All over the map: in riding politics, the only common factor seems to be idiosyncrasy.
Findlay, Martha Hall
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Grassroots Liberals: Organizing for Local and National Politics
Royce Koop
University of British Columbia Press
212 pages, softcover
ISBN 9780774820981
"THE YEARS 2006 TO 2009 WERE NOT pleasant for the Liberal
Party of Canada." writes political scientist Royce Koop. Had he
only known how much worse it was to get by 2011 ... But solving Liberal
electoral woes is not the purpose of his new book, Grassroots Liberals:
Organizing for Local and National Politics. Instead he aims to fill a
gap in our understanding of how grassroots activism plays out ha the
Liberal Party. Why the focus on Liberals? Because of past organizational
effectiveness, with the party having won over half of the 40 federal
elections since Confederation, and more than two thirds since the
extension of the franchise in 1918.
"One might think that political scientists would be intent on
understanding the type of organization that the Liberal Party has
evolved to attain such a record of electoral success," Koop
observes. Paradoxically up to the present there has been more academic
attention paid to party organization within the NDP and several minor
parties. It is an imbalance Grassroots Liberals seeks to redress.
Koop describes how the national Liberal Party reformed during the
1950s and '60s away from connection and dependence on the
provincial organizations to create a more pan-Canadian party less
beholden to the vagaries (and, often, lack of success) of provincial
Liberals. Koop's study shows that local party engagement at the
federal and provincial levels has remained highly integrated in some
constituencies, with many on-the-ground activists still identifying
themselves as Liberal both federally and provincially, in others,
however, the connection between the two levels is often tenuous at best,
and sometimes even at odds with activists working for different parties
federally and provincially. Partly, says Koop, this relates to the
broader provincial context: "provincial Liberal cousins In 2006
were seemingly unsympathetic to the national party (Ontario),
suspiciously close to the national Conservatives (British Columbia), or,
as in Saskatchewan, dead."
Although he might have altered some contextual assumptions had he
seen the disastrous results for the Liberal Party in 2011 prior to
publication, I do not believe that his analysis would have changed.
Koop has extensively analyzed constituency-level political
engagement: the varied roles of individual grassroots activists,
constituency associations, women's clubs, campaigns, members of
Parliament, members of legislative assemblies or provincial parliaments,
and candidates, and the roles of individuals' reactions to specific
national party policies versus often differing provincial ones. To
facilitate in-depth analysis, he has constrained himself to a few
tidings in only three provinces, Ontario, New Brunswick and British
Columbia. Such self-imposed limits might make sense from a purely
methodological perspective, but they limit the practical utility of his
conclusions. Canada and the Liberal Party within it are simply far more
complex. A limited survey such as this makes drawing an), national
conclusions difficult. And with such interesting federal-provincial
politics in provinces such as Quebec and Saskatchewan--and in the case
of Quebec with such major implications for overall power at the federal
level--the lack of any examination of these jurisdictions leaves a
rather large hole.
As a reviewer, I enjoyed the book from three different perspectives
of my own: as a former MP who participated in the transition and
resurgence of a long-established riding association; as former chair of
outreach for the Liberal Party for four months in 2007, crossing the
country and engaging in conversations about the future of the Liberal
Party and of the country; and as a former candidate for the leadership
of the Liberal Party, having spent ten months in 2006 travelling across
Canada on a bus, participating in countless discussions and activities
with Liberals at the local level.
As a former MP, I have to say I smiled a number of times in
recognition of the author's descriptions of why individuals engage
or do not engage, or at only one or the other of the federal or
provincial levels, or only at particular times--they ring completely
true. One Ontario activist interviewed by Koop observes that when it
comes to "the provincial Liberals, I'm comfortable with their
platform and their program and what they're trying to do.
Federally, I just don't feel like they have any platform or
anything. There's nothing there to support as far as I'm
concerned." Another notes about his divided loyalties, "I find
that in Ontario, to be a provincial Conservative and a federal Liberal
makes you a lot of enemies." Not so for one activist in British
Columbia. "[National politics] is just not talked about. A lot of
time with the BC Liberals, that's the case. And that's why
it's sometimes very easy for federal Liberals and Conservatives to
get involved. It's kind of a general rule that provincially
we're all friends. We don't talk about our federal
affiliations." But it is a New Brunswick activist Koop interviews
who takes the prize for frankly expressed shiftable loyalties: "My
friend, who is now my business partner, was thinking of coming to New
Brunswick. He grew up here ... I said, 'if you're going to
come back, one of us should be a Liberal, and one of us should be a Tory
... I am currently going down this [Liberal] road, and you should look
at the Tory side.' And he said, 'Fine, I have no problem with
that.'" The interviewee then mentions that this strategy, was
successful. His partner took on a major role in helping re-elect a
Conservative Cabinet minister, and their company soon received a "a
major plum" from the Tory provincial government.
