leading the debate themselves.

Jim Armour, a vice-president at Ottawa public relations firm Summa and a former communications director for Harper, says the government cannily played a Canadian sovereignty card.

"I think by making this about foreign interests, U.S. money, not allowing ourselves to be held hostage by the U.S, the government's been very smart and been able not only to take advantage of an opportunity, but also take advantage of something Canadians are thinking anyway," Armour said.

On the issue of federal health-care funding for the provinces, Harper caught the premiers flat-footed. Without warning or consultation, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty announced a new formula for health transfers into the future. Then, Harper really put the premiers on defence as he rejected their baleful, unco-ordinated pleas for additional funds.

As they began a first ministers' meeting this week, they were left reacting to Harper rather than setting the agenda for the debate themselves.

"I think it was incredibly well handled. The federal government and Minister Flaherty pretty well took health care off the agenda before any of the health stakeholders or even the provinces got to the table," said Armour.

"If it was a bar fight, it was all over before anyone got their coat off."

Ottawa lobbyist Geoff Norquay, who also once worked for Harper, agrees.

"(It) completely sidestepped everybody's expected narrative, and everybody's expectations as to how this particular issue would play out, and over many years," said Norquay, noting Harper put the division of provincial-federal powers front and centre in the discussion.

The communications strategy bears some similarity to how the Conservatives handled the more strictly political issue of how to critically maim their opposition opponents.

Former Liberal leader Stephane Dion was hobbled by the "Not a Leader" ad campaign, and his successor Michael Ignatieff was never able to recover from the "Just Visiting" motto that labelled him an arrogant dilettante.

Those portraits were painted by an ad campaign funded by the formidable Conservative party war chest before Dion or Ignatieff ever had a chance to make their own first impressions on voters.

Armour says the Conservatives have put three main principles at the centre of their communications strategy: message discipline, acting on insight and opportunity.

The message control has been well documented. The insight comes from properly reading and analysing the landscape and the players, and the opportunity is the moment that presents itself to act.

Harper's summit next week with Canada's First Nations leaders will be another big communications challenge for the Conservatives on a complex, sensitive policy issue.

Unlike with the pipeline and health-care funding stories, Harper was forced to react defensively to the crisis in Attawapiskat after it exploded in the media. The unified message that emerged from government was that it was dealing quickly with financial mismanagement on the reserve.

Human rights lawyer Paul Champ, who represents some First Nations communities, said that despite some key underlying facts about Attawapiskat, the Tories managed to shape the story about the situation.

"Even those Canadians who don't see themselves as being racist or having racist stereotypes, I think the are definitely susceptible to that frame that First Nations mismanage money, or that First Nations bands are irresponsible or are wasting money," Champ said.

"I think those are regrettably very deeply rooted stereotypes in Canada. This government played on that."

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C-10 -- The omnibus crime bill, combining all the justice measures the Conservatives tried to pass when they had a minority government, is at second reading debate in the Senate and expected to pass in 2012.

With files from CBC
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OTTAWA - Building a storyline that sticks helped the Conservatives sink two successive Liberal leaders and they are using the same strategy early in 2012 on a pair of major policy debates facing Canad...
OTTAWA - Building a storyline that sticks helped the Conservatives sink two successive Liberal leaders and they are using the same strategy early in 2012 on a pair of major policy debates facing Canad...
OTTAWA - Building a storyline that sticks helped the Conservatives sink two successive Liberal leaders and they are using the same strategy early in 2012 on a pair of major policy debates facing Canad...
OTTAWA - Building a storyline that sticks helped the Conservatives sink two successive Liberal leaders and they are using the same strategy early in 2012 on a pair of major policy debates facing Canad...
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Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
04:57 PM on 01/23/2012
Stephen Harper gave his "yes I really hate Canadians this much" speech in 1997. Said Harper:

"The establishment came down with a constitutional package which they put to a national referendum. The package included distinct society status for Quebec and some other changes, including some that would just horrify you, putting universal Medicare in our constitution, and feminist rights, and a whole bunch of other things."

http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/SpecialEvent7/20051213/elxn_harper_speech_text_051214/
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
04:50 PM on 01/23/2012
Within weeks of being elected in 2006, Stephen Harper limited access to his government, by both the media and the public. He closed down a searchable database that provided easier access to information, and forbid any questioning of his ministers, without his approval, and even then questions had to be presented in advance.

Time magazine found Harper's actions so disturbing that they published an article on it: Controlling the Message. In the piece, Alasdair Roberts, a Syracuse University public-policy professor, asks, "How can the average Canadian make a judgment about whether their government is being well run if they don't have access to the information?"

A very good question, but what Roberts may not know is that since that time, things have only gotten worse.

