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Mark Crowley

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You're Wrong, David Frum

Posted: 04/ 2/2012 5:38 pm

A common response from many pundits on the recent Conservative budget seems to be: sensible, dull, uncontroversial. David Frum recently published his analysis and went a bit further asking whether or not this budget definitively proves that Canada is the "best-governed country in the advanced democratic world." He thinks it does. His question is especially interesting given that democracy is one of the areas that the Conservatives would get a failing grade on most comparisons with other developed nations.

I find myself in the situation, common after reading Frum's articles, of wanting to agree and disagree with him simultaneously. I agree with him because Canada does strike a middle way on many policy issues between a European approach on the one hand and an American approach on the other. On the issues of bank regulation, healthcare, financial regulation, and government intervention in the market he is mostly right. There is a strong case that we lead the world in sheer reasonableness. However, I take issue with his argument because this latest budget has nothing to do with making that assessment.

On a purely economic basis this budget is prudent in many ways. But as a policy document, which is the more important aspect, this budget is a dismal failure that continues this government's disregard for the health of our democracy and its inability to envision solutions for (or even acknowledge the existence of) the real long term challenges that Canada will face as a nation.

I say this budget is more important as a policy document for precisely the same reason Andrew Coyne recently penned the budget as unambitious. If ever the Conservatives were going to put forward a budget that exemplifies everything they stand for, now would be the time. In fact, it is more important as a policy document than it would be in other countries precisely because Canada is in such a good position economically compared to our peers.

So we must assume that a policy document is exactly what this budget is. We can see clearly that what is important to the Conservatives is not economic issues such as tax reduction or the deficit, or at least no more so than it was for the Chretien/Martin Liberals. No, what is important to them as a legacy is a long-term shifting of the national conversation towards their philosophy.

So when cuts need to be made, where do they come from? The cuts come from the public broadcaster which ensures all voices are heard in the national discussion even if they don't have financial resources. The cuts come from government aid for youth in our own country and  aid for the needy aound the world. The cuts come from government bodies which ensure there is a scientific basis for important decision making such as the First Nations Statistical Council, the National Round Table on the Environment, and the Economy and the National Welfare Council.

Is this part of Flaherty's claimed "responsible choices" showing "common-sense, moderate restraint?" If they keep on attacking the independent analytical infrastructure of the government in this way then common sense will be the only kind that is left on which to base policy. I suspect if they could get away with cutting Statistics Canada itself they would, after their attempt to neuter its independence last year -- oh wait, they also cut seven per cent of StatsCan's budget, at least they're consistent.

Finally, the cuts come from the organization tasked with running and monitoring the very elections which are the basis of our democracy, Elections Canada. This isn't surprising given the swiftness with which the Conservatives struck down the per vote subsidy last year and their continual disregard for democratic tradition and fairness. This has been shown again and again over past years by shutting down parliament to avoid defeat, the way they attack other parties as un-Canadian, and manipulate the financial and advertising advantage of their committed base and position in power. This is especially unfortunate timing given the ongoing and growing robocall scandal from the last election. If it turns out that the Conservative party was deeply involved in the fraud that occurred last year then cutting the funding of the body investigating it will be worthy of a scandal all its own.

In terms of vision for the future we see just as clearly what the Conservatives want Canada to be by what they don't spend money on. The Conservative vision for Canada succeeding in the 21st century seems to rely on making it easier to develop more resource projects with less risk of being slowed down by environmental concerns.

They are clearly betting that setbacks to Canadian oil development, such as the recent canceling of the Keystone oil pipeline to the U.S., will be more the exception than the rule in the future. Now they are also targeting charities that have spoken out against our environmental record. The Conservatives are assuming that demand will only increase for our oil and other resources even as the impact of climate change accelerates over the next century and new technologies change how resources and energy are used.

A truly bold vision would chart a way forward over the next 50 years shifting from our current dirty resource industries towards developing new renewable technologies. With Canada's skills, resources, and experience there is no reason Canada could not aim to become a sustainable energy superpower which would make it more likely Canada will remain prosperous in an uncertain future.

So if Canada is a leader in policy reasonableness in some ways, it will be despite this budget rather than because of it. In fact, after the next couple years of majority Conservative rule, we may have a few more things that need fixing than when they started.

