Sunday, January 08, 2023

Setting Fires

For decades now, the Conservative Party of Canada has been taking its cue from Republicans south of the border. And the recent battle in the House of Representatives confirms that they are on a path to burn everything down. Max Fawcett writes that Pierre Poilievre, like his southern cousins, is a "political arsonist:"

Poilievre says his goal is “turning hurt into hope.” But if his attempt to channel Barack Obama feels just a bit off, that’s because he’s personally responsible for much of the anger he claims to be worried about. After all, he’s the one who keeps telling Canadians their country feels “broken” — and that all of their woes are directly attributable to one source.

His promise to turn the hurt he’s cultivated into hope is a bit like an arsonist trying to put out the fire they started. Poilievre has been starting political fires all across the country over the last year, whether it’s stirring up anger in Vancouver over drug policy, frustration in Alberta about federal climate policies, or discontent among vaccine-skeptical protesters in Ottawa.

Former Conservative leader Erin O'Toole recently warned his colleagues about the danger of starting fires:

In a year-end blog post, Erin O’Toole criticized the party’s embrace of the far-right elements that new leader Pierre Poilievre has repeatedly cozied up to. Notably, he called out the “F*ck Trudeau” flags that have become a common sight whenever convoy-curious conservatives gather in groups.

“These flags and the hyper-aggressive rhetoric that often accompanies them are slowly normalizing rage and damaging our democracy,” O’Toole wrote. “Since so many people that display the flags claim to be conservative, this might also be an appropriate time to tell them that these flags are the very antithesis of what it means to be conservative.”

But Poilievre is hell-bent on starting fires:

His willingness to blame the prime minister for almost anything was on display in a video he posted a few days ago when he shared the story of “Mustafa”, a Calgary man he apparently met in the Ottawa airport who was looking to get his passport renewed. According to Poilievre, “Mustafa” had applied 10 months ago, but still hadn’t received it — and his wedding in Cuba was supposed to happen the previous day. “They’re all down there in Cuba waiting for him to come down and get married, and he can’t get a passport. He applied 10 months earlier. This is how everything operates with Justin Trudeau.”

But as many people pointed out in the comments to his post, that isn’t actually how it operates. Much of the backlog in passport applications has been eliminated, and hundreds of people pointed out that they’d had their own applications processed in a matter of days or weeks. Meanwhile, if Mustafa was really in such dire straits, he could have simply gone to the Calgary passport office and requested the urgent or express delivery option rather than boarding a flight to Ottawa. For the leader of a party that claims to believe in personal responsibility, this is some pretty thin gruel.

 Perhaps Canadians are not as dull-witted as the Americans:

Canadians seem to be taking notice. The most recent Angus Reid Institute poll showed more than half of Canadians (54 per cent) have a negative view of Poilievre, while only one-in-three like what he’s offering. “These levels of unfavourable sentiment are much higher than those of previous leaders Andrew Scheer, Erin O’Toole, and Stephen Harper at the beginning of their own leadership ventures.”

Let's hope that's the case.

Image: Fire Rescue 1


6 comments:

Lorne said...

I fancy that Canadians are more discerning thinkers than our American counterparts, Owen. I was saying to my wife the other day that I doubt very much that the debacle of Kevin McCarthy giving up so much power to sate his thirst for the Speaker's chair would be viewed favourably if one of our politicos acted so shamelessly and transparently. I hope I'm right.

Owen Gray said...

I hope you are, too, Lorne. It seems to me that one of our best qualities is that we refuse to put our politicians on pedestals. The Royal Canadian Air Farce was popular because it insisted on the fallibility of all our politicians.

lungta said...

It works.
Cultivate a feeling, real or imaginary, of victimhood. Identify a source, real or imaginary, and crusade against it.
A rich person will support someone who will avenge their poverty.
Free people will rally to get their freedom back if you convince them it is missing.
Inconvenienced people will blame others for their ineptitude with false empathy and someone to blame.
It becomes a multigenerational cross to carry and a default setting for any perceived slight.
And once in place no historical or logical evidence will dislodge it. It is the leverage of our times. It is Alberta in a nutshell.
But it is also all those other sacred cow victim groups that you just can't confront with any balanced view of history or truth.
So the principle is sound.
Good for us 'lil pp but for his cleverness is almost the complete collection of humanly distasteful attributes. Though at one point, it is said, we did take an apple we didn't need from a snake who said we were victims.
Fun times.

Owen Gray said...

As Pogo used to say, lungta, we have met the enemy and it is us.

Anonymous said...

Canadians don't like liars, and Poilievre is a habitual one. The Mustafa from Calgary story is an obvious nose stretcher. Who the hell walks up to the leader of the opposition in an airport and starts yammering about being so incompetent that he's traveling to Ottawa for services he could get in Calgary? Foreigners need a valid passport even to book a wedding in Cuba, so who believes that a woman would take off for a Cuban wedding knowing that her fiance doesn't have a passport?

But PP gets away with this stuff because the media don't follow up. Next time PP talks to the media I doubt any of them will ask him about Mustafa. The whole story just gets shoved down the memory hole, and everyone pretends that PP isn't a barefaced liar. This is how the media is complicit in undermining democratic accountability.

Cap

Owen Gray said...

We have an immediate and painful example of what happens to a country that elects a pathological liar, Cap.