Harper's office has been taking their own press photos, creating their own videos (Taxpayers on hook for $1.7-million as PMO rolls out video, By Bruce Cheadle, The Canadian Press, December 08, 2009), and have made most media events by "invitation only".

http://pushedleft.blogspot.com/2011/11/stephen-harper-inches-canada-even.html
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
09:20 AM on 01/23/2012
If anyone is interested enough to see how Canada has been infiltrated by the Yank Think tanks and moneyed capitalistic Foundations along with the Yankee corporations, There is a new (2009) book out by Donald Gutstein, ex-professor of Communications at Simon Fraser University called "Not a Conspiracy Theory" . The subtitle is "How Business Hijacked Democracy!"
You can get a summary if you Google the title and name.

It covers the formation of the Reform party, the real rise of the Fraser and CD Howe Institutes to formulate the propaganda and the Yankee foundations like the Donner Foundation that established Canadian roots and the multinational corporations and big business that fund it all. The greatest propaganda machine in the world and now it is focused on YOUR healthcare system. It has been for some time and are constantly generating lies and misleading articles about the shortcomings of the system but not mentioning it is mainly caused by purposely underfunding by the right wing governments.
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
09:17 AM on 01/23/2012
Canada Ranked Last in Healthcare But Tax Cuts for Rich Come First
Despite promises to fix our public healthcare, after five years, Canada now ranks dead last in terms of quality of care.

Dead last.

But what is the Harper government doing?

More tax cuts for the rich.

Polls consistently show that Canadians rank healthcare as their number one priority.

But what is the Harper government doing?

Building more prisons when our crime rate is the lowest in our history and buying fighter jets that no one else will take because they are considered to be junk.

Do you want public healthcare or to borrow money to give to the wealthy?

Healthcare or fighter jets?

Healthcare or prisons?

Healthcare or Harper?

Canadians are being told that public health care financing is not ’sustainable’, and that the solution is a shift to more private health insurance and private delivery of services.

According to Canada’s leading health care economist, “bluntly, this is a lie.”

Robert G. Evans, O.C., Ph.D. (Economics, Harvard), an officer of the Order of Canada, and a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences, recently delivered this message to Members of Parliament during a special briefing session.

This is not because healthcare is unsustainable but because it is underfunded, at both federal and provincial levels.

http://www.rabble.ca/news/2010/10/harper-politicizes-healthcare-it-bad-canada-bad-world
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
09:12 AM on 01/23/2012
"When a government starts trying to cancel dissent or avoid dissent is frankly when it's rapidly losing its moral authority to govern."

- Stephen Harper, Canadian Press, April 18, 2005
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chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
11:24 PM on 01/22/2012
The Harper Government's tactics worked well because Canadians have a deep underlying distrust of anything American, despite being their biggest trade partners and obviously consuming so much American culture.
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MyTake
Release the Hydrogen Economy now!
07:57 PM on 01/22/2012
Well, this is sure a krap spun article.

Our media is "american-ized" and run out of The Pratt House in NY. It was unleashed on Canada prior to Mulroney's election.

A background video to set the table: http://tinyurl.com/yg3xvdm .

Conrad Black was set up to con Canada into NAFTA, with his 53% control of print media, which has accelerated the rise of The CORPORATE STATE now controlling America.

The Pratt House (David Rockefeller, Chairman Emeritus) kept Chretien "on message" for 13 years with Mitchel Sharpe, held board membership on Rockefeller's Foundation, as a $1/year paid adviser.

Chretien ran Rockefeller's "Union of the Americas" summit in that armed encampment and was flown to NY for a Rockefeller handshake and photo-op.

Now, step up to The House of Bilderberg, David Rockefeller being a cornerstone member, which is now engineering a singular global government by sinking the U.S. into unrecoverable debt.

Mansbridge has attended Bilderberg and Sun Media has its strings pulled out of Pratt.

Here is Harpo down at Pratt and introduced by Bilderberg member Marie-Josée Kravis: http://tinyurl.com/7tm9cs9 .

And to show you the Pratt power, here is a very despised V/P talking to his real boss: http://tinyurl.com/ctgofae . Note his gloating over failing to disclose his membership to the government vetting process.
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Warren Yuill
Jesus Built My Hot-Rod
09:36 AM on 01/22/2012
This is what Canadians seem to like in a leader.
It's all on him.
Win or lose it, all lands on Harper's shoulders.
In a word "accountability"
Something that has been lacking in Canadian politics for decades.
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BCSLAVE
Got a key?
02:10 PM on 01/22/2012
Harper is not accountable. Where is the transparency he espoused in 2006?

