Posted by John Deverell, Catch 22 campaign
Paul Godfrey has turned his attention from promoting US baseball and football in Toronto to helping Stephen Harper remake Canada’s parliament in the Conservative mould. Godfrey, a lifelong Conservative and former chairman of Metro Toronto, this summer led Postmedia Network Inc. in the acquisition from the collapsing Asper empire of the newspaper assets of Canwest Global.
Godfrey, fronting a consortium anchored by American investors, is now in command of a bully pulpit which includes the National Post, Vancouver Sun, The Calgary Herald, Ottawa Citizen, and Montreal Gazette along with their portfolio of digital media and online assets including canada.com.
Important evidence of how he will use this political leverage popped up in The Calgary Herald today as Harper’s hometown paper editorialized brazenly for Harper’s drive to eliminate democratic per vote subsidies to political parties.
Subsidizing separation: Party funding that favours BQ must change
Godfrey’s newspaper doesn’t call it a Harper campaign against democracy, of course. It pretends the PM’s goal is not to kneecap the Liberals, NDP, Bloc Quebecois and Green parties, but rather to fight Quebec separatism.
The Herald goes on to attack all independent candidates and regional parties. Its thought experiment in crude electoral manipulation would be laughable – except that it’s inspired by Prime Minister Harper and his University of Calgary ally Tom Flanagan.Campaign finance will be a key re-election platform for the Harper Conservatives. It is an issue we support for many reasons. Foremost among these is the unfair advantage the current system gives to the Bloc Quebecois. It is ludicrous that Canadian taxpayers heavily subsidize a party devoted to breaking up the country.
The ”Calgary vision” of political party finance is a diversionary tactic based on naked lies – but it might work. The lies appeal to regional and ethnic emotion and attempt to inflame existing divisions.
Why diversionary?
Is any of this likely to enter the reasoning of Paul Godfrey, Postmedia Network Inc and its influential newspapers? Don’t bet on it. Why would a Godfrey newspaper let democratic principle stand in the way of Conservative majority government by fair means or foul?
Comment
Comment by John Deverell on January 25, 2011 at 10:02pm
Comment by Elizabeth Rosenau on January 25, 2011 at 7:03pm
Comment by Gretchen Schwarz on January 25, 2011 at 6:32pm
Comment by CK Twight on January 25, 2011 at 4:35pm Time after time it gives the BQ two thirds of the province’s 75 seats on less than 40 per cent of the popular vote. Quebec’s federalist voters, a divided majority, have been denied fair representation for six elections in a row. The Bloc profits – but it didn’t invent the voting system. True Canadian federalist patriots, if they existed, would make the voting system democratic.
Majority of Quebecers-true federalist patriots. No, those would be a minority and today, since the pre-referendum exits of 1980 and again somewhat in the 90s, I would say even less so. I would even venture to say that when the next referendum on sovereignty comes, we won't see such a mass exodus, whether the yes or the no side is winning. It is one of the reasons I'd say the Bloc is successful, while separatism has not yet gained excitement, I'd say that strong sense of federalism in this province is also dead. The only true patriot Federalists in Quebec are those NIMBY WASPs in West Island Montreal ridings who will vote in Larry Smith; very conservative and just love stephen Harper. Those who vote Liberal, do so out of habit or are simply smart enough to see how far to the right Harper is and are not quite ready for that (they're center right though).
I'm saying the Bloc would probably still prevail in Quebec even under a different electoral system, just as Alberta would still vote Harpercon (who else would the Conservative heartland vote for?)
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