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Passages of 2015: Stephen Harper

Harper began his political career with the national media against him, and that intensified in the campaign that elected Justin Trudeau
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Conservative leader Stephen Harper mocks Liberals' plan to run 'tiny little' $10 billion deficits during last year's election campaign. Latest estimate for the first one to be $20 billion or more.

I first met Stephen Harper when he was running for the Canadian Alliance leadership in 2002.

Speaking to a group of Fraser Valley party members concerned that the party had split over the leadership of Stockwell Day, Harper didnѻýt mince words just because a local reporter had showed up on a Saturday morning. He explained his prediction that no matter who leads the conservative movement started by Preston Manning, the national media would work against it.

ѻýThe press is owned by big-L liberals and staffed by small-L liberals,ѻý Harper said. ѻýPreston was too cerebral; Stock was not cerebral enough. Iѻým not sure where I will be, but the media will always be on the other side.ѻý

Harperѻýs cold war with national media is a theme that runs through his decade as prime minister, peaking in 2015 with the most slanted election coverage Iѻýve ever witnessed. The celebration continues over Justin Trudeauѻýs victory, with the supposedly non-partisan federal bureaucracy cheering along with much of the national media.

Harperѻýs assessment of major newspaper ownership is no longer accurate, except for the Toronto Star. But the dying tradition of owners looking up from their accounting ledgers to endorse a political party continued, with the Postmedia chain and the Globe and Mail pointing out that Trudeauѻýs rash promises didnѻýt add up.

Endorsements were a brief interruption in the media assault on Harperѻýs record. His governmentѻýs plan to welcome 10,000 refugees, unveiled way back in January 2015, was portrayed as heartless and feeble, while Trudeauѻýs 25,000 by Christmas represented the generous character of the true Canada.

As it turns out, the Liberals backed off to a promised 10,000 by the end of 2015, and missed that by 75 per cent. But theyѻýve put out a rash new promise to make it 50,000 at some point in the future, so the mediaѻýs new-found message of sunshine, hope and change continues.

Those modest $10 billion annual deficits that Trudeau promised, and Harper warned against? Borrowing and spending will far exceed that, but weѻýre assured thatѻýs because they were based on inflated Conservative financial forecasts.

In fact, independent private sector forecasts are now the key reference for government budgets at the federal and provincial level. None of them predicted the further slump in energy prices that continued through 2015.

And cooking the books before an election isnѻýt really possible any more, thanks to the establishment of the Parliamentary Budget Office. That was a Harper innovation, along with scheduled elections.

And that Trudeau pledge to raise taxes on the wealthiest Canadians and use the proceeds to finance a tax cut for the middle class? That one didnѻýt add up either. For one thing, wealthy people have a variety of legal ways to reduce their taxable income.

Hereѻýs an actual front-page headline from the Globe and Mail, reporting this unfortunate fact, well after the election: ѻýThe way Liberals gauged response to new tax rate explains gap.ѻý So it was just an understandable oversight, you see.

Trudeauѻýs star turn in Paris, where he pronounced that ѻýCanada is backѻý in the battle to control the worldѻýs weather? The official submission from his bloated delegation to the UN climate meetings was actually the existing , which includes phasing out coal-fired electricity generation.

Harper generally represented a preference for the individual over the state, a concept that at one time was known as ѻýliberalism.ѻý This was illustrated by his preference for parents rather than a nanny state to administer child care.

He advocated free trade, small government and low taxes. Weѻýll see how that legacy survives the new government and its media cheering section.

Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Email: tfletcher@blackpress.ca Twitter: @tomfletcherbc

 





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