stephen harper

A Good Five Years, or A Great Five Years for Stephen Harper?

  • First Posted: Jan 17 2011 17:33 PM

The National Post writers get misty looking back on Harper's first five years in power.

The Post has unveiled a series to mark the fifth anniversary of the Conservatives' rise to power.

John Ivison declares that “by almost every pocketbook metric, Canadian families are better off than they were five years ago,” George Jonas wonders if Harper has missed his big political opportunity (and concludes he hasn’t), Adam MacDowell grades the Conservatives on keeping their campaign promises (they mostly get good marks), and David Frum waxes nostalgic about the days he spent yearning for a Harperesque leader to unite the right. So no real ambiguity as to where the Post writers stand on Stephen Harper (they like him!).

The most interesting of the Post series is this piece by Conrad Black, who lauds Harper’s “patching political fragments together” to form a party “at least as natural a party of government as the Liberals.” Harper’s resurrection of the right after the 1992 election disaster really is impressive, but calling the Conservatives a natural governing party when they have yet to win support broad enough for a majority is surely premature, in The Newsroom’s opinion. Ironically, we may not know if Harper has built such a party until he steps down from its leadership, as it is the prime minister’s perceived arrogance and controlling nature that many voters cite as the reason they don’t support the Tories. Also, not surprisingly, as he awaits a possible return to the hoosegow himself, Black condemns Harper’s tough-on-crime policy.

Harper’s take-no-prisoners governing style is well documented, but if you believe the Toronto Star’s Linda Diebel, in five short years Harper has turned Ottawa into Stalin’s Moscow, a capital staffed by civil servants and politicians terrified of displeasing their overlord. “I’ve never seen a climate of fear like there is now,” she quotes one anonymous consultant as saying. “People are frightened out of their wits . . . To tell you the truth, it’s goddamned scary.” She relates how one Liberal MP “felt the full force of retribution” after displeasing Harper, which amounted to being most vigorously insulted during Question Period. Admittedly some of Harper’s controlling ways are deeply troubling, but until he opens a gulag in the Yukon, can we be spared the alarmist rhetoric and talk about the real issues?

Comments

LATEST NEWS

So Long and Thanks for All The Hits

In which we bid adieu and do something t...

MacKay Underestimated Libya Cost by $300 M

Well, at least we won, kinda....

SpaceX Laying Groundwork for Visits to Private Space Stations

No more low-orbit fly-bys for SpaceX –...

Globe and Mail To Hide Behind Paywall

As if they actually expect people to pay...

MCA's Death Puts 7 Beastie Boys Albums on Billboard 200

Only Hello Nasty and To The Five Borough...

Prince Charles Does The Weather, Is Actually Charming

While he might never get to be king, at ...

Greek Unemployment Hits New High

One in four Greeks are unemployed, while...

NDP Outpolling Tories

The NDP is now nipping at the Tories' he...

Details of First Low-Cost 'Artificial Leaf' Published

An MIT chemist has found a way to replic...

National Post Infographic Details Child, Forced Labour Worldwide

Some of the world's hottest economies ...

Rothko, Pollock Help Smash Contemporary Art Auction Record

Nearly $400 million was spent on a haul ...

Only A Quarter of Americans Support Afghanistan War

A new poll shows that support for the de...

play

FEATURED VIDEO

This is apparently what news anchors (at least cool ones) do during commercial breaks.  Reminiscent of the coordinated dance routines our own news editor Mike Barber performs after a few beers.

The Life of a News Anchor: Better Than You Thought

This is apparently what news anchors (at least cool ones) do during commercial breaks. Reminiscent of the coordinated dance routines our own news editor Mike Barber performs after a few beers.