 

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05:23 PM on 04/09/2012
Who cares about David Frum, anyway ? we all know where he comes from.
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Ian Llangan
Your Invisible Sky Friend Is Morally Abhorrent
04:38 PM on 04/11/2012
What do you mean? He comes from a sane family and a smart set of parents. His mother is practically an icon. His sister is a respected journalist in her own right. All of which is what makes his own idiocy so inexplicable.
09:25 PM on 04/03/2012
Id like a list of countries better managed. Maybe something could be learned from them?
12:45 PM on 04/03/2012
If people really understood what David Frum stands for -- neo-liberalism -- about 80 per cent of Canadians would never want to hear from him again. The problem is that people like Frum and Harper are so driven by their own ideological biases that they refuse to see the terrible failures of their policies. So ordinary folks can compete with them, we need to create One Big Campaign: http://nickfillmore.blogspot.com/2012/03/part-two-of-three-part-series-what.html
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greenmonk
The Only Thing We Have to Fear Is Fear Itself
05:27 PM on 04/03/2012
Happy to be your first fan!
And your blog raises some good points. Its good to see someone down in the trenches looking for solutions to the maniac minority that runs this country.
10:34 AM on 04/03/2012
good article!
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albertarick
These are questions for wise men with skinny arms
09:29 AM on 04/03/2012
The world makes a little more sense every time Mr. Frum is shown to be wrong. I especially appreciate your point that this special time for our nation has thus far been wasted on ideological posturing by our leadership. We should be seizing the day, and using our current advantages to push the envelope on the world stage in energy for the future, improving quality of life for our citizens, etc... Great article.
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sgillhoolley
Occupy the discussion.
09:28 AM on 04/03/2012
The Canadian economy is not nearly as strong as the media and government are making it to be. Housing prices are overvalued, and a correction is soon coming. Personal debt is too high, worse than the Americans I think. Austerity does not put people to work. We need smart spending.

Infrastructure is an area that needs work. We can kill two birds with one stone...fix our infrastructure, which currently costs us millions in quick-fixes and damage to vehicles, and by fixing our infrastructure we are putting people back to work. The infrastructure needs fixing anyways, so it just seems like a good opportunity to get it done to me.
08:58 AM on 04/03/2012
Although in agreement with a good portion of this posting, I do take exception to a couple of points-
1. The payment per vote to political parties, I have never agreed with this and have not heard any arguements to convince me otherwise. The way I look at it, is the politicans of this country can think of too many ways as it is to waste tax dollars as it is without giving them this opportunity. and cant see why they would settle for the amount they were getting-in the near future they would have this amount indexed and want it doubled.
2. Environmental hearings, these have to be streamlined. A few years ago I attended one of these hearing as a resident of a particular community. It started out as a information session with the residents being able to question the so-called "experts" in attendance. Approximately 20 people showed up with the sole purpose of disrupting this meeting. They did not live in the community and only succeded to disrupt the whole exercise to a point where nothing was accomplished.
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DirkNeptune
I love raspberry pie, damn it.
12:27 PM on 04/03/2012
The whole point of the "payment per vote" system was to prevent big money from having political influence on campaigns. I know there are restrictions on how much organizations can give, but there are ways around those guidelines.

I thought it was a great idea, still do. Harper only got rid of it, because he knows he can raise more money from the people who benefit from his corporate tax cuts than the other parties combined. I doubt most Canadians have a problem giving two dollars to the political party they supported.

If the environmental process needs to be streamlined it should be streamlined. But what the Tories are implementing as of this budget is short on details. My guess is the process will be more of a one-sided rubber stamp than an actual search for the truth.
02:47 PM on 04/03/2012
Appreciate your thoughts and they do offer some validity, however believe that there is still money going to the different parties regardless if the parties are taxpayer funded or not.
It appears to me that the last budget statement was indeed looking for ways to "rubber stamp" the issues, this is, I believe gone too far. That being said there must be some way to preserve the integrity of those proceedings.
Think the opposition parties can do much to accomplish this if they chose to act in a responsible manner and not respond to the attack ads and name calling that has become a trademark of Canadian politics. Common sense opposition will win more votes for them that trying to match insult for insult.
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Norma Ward
07:28 AM on 04/03/2012
As shown in this article, over the past 25 years, an assortment of successive Liberal and Conservative governments have only managed to run surplus budgets 40 percent of the time:

http://viableopposition.blogspot.ca/2012/03/canadas-debt-and-deficit-history.html

