Democracy,
trust, environmental crises, costs of an aging society major issues for
Canadians
By
Michael J Morris
EKOS Politics discovered
recently that perhaps somewhat surprisingly the deepest concern Canadians have
about the future is not an economic fear which tops the list but "the acute
decline of our democratic and public institutions".
Given the current mess
centring around the Senate scandal at the federal level, and now the shocking
allegations about Rob Ford, the mayor of Toronto, Canada's largest city, little
wonder that good and decent Canadians are shaking their heads in disbelief at
the sorry state of politics, seemingly at all levels. The public expect
progress on improvements but I am sure not overly optimistic that anything will
happen on that score anytime soon.
In a report on its web site
EKOS Politics on October 17, the polling firm explained that the concerns were
grouped into the deepest, moderate, and lowest level concerns.
"Somewhat surprisingly, it
is not an economic fear which tops the list, suggesting that the public expect
progress in areas other than economic fronts. A sense of acute decline in our
democratic and public institutions leads the list. This mirrors other research
showing that many trust indicators have reached historical nadirs and continue
downward," the report said.
Second, the consequences of
an aging population are also weighing heavily on the minds of Canadians,
specifically the unmanageable costs of caring for Canadians in their "Winter
years".
We are only seeing the tip
of the iceberg on that one as the baby boomers enter their retirement years, and
to me, it is serious indictment of the provincial and federal governments to
start planning years ago for the aging tsunamai. They have known since about
1950 there would be a day of reckoning.
Almost tied with it at the
top of the list is the spectre of a severely degraded future environment. That
one is pretty obvious too.
EKOS found that the next
item also relates to non-economic forces – notably ethical collapse and soaring
corruption.
A pure economic fear arises
as the fifth item -- "the notion of a darkening economic outlook for future
Canada."
"So, democracy, trust,
environmental crises and the costs of an aging society appear to be what is
keeping Canadians up at night. It may be that we have entered an era of purely
retail or consumer politics but we suspect that the declining outlook on the
country and the government’s recent woes are linked to a sense that these deeper
ingredients of public interest are not central in the agenda or governing style
of the current government," the report notes.
EKOS suggests that Canadians
see the current state of problems and democracy so broken that it cannot begin
to speak to the true longer term values and interests of the public. "This may
be why younger Canada is tuning out almost entirely. The public interest,
universalism, and a search for moral community are the themes that run through
the top trade-offs. This is shockingly distant from the current state of
political discourse and the permanent campaign."
Click here for the full
report: Full
Report (October 17, 2013)
Full disclosure: I am not now and never have been a member of the Citizens for a Livable Cranbrook Society; however, I did conduct a workshop for its members for which I was paid.
The EKOS report should serve
as a wakeup call, most especially to those in government at all levels, that
Canadians deserve better. After all, EKOS researchers spoke with people like you
and me before preparing the report. My email is mj.morris@live.ca
Full disclosure: I am not now and never have been a member of the Citizens for a Livable Cranbrook Society; however, I did conduct a workshop for its members for which I was paid.
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