Friday, January 20, 2006

Stephen Harper; Canada's Jekyll and Hyde


As we come upon the last weekend before the election more expose's of Stephen Harper are appearing. The evolution of Stephen Harper and his party Too little, to late some will say.

Perhaps not combined with todays headlines the Harper Hasn't Changed campaign may have a real impact in these final days.


Too late, but Harper tosses Liberals a lifeline National Post

Harper says Senate shouldn't block Tory bills

Canadian Press

WATERDOWN, Ont. — Stephen Harper says outlawing gay marriage won't be one of his top priorities if elected, and that efforts by the Senate to block such a bill would amount to an "abuse of power.''

Two days after saying that a Liberal-dominated Senate would be a check on Tory power, the Conservative leader signalled that he expects the high chamber to defer to Parliament on such contentious issues.


Jim Travers in today's Toronto Star says;

But the harder-to-fix problem for Harper is that his cracks stirred memories of an angry, vindictive streak that worried Canadians enough to send them reluctantly back to Liberals in the last election's final weekend That's not the Harper Canadians are rallying around now. Calm, reassuring and happiest talking about policy, the Conservative leader has redefined himself as far from scary.

Candians should not be fooled by Conservative pundits and Harper apologists,who dismiss critics of Harper as ideoloques because they have been critical of Harper through out his career.

Harper has only had his makeover since the election began.
Harper has figured out how to appeal to everyone

The real Harper is still under the media makeup skillfully applied by his new handlers.


Harper’s team of advisers offer eclectic mix
Financial Times, UK

The most significant appointments are three political operatives with close ties to former Conservative prime minister Brian Mulroney: Conservative Senator Marjory LeBreton, formerly appointments secretary in Mr Mulroney’s office; Conservative Senator Hugh Segal, who was his principal secretary; and Derek Burney, who was his chief of staff before being named ambassador to the US.

Among Mr Harper’s retinue of academic advisers, Tom Flanagan, a political scientist, has attracted the most attention because of his strong views on both aboriginal programmes and the role of government. His influence was seen in Mr Harper’s decision to renounce the C$5bn deal Ottawa signed with aboriginal groups in November. Mr Flanagan and other academic members of the Calgary School of conservative thinkers favour market-oriented policies to reduce the role of government. They draw their inspiration from Republicans in the US.


Former Mulroney advisors have made over Harper as BM sans the chin and smile, but there is only so much poltical makeup can do. Behind the scenes remains the same old Calgary gang that have been advising Stephen since university. "The Man Behind Stephen Harper,"


If the Conservative leader is cut from the same cloth as Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan and Mike Harris, expect him to slash government programs, says James Laxer

In power, Harper will reopen the debate about Canada signing on to U.S. missile defence and is likely to cancel Canada's commitment to the Kyoto environmental accord. He refuses to commit himself to honouring the far-reaching aboriginal development program agreed to by first ministers last autumn. He will not throw Ottawa's weight behind the establishment of publicly funded, not for profit, child care across the country. And, as he said on day one of the election campaign, he plans to reopen the issue of same-sex marriage. Perhaps the best clue that Harper has not moderated comes from his commitment to resolve the so-called fiscal imbalance in Canada. In plain English that means that a Harper government would sharply reduce Ottawa's role in setting the nation's socio-economic agenda. That pledge, one of Harper's top five priorities, could well become his mantra as he slashes government programs in the days to come.


His past has been one of being right. Having been the voice of the Republican right wing inthe Reform party he stepped down in a dispute with then party Leader Preston Manning. This was followed with his immediate hiring and appointment as President of the right wing political lobby for Canada's Corporate Elite; the National Citizens Coalition (NCC) He did not run for the Alliance leadership till after Stockwell Day's annus horrbilus as leader. And then only when he was begged to and given supereme authority in the party.

Who is Stephen Harper, the Conservative poised to be Canada’s next prime minister?

