Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Will Harper's Conservative Footprint Endure, Or Soon Be Washed Away?

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2015 06:13 PM
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper came to office almost a decade ago with the goal of making Canada more conservative and dispelling the notion of the Liberals as the natural governing party.
     
    He steadily began chipping away at socially minded programs and institutions, introduced wave upon wave of hard-nosed criminal justice legislation and touted symbols that evoked a time when government played less of a role in daily life.
     
    Harper has suffered a crushing electoral loss to Justin Trudeau — the son of a Liberal prime minister who fostered and embodied much of what the Conservative leader loathed in Canada's public life.
     
    Will the conservative footprint Harper leaves be visible many years from now, or will it be washed away by the tide of change the younger Trudeau has promised?
     
    A definitive answer may take years. But there's an early sense that even a prime minister as strong-willed and disciplined as Harper cannot impose his agenda if most Canadians are unwilling to accept it.
     
    "In my mind, nothing is ever irreversible," said Melanie Adrian, an assistant professor in the department of law and legal studies at Carleton University in Ottawa. "And I think that's the joy of living in a strong democracy."
     
    Harper "mucked around" with institutions but "all of that can be rebuilt," said Michael Behiels, who teaches history at the University of Ottawa.
     
     
    Harper's only enduring legacy will be the successful unification of the political right under the Conservative banner — an effort that has secured a consistent base of about 30-per-cent support, said Behiels.
     
    As for what he did with that power, critics long attacked Harper for deliberately working to undermine, muzzle or outright scrap institutions that irked party faithful who saw them as unduly intrusive or otherwise contrary to conservative values.
     
    It meant funding cuts to the CBC and legal funding for women and minorities, the scrapping of the think-tank Rights and Democracy and the end of the long-form census.
     
    The Conservatives passed laws with mandatory minimum sentences and new restrictions — legislation that sometimes ran smack into the Charter of Rights and Freedoms ushered in by the late Pierre Trudeau.
     
    Several Harper policies will be remembered for the lack of evidence-based decision-making underpinning them, said Adrian.
     
    During his tenure, Harper also promoted time-honoured symbols that resonated with his fabled base of core supporters.
     
    The word "Royal" was restored to military branches, a portrait of the Queen was installed in the lobby of the Foreign Affairs building and the monarch's diamond jubilee was marked with special awards.
     
    Millions of dollars were spent commemorating Canada's role in the War of 1812, a sound-and-light show presented to tourists on Parliament Hill emphasized the country's combat history and Canada's military effort in Libya was celebrated with an elaborate ceremony.
     
     
    Harper also seized opportunities to honour Conservative forbears John Diefenbaker and Sir John A. Macdonald and his government backed a privately sponsored effort to build a monument to the victims of Communism in the shadow of the Supreme Court building. 
     
    At the same time, Harper failed to deliver the Senate reforms many supporters craved.
     
    None of his prime ministerial initiatives come close to equalling the fundamental change the senior Trudeau effected through patriation of the Constitution and introduction of the charter, said Behiels.
     
    "Nothing," he said. "Absolutely nothing."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Portuguese Man Fined $1 For Harassing Swimming Deer Off B.C.'s Coast

    Portuguese Man Fined $1 For Harassing Swimming Deer Off B.C.'s Coast
    Rodolfo Lopeshas been fined $1 by a British Columbia court and ordered to donate $5,000 to a wildlife trust for hitting a swimming deer

    Portuguese Man Fined $1 For Harassing Swimming Deer Off B.C.'s Coast

    Vancouver's Plus-Size Model Ruby Roxx Battles Cyberbullies After Being Body-Shamed Online

    Vancouver's Plus-Size Model Ruby Roxx Battles Cyberbullies After Being Body-Shamed Online
    Ruby Roxx said she received a link from one of her Facebook followers featuring a photo of the curvy model digitally doctored to make her look thinner

    Vancouver's Plus-Size Model Ruby Roxx Battles Cyberbullies After Being Body-Shamed Online

    WATCH: First Green Video Ad Flirts With Candidate Claire Martin's Old TV Persona

    WATCH: First Green Video Ad Flirts With Candidate Claire Martin's Old TV Persona
    B.C. candidate Martin reprises her weather routine, complete with a giant Canadian map, to deliver a decidedly optimistic party forecast.

    WATCH: First Green Video Ad Flirts With Candidate Claire Martin's Old TV Persona

    No Preliminary Hearing For Accused B.C. Polygamist, Case Heads Straight To Trial

    A lawyer prosecuting the accused polygamist leader of a fundamentalist Mormon commune has opted to forego a preliminary inquiry and head straight to trial.

    No Preliminary Hearing For Accused B.C. Polygamist, Case Heads Straight To Trial

    Waiting For Work: Canadian Retail Workers Face Volatility Of On-Call Shifts

    Waiting For Work: Canadian Retail Workers Face Volatility Of On-Call Shifts
    The rise of so-called precarious employment in Canada — mainly work in the services and retail sectors — has brought with it some questionable employer practices that have employees stressed out and labour activists fuming.

    Waiting For Work: Canadian Retail Workers Face Volatility Of On-Call Shifts

    Edmonton Police See Bleak Future For People Duped By Bogus Fortune Tellers

    They say victims across Canada have paid between $2,000 and $15,000 to self-proclaimed fortune tellers.

    Edmonton Police See Bleak Future For People Duped By Bogus Fortune Tellers