There are more controls today to hinder accountability and raise secrecy then in any decade past.
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Spanky McFarlane
ILLEGITIMUS NON CARBORUNDUM.
04:19 PM on 01/22/2012
You have got to be kidding? Even George Bush was 'accountable at the OLYMPIC opening- where was our PM?
It wouldn't surprise me if the Americans looked at the sorry state of affairs & the equity he squandered with China (on behalf of all Canadians) & said: Keystone? No rush-

Now 'Mr. Out Front' is sucking the hind teat & Canada's economy along with him.
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gravescanada
06:11 PM on 01/22/2012
f our first-past-the-post (FPTP, aka single-member plurality) electoral system, a candidate needs only to secure a plurality of the votes in a riding -- that is, more than any other single candidate -- to win. S/he need not win a majority (over 50 per cent) of the votes. Depending on how many candidates run in a riding, it is possible to win a seat even though the vast majority vote for other candidates. In fact, successful candidates are seldom elected by a majority of voters in their riding.

http://rabble.ca/news/2011/04/conservatives-play-phony-percentages-first-past-post
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
04:40 AM on 01/22/2012
The paper suggests that guidance can be taken from section 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 because of this provision’s charge to recognize and affirm Aboriginal rights.Alternatively, consent is required to justly occupy Aboriginal land. The Supreme Court of Canada has developed helpful principles to assist in this result. Public officials could apply these principles in their work. The police, politicians, civil servants, developers, third parties, and others could take guidance from the court’s calls to: deal with Aboriginal peoples in utmost good faith; avoid sharp dealing; cultivate a trust-like, rather than an adversarial, relationship; incorporate Aboriginal perspectives in decision-making procedures and outcomes; approach dispute resolution with a eye to reconciliation; interpret historic events as historic Aboriginal groups would have naturally understood them; avoid overly technical interpretations of ideas or events; interpret Aboriginal aspirations flexibly to avoid stereotypes; infringe Aboriginal and treaty rights as little as possible; engage in effective consultation with Aboriginal groups; reasonably balance Aboriginal interests in making calculations of the public good; provide compensation where Aboriginal economic interests are diminished. The paper suggests that the application of these principles should not be solely court-focused. They should be considered public obligations that bring the police, corporations, governments, and others into compliance with the spirit and intent of Canada’s law dealing with Aboriginal peoples.

http://www.attorneygeneral.jus.gov.on.ca/inquiries/ipperwash/policy_part/research/pdf/History_of_Occupations_Borrows.pdf
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
04:27 AM on 01/22/2012
Notes on the Indian Act
The Indian Act seems out of step with the bulk of Canadian law. It singles out a segment of society -- largely on the basis of race -- removes much of their land and property from the commercial mainstream and gives the Minister of Indian & Northern Affairs, and other government officials, a degree of discretion that is not only intrusive but frequently offensive.

Historically, the Act evolved to protect the small share of Canada's land base which remained to our original peoples. Statutes dating back to the middle of the last century created the concept of "status" to separate those who were entitled to reside on Indian lands and use their resources from those who were forbidden to do so. In this respect, the early legislation was an expression of the concepts set forth in the Royal Proclamation of 1763. The exemption of reserve lands from municipal taxation and seizure under legal process were other measures intended to secure those lands for the intended occupants: Indians themselves.

Status soon came to have other implications. Status Indians were denied the right to vote, they did not sit on juries, and they were exempt from conscription in time of war (although the percentage of volunteers was higher among Indians than any other group). Most telling in relation to this attitude was the definition of "person" which was in the statute until 1951: "an individual other than an Indian".

http://www.bloorstreet.com/200block/sindact.htm
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
04:09 AM on 01/22/2012
Re: "Harper was forced to react defensively to the crisis in Attawapiskat after it exploded in the media."

'COLD AS ICE':

http://bsn­orrell.blo­gspot.com/­2011/12/mn­n-attawapi­skat-kasha­chewan-and­.html
Report By : Orakwa Indigenous Enterprise­s /January 2006
kahentinet­ha2@yahoo.­com
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
04:07 AM on 01/22/2012
The real foreign interests in the oilsands
By Terry Glavin, The Ottawa Citizen January 12, 2012

But if we’re seriously supposed to be going all villagers-­­with-torc­h­es about foreign outfits with weird ideologies underminin­­g Canada’s national economic interests, let’s review what’s really going on, shall we?

The $5.5-billi­­on Enbridge pipeline project is all about sending Alberta bitumen in huge oil tankers to China. Beijing’s own state enterprise­­s are among the project’s major backers, and Beijing has been buying up Alberta’s oilpatch at such a dizzying pace lately it’s hard to keep up. In the spring of 2010, China’s state-owne­­d Sinopec Corp. took a $4.65-bill­­ion piece of Syncrude. Then the China Investment Corporatio­­n, which is run by the Chinese Communist Party, took possession of a $1.25-bill­­on share of Penn West Petroleum. Last summer, the Chinese National Offshore Oil Corporatio­­n gobbled up Opti Canada for $2.34 billion. And so on.

Then, last month, Sinopec spent $2.2-billi­­on to take over Daylight Energy Ltd., and last week, Petro-Chin­­a, with the final push of $1.9 billion, became the owner and manager of the MacKay River oilsands project. This is what Ottawa doesn’t want you noticing.

Read more: http://www­­.ottawaci­t­izen.com­/b­usiness­/re­al+for­eign­+inte­rests­+oil­sands/­598­1230/st­or­y.html#i­x­zz1jK6h4i­­lr