Fascism in Canada. How does Stephen Harper differ from David Cameron, John Key or Tony Abbott?
The
Closing of the Canadian Mind
THE
prime minister of Canada, Stephen Harper, has called an election for
Oct. 19, but he doesn’t want anyone to talk about it.
14
August, 2015
He
has chosen not to participate in the traditional series of debates on
national television, confronting his opponents in quieter, less
public venues, like the scholarly Munk Debates and CPAC, Canada’s
equivalent of CSPAN. His own campaign events were subject to gag
orders until a public outcry forced him to rescind the forced silence
of his supporters.
Mr.
Harper’s campaign for re-election has so far been utterly
consistent with the personality trait that has defined his tenure as
prime minister: his peculiar hatred for sharing information.
Americans
have traditionally looked to Canada as a liberal haven, with gun
control, universal health care and good public education.
But
the nine and half years of Mr. Harper’s tenure have seen the
slow-motion erosion of that reputation for open, responsible
government. His stance has been a know-nothing conservatism, applied
broadly and effectively. He has consistently limited the capacity of
the public to understand what its government is doing, cloaking
himself and his Conservative Party in an entitled secrecy, and the
country in ignorance.
His
relationship to the press is one of outright hostility. At his
notoriously brief news conferences, his handlers vet every
journalist, picking and choosing who can ask questions. In the usual
give-and-take between press and politicians, the hurly-burly of any
healthy democracy, he has simply removed the give.
Mr.
Harper’s war against science has been even more damaging to the
capacity of Canadians to know what their government is doing. The
prime minister’s base of support is Alberta, a western province
financially dependent on the oil industry, and he has been dedicated
to protecting petrochemical companies from having their feelings hurt
by any inconvenient research.
In
2012, he tried to defund government research centers in the High
Arctic, and placed Canadian environmental scientists under gag
orders. That year, National Research Council members were barred from
discussing their work on snowfall with the media. Scientists for the
governmental agency Environment Canada, under threat of losing their
jobs, have been banned from discussing their research without
political approval. Mentions of federal climate change research in
the Canadian press have dropped 80 percent. The union that represents
federal scientists and other professionals has, for the first time in
its history, abandoned neutrality to campaign against Mr. Harper.
His
active promotion of ignorance extends into the functions of
government itself. Most shockingly, he ended the mandatory long-form
census, a decision protested by nearly 500 organizations in Canada,
including the Canadian Medical Association, the Canadian Chamber of
Commerce and the Canadian Catholic Council of Bishops. In the age of
information, he has stripped Canada of its capacity to gather
information about itself. The Harper years have seen a subtle
darkening of Canadian life.
The
darkness has resulted, organically, in one of the most
scandal-plagued administrations in Canadian history. Mr. Harper’s
tenure coincided with the scandal of Rob Ford, the mayor of Toronto
who admitted to smoking crack while in office and whose secret life
came to light only when Gawker, an American website, broke the story.
In a famous video at a Ford family barbecue, Mr. Harper praised the
Fords as a “Conservative political dynasty.”
Mr.
Harper’s appointments to the Senate — which in Canada is a
mercifully impotent body employed strictly for political payoffs —
have proved greedier than the norm. Mr. Harper’s chief of staff was
forced out for paying off a senator who fudged his expenses. The
Mounties have pressed criminal charges.
After
the 2011 election, a Conservative staffer, Michael Sona, was
convicted of using robocalls to send voters to the wrong polling
places in Guelph, Ontario. In the words of the judge, he was guilty
of “callous and blatant disregard for the right of people to vote.”
In advance of this election, instead of such petty ploys, the
Canadian Conservatives have passed the Fair Elections Act, a law with
a classically Orwellian title, which not only needlessly tightens the
requirements for voting but also has restricted the chief executive
of Elections Canada from promoting the act of voting. Mr. Harper
seems to think that his job is to prevent democracy.
But
the worst of the Harper years is that all this secrecy and
informational control have been at the service of no larger vision
for the country. The policies that he has undertaken have been
negligible — more irritating distractions than substantial changes.
He is “tough on crime,” and so he has built more prisons at great
expense at the exact moment when even American conservatives have
realized that over-incarceration causes more problems than it solves.
Then there is a new law that allows the government to revoke
citizenship for dual citizens convicted of terrorism or high treason
— effectively creating levels of Canadianness and problems where
none existed.
For
a man who insists on such intense control, the prime minister has not
managed to control much that matters. The argument for all this
secrecy was a technocratic impulse — he imagined Canada as a kind
of Singapore, only more polite and rule abiding.
The
major foreign policy goal of his tenure was the Keystone Pipeline,
which Mr. Harper ultimately failed to deliver. The Canadian dollar
has returned to the low levels that once earned it the title of the
northern peso. Despite being left in a luxurious position of strength
after the global recession, he coasted on what he knew: oil. In the
run-up to the election, the Bank of Canada has announced that Canada
just had two straight quarters of contraction — the technical
definition of a recession. He has been a poor manager by any metric.
The
early polls show Mr. Harper trailing, but he’s beaten bad polls
before. He has been prime minister for nearly a decade for a reason:
He promised a steady and quiet life, undisturbed by painful facts.
The Harper years have not been terrible; they’ve just been bland
and purposeless. Mr. Harper represents the politics of willful
ignorance. It has its attractions.
Whether
or not he loses, he will leave Canada more ignorant than he found it.
The real question for the coming election is a simple but grand one:
Do Canadians like their country like that?
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