The Conservatives had another raucous debate last night. And it's clear, Bruce Arthur writes, that Pierre Poilievre will say anything in his quest for the party leadership:
In a Conservative leadership campaign defined by convoy praise and high school debate club burns, Pierre Poilievre also takes time to attack the Bank of Canada. Sunday, former Bank governor David Dodge responded, “well that’s bulls---” on a national talk show. You don’t see that every day.
The Ottawa-Carleton MP seems to be leading the Conservative leadership race thanks in part to predatory, distorted attacks on institutions during a time of global uncertainty. The Bank of Canada is a target thanks to the rise of inflation, which is largely due to the war in Ukraine and oil prices, house prices, China and COVID, and maybe some profiteering. People notice pocketbook economics.
In response to this thorny global financial challenge, Poilievre blames domestic spending and Bank bond-buying to support government deficit spending — he has always been against the pandemic financial supports to Canadians — and pitches … Bitcoin? That attack on the Bank came after its research showed five per cent of Canadians owned Bitcoin between 2018 and 2020: mostly young men whom the Bank described low financial literacy. Pierre, courting such young men, shot back that the bank was financially illiterate. Poilievre has also pitched Canada as a global cryptocurrency leader, proposed banning a government version, and has sold Bitcoin as a way to opt out of inflation.
It truly is a Trumpian performance -- loud on volume and high on ignorance:
Economists look at Poilievre the way a plumber would look at your plan to build a cardboard toilet: befuddlement, rising to annoyance. Bitcoin as a watchword for sound money is more or less the gold standard rebranded, and former Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz has already noted that a fixed money standard historically raises the risk of deflation and depressions.
Maybe you could view Poilievre’s Bitcoin pitch simply as the broader trend of hawking crypto: buy Bitcoin, make lots of money, opt out of inflation, the dream. He’s like Matt Damon telling people that fortune favours the brave so he can afford a new boat or something.
But Bitcoin is down 50 per cent since November as part of a greater cryptocurrency slump, and one estimate had 40 per cent of its holders as being underwater. It might go up again. But it’s not stable.
His attacks on the Bank of Canada are similarly reckless. He wants the Bank to focus on keeping inflation as low as possible, while knowingly pushing lines of attack that could undermine its ability to do so. Expectations of inflation affect wage expectations, which affect prices, and if the market doesn’t think the Bank of Canada is serious about bringing down inflation, inflation doesn’t slow.
Really, the simplest throughline to Poilievre’s bit is that if your goal is to hammer freedom to an audience that found wearing masks was an imposition, that vaccines were a conspiracy rather than a collective victory, and that are angry or confused by what’s happening with the world, then Bitcoin is just another aspirational buzzword that signifies the world doesn’t have to work the way you’re told it does. Poilievre has been pumping conspiratorial theories about gatekeepers for much of the pandemic; He’s still doing it. He’ll say just about anything, and that opens the door to all kinds of conspiracies, all kinds of anger, all kinds of extremism.
These days, morons get a lot of press coverage.
Image: CBC
12 comments:
I just wrote on the same topic, Owen. I think it would be fair to say we both look upon Poilievre with dismay and disgust. It is to be hoped that the majority of Canadians feel the same way.
Bitcoin..a wonderment! Do Canadians not know about the Canadian founder of Bitcoin? Did the founder of Bitcoin abscond with all the money and orchestrate his own death? That needs to be brought to everyone’s attention again especially the Conservatives it seems. Anyong
Best quote I heard today although I don't usually abide by Charles Adler,
"Pledging to fire the Governor of the Bank of Canada-the policy equivalent of launching your campaign on a Jet Ski".
I just read your piece, Lorne. It seems we both turned to Bruce Arthur this morning. I agree. It's not the Canada I grew up in. And it's not the Canada I want to see in the future.
That bit of background should tell us something about Mr. Poilievre, Anyong.
Jetskiing is a good analogy, zoombats. Poilievre seems to want to quickly leave everyone behind.
'cardboard toilet'
A rather brilliant phrase (in an otherwise predictable piece that the media keeps dishing out around Lil'PP).
Sounds a lot like the cul-de-sac humanity has created and lives in.
I thought the quote was more of a comparison with Stockwell Day and his leadership. Both analogies are good though
It was no accident that the party removed the word "progressive" from its moniker, PoV.
My wife and I still have our five free BCRIC shares issued to us in 1979 by the the B.C. Social Credit government. I wonder how much I will be able to flog them to Poilievre's supporters for.
mr perfect
Day's spirit still haunts the party, zombats -- just as Stephen Harper's ghost is also there, alive and well.
Good question, perfect. Time has passed. But some things don't change much.
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