How Harper’s Philosophy Transformed Canada for the Better

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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The dust has finally settled following the 2015 federal election. A new government has been sworn in. Outgoing Parliamentarians have departed. A leadership race to select the permanent Official Opposition Leader will soon commence. A Speech from the Throne is expected for early December. Ottawa is gradually returning to post-election normalcy.

Yet, after nearly ten years as Prime Minister and more than twenty-five as a Parliamentarian and conservative thought leader, while Stephen Harper’s presence is missing, his ideas and influence endure. There is no question that Mr. Harper has left a durable mark on the Canadian conservative movement and federal public policy. As we will argue, he has changed Canada, and for the better.

Stephen Harper became Prime Minister in 2006 with the most developed and clear views about the role of government vis-à-vis the individual, family, and civil society of any Prime Minister since Pierre Elliott Trudeau. He had spent most of his adult life thinking about these issues and setting out his vision in clear and dispassionate speeches and writings over the course of several years. Indeed, one can argue that Mr. Harper was a conservative intellectual and policy thinker first and a politician second.

While his prime ministership involved the common trade-offs that any successful politician must make to grow and retain democratic support, there is no question that, over time, he slowly and methodically carried out his plan to reshape federal policy from the liberal technocratic consensus that had dictated the federal agenda for the previous decades.

It is worth emphasizing this point. Our argument is not that everything Harper did was directed in the first place by his intellectual view of the role of government vis-à-vis civil society. He was, after all, a politician who needed to win, and frequently did what was necessary to win.

Our argument is that Harper had the most well-developed view of government’s role since Pierre Trudeau and that understanding this worldview is critical to understanding his approach to federal politics and policy.

Harper did not seek power for power’s sake. He had a vision for Canada, a vision steeped in Canadian conservative history going back to Sir John A Macdonald, a vision that deeply informed his politics and his actions as Prime Minister.


get more mad here


How Harper’s Philosophy Transformed Canada for the Better

fun fact: written by a philandering liberalish ex-christy clark aid.
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
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Alberta
That must really bring back all those overwhelming salty emotions from election night. Too bad your man couldn't have balance the budget. He might have stood a chance
 

AnnaG

Hall of Fame Member
Jul 5, 2009
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Like I said, there have been better and worse PMs than Harpy.
And I agree with Cannuck: too bad people are OCD about the smoke and mirrors of budget deficits and surpluses.
 

grumpydigger

Electoral Member
Mar 4, 2009
566
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Kelowna BC
This is a very hard question to answer, because all the time he was prime minister he only had one single majority.
So his so-called philosophy was kept in check because of the minority governments he had.
I honestly cannot think of one good thing that he did.
If a philosophy of fear and control basically outlawing scientists and anyone with any intelligence so he could be king is a philosophy so be it.