- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 410
Dennis & SKT - I wrote a facetious answer to that question for a blog a while back on being a "recovering conservative", but I think I will give a more reasoned answer (it was written mainly as a humourous polemic).
First of all, I don't despise Stephen Harper. I don't think he's a bad person, or a particularly bad leader. I voted for him after all (well, not him directly, I don't live in Calgary). I don't consider myself especially a "progressive". I'm a pragmatist, and more or less in the middle slightly tilted right. I used to be much more of a far right leaner, a card carrying rabid Tory. Remember the scandal with the PC Youth on campaign buses for Mike Harris getting drunk and acting like idiots? I was one of them.
Like you, Dennis, I realize that Harper is generally a pragmatic guy, and he has to be. If he decided to actually pursue a lot of his personal beliefs in policy he'd be done. And he has rather eloquently explained that he considers, for example, his views on certain social issues like abortion not appropriate to try to legislate on. Ditto with gay marriage, he realized it was not in the country's interest (nor that of his political career perhaps) to fight over it so he's basically worked to squelch the social conservative extreme of his party.
That said I have to attribute his staying in office as much to the incompetence of the Liberal Party in selecting leaders as anything else. I think he's won not so much because people think he's a great leader or like his party, but because the Grits haven't inspired any swing voters from either end of the spectrum to come back. Running buffoons like Stephane Dion was not a good choice for them.
Harper - like all politicians - has made stupid mistakes (like the two GST cuts) and I think to many on the left (from what I can tell) comes off as being arrogant, as though he has some long standing majority, rather than a minority government. He seems to have sold some of them on the virtues of a minority government. He's also a hypocrite (take a look at the Senate), and that doesn't sell well. He also seems to take credit for things that weren't his doing. For example, he was all too happy to brag about the stability of Canada's financial system in the wake of the 2008 crash, but it was regulations which I believe were mainly implemented by the Liberals that helped that happen - and Conservatives largely seemed in favour of relaxing a lot of those regulations. For what it's worth, I've often defended him to more left-leaning folks who'll attack him based on the fact that he's avoided social issues adeptly, and when people attack him for taking positions I can see no realistic alternative to.
Anyhow, I'm a pragmatist because it has become clearer to me that no one has all the right answers, and the only way to appear to do so seems to be to cast one's self against a hypothetical opposite. To illustrate what I mean by that, consider the reaction many are having to the nuclear disaster presently unfolding in Japan. Broadly, people (across the spectrum it seems) scream "no more nukes" and "renewable power" and "wind and solar". They cast nuclear as a horror against perfectly clean renewable power sources - which of course do not exist, or at least not in any way that could replace nuclear, which when one does a more reasoned assessment is superior to the viable options - coal, oil and natural gas. I could say hydroelectricity has a better safety record which is probably true, but the key there is you need sources.
I mused in some forum that in the event of an election I don't know who I'd vote for. In the last two federal elections I voted for the Green Party. I don't agree with their platform terribly strongly (though much of it comes from the right if you actually read into it), but I figured that every vote for them helped them raise money to become a louder voice, and I think they have one worth hearing. Hell, if the Bloc Quebecois occupies space in the House of Commons, why not them. I knew they had no chance of winning, but I felt better walking out of the polling station than I would have voting Conservative, and I've never voted Liberal and I'm still not inclined to start. In the first case it wasn't so much to do with Harper, and everything to do with the actual candidate (Dean Del Mastro), for whom I had no respect from a variety of interactions and his policy ideas.
Alright, I think I'm jumping all over the place and have said enough for one post. I'm actually heading to the Wardroom for a drink and over to 0ttoDestruct's place to drink his whiskey and eat his food, so I'll end off here for now!
First of all, I don't despise Stephen Harper. I don't think he's a bad person, or a particularly bad leader. I voted for him after all (well, not him directly, I don't live in Calgary). I don't consider myself especially a "progressive". I'm a pragmatist, and more or less in the middle slightly tilted right. I used to be much more of a far right leaner, a card carrying rabid Tory. Remember the scandal with the PC Youth on campaign buses for Mike Harris getting drunk and acting like idiots? I was one of them.
Like you, Dennis, I realize that Harper is generally a pragmatic guy, and he has to be. If he decided to actually pursue a lot of his personal beliefs in policy he'd be done. And he has rather eloquently explained that he considers, for example, his views on certain social issues like abortion not appropriate to try to legislate on. Ditto with gay marriage, he realized it was not in the country's interest (nor that of his political career perhaps) to fight over it so he's basically worked to squelch the social conservative extreme of his party.
That said I have to attribute his staying in office as much to the incompetence of the Liberal Party in selecting leaders as anything else. I think he's won not so much because people think he's a great leader or like his party, but because the Grits haven't inspired any swing voters from either end of the spectrum to come back. Running buffoons like Stephane Dion was not a good choice for them.
Harper - like all politicians - has made stupid mistakes (like the two GST cuts) and I think to many on the left (from what I can tell) comes off as being arrogant, as though he has some long standing majority, rather than a minority government. He seems to have sold some of them on the virtues of a minority government. He's also a hypocrite (take a look at the Senate), and that doesn't sell well. He also seems to take credit for things that weren't his doing. For example, he was all too happy to brag about the stability of Canada's financial system in the wake of the 2008 crash, but it was regulations which I believe were mainly implemented by the Liberals that helped that happen - and Conservatives largely seemed in favour of relaxing a lot of those regulations. For what it's worth, I've often defended him to more left-leaning folks who'll attack him based on the fact that he's avoided social issues adeptly, and when people attack him for taking positions I can see no realistic alternative to.
Anyhow, I'm a pragmatist because it has become clearer to me that no one has all the right answers, and the only way to appear to do so seems to be to cast one's self against a hypothetical opposite. To illustrate what I mean by that, consider the reaction many are having to the nuclear disaster presently unfolding in Japan. Broadly, people (across the spectrum it seems) scream "no more nukes" and "renewable power" and "wind and solar". They cast nuclear as a horror against perfectly clean renewable power sources - which of course do not exist, or at least not in any way that could replace nuclear, which when one does a more reasoned assessment is superior to the viable options - coal, oil and natural gas. I could say hydroelectricity has a better safety record which is probably true, but the key there is you need sources.
I mused in some forum that in the event of an election I don't know who I'd vote for. In the last two federal elections I voted for the Green Party. I don't agree with their platform terribly strongly (though much of it comes from the right if you actually read into it), but I figured that every vote for them helped them raise money to become a louder voice, and I think they have one worth hearing. Hell, if the Bloc Quebecois occupies space in the House of Commons, why not them. I knew they had no chance of winning, but I felt better walking out of the polling station than I would have voting Conservative, and I've never voted Liberal and I'm still not inclined to start. In the first case it wasn't so much to do with Harper, and everything to do with the actual candidate (Dean Del Mastro), for whom I had no respect from a variety of interactions and his policy ideas.
Alright, I think I'm jumping all over the place and have said enough for one post. I'm actually heading to the Wardroom for a drink and over to 0ttoDestruct's place to drink his whiskey and eat his food, so I'll end off here for now!