As chair of outreach for the Liberal Party in 2007, I also concur
in the realization that people who brand themselves Liberal in one
region, or even in one riding, do not necessarily share the same values
as Liberals elsewhere--or from the provincial to federal level. Indeed,
I have been struck by how many people across the country call themselves
Liberal, and even work for the cause, but who, when they sit down with
each other, might disagree significantly on what Liberal actually means.
(That this In itself may be a fundamental cause of the federal Liberal
Party's recent setbacks is for another discussion.)
As a former leadership candidate, however, I had the opportunity to
learn a lot about how the system works, and I feel obliged to challenge
some of Koop's assumptions. One of them is that grassroots
activists are involved, perhaps seeking different Individual benefits,
but ultimately for the success of the Liberal Party. Unfortunately, for
at least a decade, much of what has driven riding association activities
at the federal level has been leadership contests--key forces behind
membership drives and the elections of riding association executives.
This is a topic conspicuously underplayed in Koop's analysis.
Indeed, the unprecedented drive to solicit members and gain control of
riding association executives across the country in the years up to
Patti Martin's 2003 election coloured virtually all riding-level
activity. In many cases, rather than activists working for their view of
Liberalism or to benefit the Liberal Party, more often than not
activists were pitted against other activists, or long-term activists
were shunned. Many "real" grassroots Liberals turned
away--many have not returned. Almost without a pause, the same thing
happened in 2006, although it was spread around with more leadership
candidate campaigns doing organizing and selling membership. Many
inactive ridings became active only for leadership, only to die off
again afterward. And while the party has now moved to a
one-member/one-vote system for electing the next leader, no longer
relying on a "delegated" convention, and has removed much of
the association executive-level control over membership, it is too early
to predict exactly how this change will affect riding-level
organizations and activism.
I also feel obliged, particularly as a woman, to question another
of the author's assumptions: the role of the women's clubs and
women's associations. In his discussion of constituency
associations Koop lays out in detail the work of "local auxiliary
units," many of which are women's clubs. He describes well how
these clubs and their members interact with the broader riding
associations. But he has accepted at face value the publicly stated
purpose that they exist to help women in the process and to encourage
and support women candidates. Unfortunately, the underlying political
realities are not so simple, and many women in women's clubs are
not necessarily supportive of other women at all. As only one example:
in the 2006 leadership campaign, of the original eleven candidates,
there were three women (Carolyn Bennett, Hedy Fry and me)--a record. Yet
of the more than 80 women's clubs established across the country,
only three (!) supported a woman candidate. All of the others either
were formed for the purpose of, or had already decided to, support one
of the men. In other words, any analysis of constituency-level political
activity must analyze actions perhaps more carefully than just words.
This is politics, after all.
Overwhelmingly, the book reinforces the difficulty in describing in
any simple, consistent way how those who brand themselves Liberal
participate in the political process, and more precisely within the
Liberal Party. It is all over the place. Riding to riding, this
participation depends hugely on arbitrary factors such as geography,
constituency boundaries, regional history, the strength or lack thereof
of individuals as local leaders, and provincial versus federal policies.
Indeed, one gets a sense of a brave effort on the part of the author to
render the topic and the activities neatly and academically categorized
and sortable. But the major conclusion the reader comes to is that there
is very little coherent, consistent method or process to the political
organizing and sustaining efforts within the federal Liberal Party, and
in turn how local activists organize and act. Despite Koop's heroic
efforts to categorize it all, his results ultimately come across as a
mix of almost everything.
But from a practical level is this lack of consistency necessarily
a problem? Koop makes a compelling case that local diversity is an
unavoidable feature of a "big tent" entity such as the Liberal
Party of Canada. However, for party activists at both the local and
national levels, it is essential to understand just how varied it is
across the country and even riding by riding, and to learn exactly which
factors are at play in any particular riding. The analytical reach of
Grassroots Liberals could have been usefully extended. But Koop's
careful scholarship should nonetheless help party activists at all
levels operate more effectively.
Martha Hall Findlay is the former Liberal member of Parliament for
Willowdale and was a candidate for the leadership of the Liberal Party
in 2006.