Avoiding extremes: will the historic Tory bent toward the centre prevail with the new Conservative majority?
Westell, Anthony
The Right Balance: Canada's Conservative Tradition
Hugh Segal
Douglas and McIntyre
249 pages, hardcover
ISBN 9781553655497
History is about the past, and The Right Balance: Canada's
Conservative Tradition is not only about Canadian politics in the past,
but it was written and published in the past--that is, before the
upheaval of the recent election. It has to be read and reviewed in that
light, even if the old battles with which it is much concerned have
since been won and lost, and all perspectives have changed.
Senator Hugh Segal, a well-known Red Tory, once wrote a cover plug
for a book in which I argued Canada had become a social democracy. How
very agreeable of him, but Segal was like that, progressive while firmly
Conservative, advisor to premiers and prime ministers, unsuccessful
candidate for the House of Commons and for the leadership of his party,
a prolific writer on political affairs, appointed to the Senate by a
Liberal prime minister. I wish I could now return the favour he granted
me, but I can't because in this book he reveals a different Segal.
He sets out to write a history of conservatism in Canada, but it
soon becomes infected by partisanship, sometimes going so far as to
accuse Liberals of endangering Canada by recklessly ignoring the
founding principle of the equal partnership of English and French
nations. The fact of course is that Liberals and not Tories have
traditionally been the party of French Canada. There have been four
French Canadian prime ministers: Wilfrid Laurier, Louis St. Laurent,
Pierre Trudeau and Jean Chretien--Liberals to a man. French Canadians
over the years elected far more Liberal members of Parliament than
Tories, and in Quebec today they often choose Liberal premiers, the
alternative being not a conservative but a separatist.
Partisan bias also infects Segal's history of Canada. To cite
only one glaring example, he simply writes Liberals out of the
achievement of Confederation. "That Sir John A.'s Tory
conservatism had to combine with the more antiestablishment Clear Grit
populism rooted in Canada West in order for Confederation to be made
possible is not in dispute," he allows, and passes on. The reality
is very different. By 1864, the Clear Grits had been absorbed into
George Brown's Reform (soon to be Liberal) party. Brown was the
owner of the Toronto Globe, and an eminently respectable figure, loyal
to the British connection. Brown and Macdonald had been opposed for
years in the frequently deadlocked legislature of the united Upper and
Lower Canadas. Brown wanted to open new land to the West for immigrants,
but that would have disturbed the balance of the two Canadas, and
roughly of English and French, so Macdonald could not agree. Then Brown
took the remarkable step of offering to serve in a coalition under his
rival if the new government would seek to create a new federation.
Macdonald was certainly the leader from there on, but the Liberal Brown
planted the seed from which Confederation flowered. Had he not, there is
no telling if and when the Canada we know would have occurred.
The Right Balance is roughly chronological, discussing each
Conservative leader and his or her fidelity to core Tory beliefs (and,
too often, the unscrupulous Liberal rivals who somehow bested them).
There are, by my reckoning, three core beliefs that Segal says
distinguish Tories from Liberals. The first (my ranking) is loyalty to
the Crown and parliamentary government, because tried and true
institutions are best. I will grant that Trudeau's original Charter
of Rights and Freedoms proposed to make the appointed Supreme Court
superior to the elected Parliament, as the U.S. Supreme Court is
superior to Congress. That was a thoroughly bad idea; inevitably, the
U.S. court has been politicized with justices seen to represent either
conservative or liberal ideologies, and it would have happened here. The
provincial premiers and their advisors, including Segal, were right to
devise a neat compromise, the "notwithstanding clause," and to
force it upon a surly Trudeau. Parliament and the legislatures remain
supreme because they can, if they so desire, override a decision by the
court.
I can think of one other occasion in which a Liberal government
might be said to have been less than respectful of our history and
institutions-when Prime Minister Lester Pearson pulled down the old
flag, the Red Ensign with the British Union Jack in the corner, and ran
up the Maple Leaf. The Tories, apparently including Segal, objected
strongly on the grounds that we were abandoning our history, but he now
sees the issue differently: "History has proven Lester B. Pearson,
who proposed the new mono-emblem flag, absolutely right," because
the single maple leaf has become a unifying symbol.
A second Tory principle, according to Segal, is "nation and
enterprise" Tories are careful to maintain a balance so that
government, while active, never gets in the way of enterprise. Thus
Macdonald invested in the CPR to secure the West for Canada while also
proclaiming the National Policy of tariffs to protect and encourage
manufacturing in Canada. Again, Segal's history is selective; he
ignores the fact that before adopting the National Policy, Macdonald
considered free trade, but could not see a good enough deal. He turned
180 degrees to tariff protection--and Tories then denounced the Liberal
policy of free trade as "veiled treason" Curiously, Segal also
describes Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's "courageous"
free trade agreement, which drove the last nail into the coffin of the
National Policy, as "nation and enterprise" at work.
He also cites Conservative prime minister R.B. Bennett's
founding of the forerunner of the CBC as government nation building, and
so it was. But Liberals can at least match the Tory record. For example,
they launched the vast Seaway Project, created what became Air Canada,
financed the Trans-Canada gas pipeline (which Conservatives in the
Commons fought bitterly to stop) and set up Atomic Energy of Canada
Limited to build Canada's first reactor. In short, there is no real
distinction between Tories and Liberals to be found under the
"nation and enterprise" heading.
