The free world has lost its leader

By DAN HANNAN, WASHINGTON EXAMINER

harper1The free world has lost its leader. In the absence of a vigorous American foreign policy, Canada’s Stephen Harper supplied his own. For the better part of a decade, he energetically championed Western interests. He was serious about fighting terrorism, keen on free trade and prepared to deploy proportionate force in defense of freedom.

His defeat in last week’s Canadian general election will be felt far beyond that sparse, chilly country. When other Western leaders fretted about Israel’s 2006 Lebanon war, he gave his full backing to the Jewish state. When others dithered over Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, he led international condemnation. Obliged to meet Vladimir Putin at a summit meeting, he was admirably curt: “I guess I’ll shake your hand, but I have only one thing to say to you: Get out of Ukraine.”

Canada, like most countries, partly defines itself with reference to what it isn’t; but Harper was uncomplicatedly pro-American and pro-British. In his first overseas speech as prime minister, he told a London audience how glad he was that his was a common-law, Anglosphere nation. As a matter of historical fact, this might not seem especially radical; but, my goodness, what a refreshing break from the line taken by previous Canadian leaders, namely that their country was a happy multiculti fusion of First Peoples and Acadians and Vietnamese boat people.

Why did Harper lose so badly? The Canadian Right got its second-lowest share of the vote since 1968, and can’t console itself with the thought that it was beaten by opponents whom it had dragged onto its own ground. Bill Clinton and Tony Blair had to meet their Right-wing rivals half way on many policy issues. But Justin Trudeau, the new Canadian PM, is like a depilated Occupy protester: pro-tax, anti-business, pro-pot, anti-America.
From an outsider’s perspective, it seems mystifying. Canada was the best-performing major economy in the world, the only G7 state to come through the downturn without a downturn. It’s true that the recent drop in commodity prices caused a slowdown, but the big picture remained positive. Taxes were falling more rapidly than at any time in the nation’s history. Crime rates were at a record low. Illegal immigration had been curtailed, with the result that legal immigrants were grateful, patriotic and — unusually — happy to vote for the Right.

It won’t do to argue that Canada is a naturally liberal country. Conrad Black used to speak of his countrymen as “English-speaking Scandinavians.” In fact, both Scandinavia and Canada went through a teenage socialist phase from the late 1960s to the late 1990s, and then snapped out of it.

Until Pierre Trudeau, the new PM’s father, Canadian immigration policy was based on keeping combined provincial and federal taxes below the U.S. equivalent, so as to compensate for the rougher climate. Before the goody-two-shoes, pantywaist, demilitarized Canada of the 1970s, Canadians were a famously tough people. Eisenhower used to remark (in private, obviously) that, man for man, they were the finest soldiers under his command. Harper believed, with justice, that he was returning his countrymen to their traditions.

What, then, was the problem? Put simply, Canadians had tired of their leader. Leftists, naturally, called him a hater, a Tea Partier, an Islamophobe, yada yada. But, more significantly, Tory pundits would remark on his “coldness” and “remoteness.” A typical column in the right-of-center National Post — the newspaper founded by Conrad Black — blamed the defeat on “the nastiness of Tory politics under Harper, the mindless partisanship, the throttling of backbench MPs.”

I’m not sure this is fair. In my scant dealings with Stephen Harper, I found him courteous but shy — a common Canadian combination. But it was widely believed. Not for the first time, a great leader, with immense achievements, stayed on for one election too many. It happened to Australia’s John Howard, even to Britain’s Margaret Thatcher.

October 27, 2015 | 5 Comments »

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5 Comments / 5 Comments

  1. Wondering here if it was Axelrod who was working for Justin or some of the other henchmen. Does anyone here know?

  2. Simply put, Harper did not fit into the new world order. It was often heard: Anyone but Harper” a slogan oft repeated by and funded by obama’s hired thugs. andCronies. It failed to overturn Netanyahu’s Likud victory, but it gained traction by the feeble minded, or mindless Canadians, among whom figured a large segment of narrow minded, self hating Jews. They will know better as time passes, but by then it will be too late. Sadly, besides them, we will all suffer the consequence.

  3. @ dove:

    Alas dove, if Canadian Jews are anything like American Jews, then most of them voted for the pretty face in the nice suit – Israel be dammed!One would think that after 7 years of the Obamanation, they’d think twice before voting for a flowery idealist with zip-zero experience and a muslim lover to boot! One would be dead wrong.

  4. @ Yidvocate:

    I unfortunately know some Canadian Jews that voted for the ‘Red Sunami’. They don’t like having their heart tugged towards Israel.

    Is that the only reason they voted red? I really don’t know because I have been avoiding them. If I hear anything thru the grapevine I will pass it along.

  5. A true statesman and moral compass for the world that will be sorely missed by Canada and the free world at large!