While Mr. Flaherty is determined to balance the budget by 2015, he said the same thing back in 2007 and by 2009, the surpluses of the previous 8 years were swallowed up by one gigantic deficit.
12:59 AM on 04/03/2012
Thanks for writing this. I read David's piece and also felt that he was ignoring everything that wasn't purely economic. It was insulting since the budget is so much more than that, and while budget is the bottom line for a corporation, there are a lot more things to consider when running a country.
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Thalin Lea
11:21 PM on 04/02/2012
yes, mr. Wrong Frum article was a total disrespect to anyone's intelligence! Thank you Mark for leaving this issue clear, no body else could describe the whole picture better than you do. !
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Mark Crowley
12:48 AM on 04/03/2012
well, I'm sure there lot's of other's who could but than you very much for the thought.
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11:04 PM on 04/02/2012
Let us remember who is Frum's ideal: Ayn Rand a woman who by all accounts suffered from extreme mental disease.
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canobserv
09:10 AM on 04/03/2012
and ended up broke and on Government assistance.......like every other Randian I have ever met............a hypocrit
11:24 AM on 04/03/2012
I didn't know this,but the Federal Reserve Chairman before Bernake is also a disciple of Rand and he led the US into the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. These Objectivists fashion themselves as Rand philosophy adherrants but they are not doing a very good job at it. However, I'll bet that both have read Rand's The Virtue of Selfishness very carefully! Thanks for the info.
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11:03 PM on 04/02/2012
The bush writer has never been right in anything whatsoever. His mental capacity is on a par with Rush Limabaugh.
11:02 PM on 04/02/2012
What Mr. Frum's perspective (and the budget) highlights is what Socrates always implicitly argued: all logic flows from its premises. Whether this budget is a good one or not depends very much on the philosophical glasses (i.e. premises) you choose to use and thus what you want to see at the end of the process of applying your own logic. Is a healthier democracy important? Yes? No? Is a healthier environment important? Yes? No? Is a more civil society important? Yes? No? How one prioritizes such values can lead to very different conclusions.
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MyTake
Release the Hydrogen Economy now!
10:04 PM on 04/02/2012
--A truly bold vision would chart a way forward over the next 50 years shifting from our current dirty resource industries towards developing new renewable technologies--

Good article and I support your analysis even though you did not call for the release of The Hydrogen and Hemp Economy's in Canada.

Harpo has driven Ballard offshore where they now sell their Hydrogen Fuel cell stacks to Asia, India and Brazil.

Yet, Apple Corporation. is all the rage these days having knocked off EXXON from the top spot. And here are the Hydrogen Fuel Cells being used at their brand new "data center": http://tinyurl.com/7p7usj8 .

And here are the U.S. Corporations installing Bloom Fuel Cell energy servers: http://tinyurl.com6n7tbxx

Click on the logo to see the scale of the installation.

Note The Shark Tank installation, because when Edmonton builds their new rink, there will be no consideration for POLLUTION FREE hydrogen fuel cell electrical generation because they are "OIL COUNTRY".

The Hemp Economy, whose fiber can build your entire house and leave the trees standing to do their job in nature which is to absorb the carbon dioxide molecule, is emerging in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, no thanks to Harpo!

Become the leader of both of those economy's and you will lead many other Nations.
12:58 AM on 04/03/2012
Pollution free hydrogen energy is physically impossible. Sorry.
08:35 AM on 04/03/2012
Hydrogen energy is not physically impossible. On of the first "nature of things" programs I watched (back in the 60`s) featured a man who build a few houses in a Flordia sub-division-each one had a hydrogen generator. The oxygen was released in to the air in the house and the hydrogen was captured to fuel cars, lawn mowers etc.
At that time the cost was app. $400 to convert a car to burn hydrogen-the benefits being much improved effiency and the by-product of utalizing hydrogen as a fuel is water.
10:01 PM on 04/02/2012
FRUM - JUST A FORMER PR MAN FOR BUSH2

David Frum was a PR man for Bush2. The man has no integrity or credibility.
No thinking person cares about what he has to say about the Conservative budget.
His support only came from a media ready to bend down and please the Bush warriors.

He tries to twist and to turn but he is without any credibility.