By Richard Dufour – World Socialist Web Site

Editorial endorsements of a Conservative election victory by such establishment newspapers as Toronto’s Globe & Mail and Montreal’s La Presse have been justified on the grounds that the 46-year-old Harper has moved his Conservatives sufficiently to the center of the political spectrum to make them a viable "mainstream" alternative to a tired and ineffective Liberal regime.

Any dissonant voice—pointing to Stephen Harper's life-long ideological struggle against “big government” and for the absolute rule of the market over all aspects of social policy, his close links with the American neo-conservative movement and admiration for the Bush administration, his agitation for the build-up of Canada’s military forces as part of a more aggressive foreign policy—is met by ridicule.

Since Harper’s very public political record cannot be effaced, his biography has been spun by his handlers and the corporate media as that of an angry young man (Globe columnist John Ibbitson concedes Harper was a "zealot") who has undergone a process of political maturation.

In fact, the rise to prominence of Harper and his new Conservative Party is a product on the one hand of the Canadian elite’s shift ever further to the right—defence of the Medicare system is now pilloried as ideological extremism—and of the refashioning of the political movement with which Harper first came to prominence (the Reform/Canadian Alliance) into a political instrument better connected with and more pliant to big business.

But the most damning expose that Harper has not changed his spots, comes not from the Left but from the Right. From a supporter of Harper. From the poison pen of Link Byfield in today's Calgary Sun.

And why it is damning is that it's true. Byfield is full of glee, and lets the cat out of the bag. The bag daddy hoped to keep closed till after the election. His article cheers the real right wing Harper. The Harper who has been hiding behind his Brian Mulroney make over all this election. Link of course loves the real Harper. The Harper who the right wing in Alberta look forward to crowning PM for obvious reasons. They want to make over the nation as they did our province.



Winds of change
Calgary Sun, Canada -
Fri, January 20, 2006

By LINK BYFIELD

Harper is a new kind of conservative, unlike any of his predecessors.

Brian Mulroney was a "progressive" who called national social programs a "sacred trust."

His government brought "pay equity" into the federal sector and doubled the national debt.

Joe Clark said there was no fundamental philosophical difference between Liberals and Conservatives.

John Diefenbaker in the 1950s, like R.B. Bennett in the 1930s, was a Conservative in the old British tradition who believed in centralist, protectionist government.

So, for that matter, did John A. Macdonald.

Harper breaks that mould.

We have never had a prime minister like him.

Harper is young enough, patient enough, smart enough, different enough and tough enough to launch Canada in a new direction in this century.

In the dying days of the campaign, Paul Martin awakened to the fact Harper is not a "progressive" in the same sense as he and Jack Layton are.

He's right.

Harper does not believe, as they do, that it's the job of governments to lead, shape and define society.

He believes it's society's job to lead, shape and define the government.

He also believes firmly in the Charter of Rights, especially its recognition of God's supremacy over mankind and the four "fundamental freedoms" -- religion, expression, association and assembly.

These are rights that call for government restraint, not the liberal dishing out of expensive state entitlements and intrusions.

He will do nothing profound very quickly, but over time he will profoundly change this country, restoring its prosperity, confidence and unity.

If he wins Monday, I believe Canadians are in for a long, satisfying surprise.

I am not so sure aboout satisfying but Candians who think Harper has moderated his views or his NEW Conservative party has moderated there's, well they are in for a surprise if he is elected. And the surprise will not be news to those of us from Alberta.

As Link's daddy said after the last election;

Marci McDonald in Walrus magazine quotes Ted Byfield, a leading voice of a quasi-separatist Western Canada and Harper supporter as saying after the 2004 election, "The issue now is: How do we fool the world into thinking we're moving to the left when we're not." Has Harper of old really moved left?
That Byfield clan what can you say. They have been in the poltical wilderness since the early days of their magazine the Alberta Report. They are Canada's political dinosaurs of the right; the Flinstones to Harpers Barney Rubble. Now they are just rubbing their, anti-choice, anti-gay, Western Seperatist, religious fundamentalist, hands in glee. And if the Byfields are happy Canadians should be worried. Very worried. Harper's holy war Xtra.ca



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