Behold the NDP lost in the wilderness without a leader
Perceptions by Gerry Warner
Wither goest the NDP? How about purgatory for starters?
At least in purgatory, there will be company around for Canada’s tired
socialists. There’s precious few fellow-travellers around the party now and
Tommy Douglas must be rolling in his grave.
And that’s a shame because Canada would be a lesser
country today if it wasn’t for the party that wears its social conscience on
its sleeve as opposed to the gun-totting, mean spirited, Empire on our southern
border. Who wants that? Not many Canadians, I believe.
But how can we keep that from happening with the only
left wing party in Canada clearly on life support and a young, charismatic,
left-leaning leader firmly ensconced at 22 Sussex Drive for the next four years
and maybe more? Ironically, the NDP, the party that’s supposed to put people
first and people before profits was soundly rejected by the “people” in the
federal election last year and now they’ve done the same thing to their own
leader only in a crueler, more devastating way. And they did it without an heir
apparent in sight. Does the word scape goat come to mind? How about vindictive?
And even though I truly hate to say this, what about stupid?
Remember we’re talking about Tom Mulcair, the first
politician to cut Stephen Harper down to size in Parliament and he deserves as
much credit for defeating the harsh Conservative interregnum as does Justin
Trudeau. That’s why Mulcair went into the momentous campaign with the dizzying
possibility of being the first socialist prime minister of Canada. But politics
is a cruel world as the former NDP leader found out quickly when the longest
campaign in recent Canadian history heated up. At that point, Mulcair made two
fatal mistakes that sealed his doom. Ironically there were good reasons for
both mistakes, but good reason turned out to be bad strategy.
First there was the balanced budget promise. Why not a
balanced budget? Right wing parties have been winning on that promise for
years. No less a socialist icon than Douglas himself brought in balanced
budgets as Saskatchewan premier. What better way to counter the false criticism
of socialist governments everywhere that they can’t balance the books. They can
and they do. But on this occasion the timing was wrong. Oil markets had
collapsed. Canada’s economy was sagging, making Mulcair’s promise appear bogus
and he paid the price, especially when Trudeau came in with a deficit-driven
promise to spend billions on infrastructure and job creation.
And then there was the niqab! Who can deny that
Mulcair’s defence of Muslim women’s right to wear the niqab was principled? It
was principled to a fault. But in a country deeply uneasy about the symbolism
of the black face-covering and nervous about terrorism, defending the niqab was
a bridge too far. And Trudeau cynically seized on this by keeping his mouth
shut on the subject even though his own party shared the NDP’s stand.
So it was a case of two strikes and you’re out. Politics
isn’t like baseball where it takes three strikes to remove you from the game.
But what has the NDP accomplished by tossing Mulcair out so unceremoniously? I
would say nothing!
Worse than that, they’ve once again shot themselves in
the foot. Or maybe in the head, depending on your point of view. First, they
should have let Mulcair go on his own terms instead of humiliating him the way
they did on live TV. He was a good man who gave his best for public life and he
didn’t deserve to be treated like that. Secondly they made him an instant lame
duck with no replacement in sight. That’s plain dumb politics.
But the worst thing the NDP did with its knife between
Mulcair’s shoulder blades was to expose the ugly, ideological chasm in NDP
ranks between moderate social democrats and the hardline ideologues who want to
bring capitalism to its knees in favour of Big Brother government and use all
its muscle to shutter pipeline producers as outlined in the unrealistic Leap
Manifesto in vain hope it will cure all of society’s ills, social,
environmental and financial.
Oh, how I wish it could! But anyone with insight into
human nature knows that ordinary people are led into revolutionary change by
inspired leadership, not by the heavy hand of government force or socialist
purity. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley knows this and it wouldn’t surprise me if
she tore up her card and formed a new version of the NDP that would be more
practical and less antediluvian.
Gerry Warner is a retired journalist who distrusts any politician with
magic solutions.
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