Fidelity to the equal partnership of English and French
nations--Segal calls it duality--is the third Tory principle. Liberals,
on the other hand, he says, are unprincipled, willing to do whatever it
takes to defeat their opponents, and they frequently endanger the
country by disregarding the founding bargain. William Lyon Mackenzie
King, the longtime Liberal leader and prime minister in the 1920s,
'30s and '40s, is one of Segal's favourite villains, a
crafty and unprincipled man who several times outmanoeuvred upright
Tories. Why, there was even the time in 1926 when King, facing certain
defeat in the Commons, "snuck" over to Rideau Hall to ask the
governor general to dissolve Parliament and allow an election. He was
"justifiably" refused, and resigned. Perhaps understandably,
Segal does not refer to the occasion when Prime Minister Stephen Harper,
facing defeat in the Commons, snuck over to Rideau Hall and persuaded
the governor general to prorogue, or suspend, Parliament. The cases are
not exact parallels, but the essential fact is that both prime ministers
dragged the GG into political controversy in an attempt to dodge a vote
in the Commons; King failed, Harper succeeded. Not in the best Tory
tradition.
Similarly, Segal lambastes Trudeau because he ignored Quebec's
objection to his Charter with the result that Quebec has never signed on
to the new Constitution. To make matters worse, he led the opposition to
Mulroney's attempts to bring Quebec back into full partnership with
the Meech Lake and Charlottetown accords. It is true, of course, that
Trudeau did object to Meech on the grounds it would have meant special
status for Quebec, but aboriginal groups, women's groups and others
also opposed the deal on quite different grounds.
Trudeau's policy was to draw Quebeckers out of their Quebec
fastness to inhabit all of Canada. To this end he made federal services
available in French across Canada, and the CBC provided service in
French to support French Canadian culture. The policy failed when
Quebeckers remained "at home," where they seemed to be
building a dynamic but inward-looking society with little interest in
the rest of Canada, electing separatists and crypto-separatists in
federal and provincial politics. Neither Conservative nor Liberal
parties could claim to represent Quebec.
Segal believes the right policy is the old policy of reassuring
Quebec that it is secure as an equal partner in Canada, as Harper did
when, in Segal's words, he "reached out to embrace Quebecois
and Quebecoise [sic] as constituting a 'nation' in a united
Canada." Whether this policy will keep Quebec happy remains to be
seen, but the notion of equal partnership seems less and less tenable
with the rise of the West and the emergence of multicultural Ontario
with few roots in history. In any case, Harper's formal statement
on the issue was just that, a statement. Similarly, his formal apology
to aboriginal people for the residential schools program (which ended
long ago, incidentally), which Segal regards as a high point in
Harper's prime ministership, may have been nation building, in the
best Tory tradition, or simply chasing votes--a quest never far from his
mind.
Respect for the constitutional division of powers, says Segal, is a
Tory value. It is true, I think, that Liberal governments more than
Conservatives have invaded provincial jurisdictions by pushing on them
so-called shared-cost programs--a gift of federal money they could not
refuse. On the other hand, we would not have national medicare if Ottawa
had not taken the initiative--certainly not if we had waited for Harper.
Before entering the Commons, he wrote the famous/infamous letter
advising Alberta to build a "firewall" to keep out the federal
government. That, says Segal, was just Harper showing Tory respect for
provincial jurisdiction.
Segal does not discuss Harper's stance on deficits. That is an
important oversight. On this score, it is hard to assess Harper's
record because he has been driven by the recession. It is clear that the
Chretien/Martin government sweated blood and tears to restore to surplus
the budget they inherited from Mulroney (who, to be fair, had inherited
a large deficit from the Trudeau era). Harper took over and promptly
returned it to deficit--before the recession struck--by cutting taxes in
a bid for popularity. To fight the recession, he sensibly elected to
replace shrinking private demand with public demand by pouring money
into public construction projects-as recommended long ago by the liberal
economist John Maynard Keynes, whom conservatives used to hate. The
projects are certainly nation building of a type--bridges and highways,
for example--but was it really necessary for Harper to launch publicity
drives--at public expense, of course--to make it appear voters owed it
all to their local Tory MP?
Is Harper a true Tory or a right-wing neocon-in-hiding until he
could win a majority? Segal rejects the neo-con theory, and I doubt we
will ever know Harper's real instincts. He has had to avoid
extremes in order to keep his new national party together, and that is
still true.
In sum, I find little evidence in this book to support Segal's
case that the two parties, Conservatives and Liberals, are ideologically
divided. Rather, they have been the Ins and Outs, driven to the centre
by the search for votes--and social democratic in the sense they believe
in a democratic government regulating and taxing a market economy to
meet social priorities established by the voters in elections.
The parliamentary system works best when there are two national
parties and elections offer voters a clear choice. Third, fourth and,
counting the Greens, even fifth parties confuse debate in the Commons
and distort election results. Thus, the Conservatives remain a minority
party in terms of their share of the vote in the most recent election,
but have a commanding majority in the Commons. If the election leads the
Liberals and the NDP to merge, creating a national centre/left party to
confront the centre/right party created by the merger of Reform and the
old Progressive Party, all might turn out for the best.
Anthony Westell is a retired journalist and a contributing editor
to the LRC.