Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Analysis: Harper's European Trip Has Domestic Political Overtones

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2015 11:11 AM
    VATICAN CITY — As Prime Minister Stephen Harper was being shepherded around the Vatican's inner corridors for his meeting with Pope Francis on Thursday, a mild kerfuffle broke out over the giving of gifts.
     
    A Vatican reporter noted that Harper did not come bearing one. His staff went to pains to email journalists travelling with him — repeatedly — that Canadian protocol officials had in fact given their Vatican counterparts a rare hand-carved Maple Leaf sculpture.
     
    Then there was the matter of the unusually short audience that Harper received — just 10 minutes, including translation, compared to the 50 minutes Russian President Vladimir Putin received the previous day.
     
    But Harper will wake up in Ottawa this morning, after completing his latest international trip after nine years as prime minister, having largely satisfied a clear domestic political purpose: shoring up support among some large Canadian diaspora voting blocs.
     
    The prime minister's every move was recorded by his 24/7 camera crew collecting images that will no doubt be used on the coming election campaign. 
     
    The footage was mainly of Harper, but also included a coterie of caucus members who were in tow over the course of his week-long travels to Ukraine, Poland, the G7 in Germany, and — albeit briefly — his truncated audience with Pope Francis.
     
    The travelling media, which paid thousands of dollars per person to accompany Harper, was able to ask him six questions over the six days.
     
    There are 1.2 million Canadians of Ukrainian descent and the one million of Polish descent still remain a key domestic political consideration.
     
    Harper's entourage also included representatives from Ukrainian community youth, the president of the League of Ukrainian Canadian Women, the president of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress, the president of the Ukraine Canadian Chamber of Commerce and a representative of the Bloor West Village Toronto Ukrainian festival.
     
    On Harper's plane, they joined three MPs and one senator with strong east European linkages with potential electoral consequences in urban ridings this coming October — Ted Opitz, James Bezan, and Wladyslaw Lizon, and Sen. Raynell Andreychuk.
     
    New Democrat foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar said the stops Harper made in Europe this past week are important for Canada's international relations, but he questioned whether it was all with an eye toward domestic politics.
     
    "The prime minister is visiting countries with strong ties to Canada and large diaspora communities here," Dewar said. 
     
    "Canadians are left wondering what exactly he is hoping to achieve. It's all fine and well for the prime minister to stop by, but does he have an actual agenda beyond just visiting?"
     
    Harper's spokesman Stephen Lecce flatly refuted that view, saying the MPs all bolstered Harper's international agenda.
     
    "These members have strong connections in foreign governments, helping to connect and grow Canadian business abroad," Lecce said.
     
    "They also played an active role in promoting our economic and security interests, including Putin's aggression in Ukraine and the advancement of CETA," the free trade agreement between Canada and the European Union.
     
    The MPs also have family histories that connect them to more oppressive times under the old Soviet Union.
     
    Harper offered a rare glimpse of the roots of his disdain of all things communist, when he participated in a moving wreath laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Warsaw on Tuesday. Harper evoked his father, Joseph, as he milled about with Polish military personnel and some of the members of his entourage.
     
    Defence Minister Jason Kenney pointed to the spot where Pope John Paul II gave his famous human rights homily in June 1979 when Poland was under communist rule — a historic moment that inspired Poland's Solidarity movement, and which led to the fall of the Soviet Union.
     
    "I remember it very well," Harper said. "There's very interesting history. My father was born and raised in Moncton, Canada, where much of the Polish air force trained during the war."
     
    Biographer William Johnson, author of the leading biography of Harper before he became prime minister in 2006, wrote that as a young man, Harper was drawn to a book by a Manchester Guardian reporter that documented the famine in Ukraine under Soviet strongman Josef Stalin, among other things.
     
    Two days later, Harper was in Italy to meet the Pope. Associate Defence Minister Julian Fantino, the Italian-Canadian who holds the suburban Toronto riding of Vaughan, turned up for that meeting and the subsequent one with Prime Minister Matteo Renzi.  
     
    A senior said Fantino is well-liked by the Italians and was an asset to Harper during his discussions. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fifty Mounties To Scour B.C.'s Comox Valley In Probe Into Julia Strobach's Disappearance

    Fifty Mounties To Scour B.C.'s Comox Valley In Probe Into Julia Strobach's Disappearance
    RCMP say new information in an investigation into the disappearance of Julia Strobach has prompted them to conduct a meticulous search of two green spaces in Courtenay, B.C., Tuesday.

    Fifty Mounties To Scour B.C.'s Comox Valley In Probe Into Julia Strobach's Disappearance

    Medical Marijuana Patients Struggle To Access Pot Under Federal Rules: Study

    VANCOUVER — A University of British Columbia study suggests medical marijuana patients are struggling to access cannabis under current regulations and many are turning to the black market.

    Medical Marijuana Patients Struggle To Access Pot Under Federal Rules: Study

    One Dead, Another Injured After House Explodes In Northeastern Toronto

    One Dead, Another Injured After House Explodes In Northeastern Toronto
    TORONTO — Police have identified a man who died in an explosion that levelled a house in northeastern Toronto as 57-year-old Paul Zigomanis.

    One Dead, Another Injured After House Explodes In Northeastern Toronto

    Mediterranean Migrant Deaths Worth Risk: Man Who Boarded Thai Ship For Canada

    Mediterranean Migrant Deaths Worth Risk: Man Who Boarded Thai Ship For Canada
    VANCOUVER — A young Sri Lankan man crammed into the cargo hold of a ship with nearly 500 others had only one thing on his mind — getting to the promised land called Canada.

    Mediterranean Migrant Deaths Worth Risk: Man Who Boarded Thai Ship For Canada

    Budget Will Make Pilot Immigrant Loan Program Permanent

    Budget Will Make Pilot Immigrant Loan Program Permanent
    OTTAWA — More newcomers will have access to federal loans to help get their professional training up to Canadian standards as part of today’s federal budget.

    Budget Will Make Pilot Immigrant Loan Program Permanent

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati
    VANCOUVER — Ross Rebagliati says he's been waiting 17 years for marijuana to go mainstream, and he's convinced the issue is so hot that politicians will be forced to address legalization in the upcoming federal election.

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati