The Economist, an influential British magazine that once deemed Canada "rather
cool" and later dubbed former prime minister Paul Martin as Mister Dithers, is
not amused by Stephen Harper's recent parliamentary tactics.
The weekly newsmagazine's print
edition Thursday published a critical story about the Conservative prime
minister's suspension of Parliament and a scathing editorial under the headline,
"Harper goes prorogue."
"Never mind what his spin doctors
say: Mr. Harper's move looks like naked self interest," says the editorial.
The Economist, which has a
circulation of about 1.4 million - about half in North America, endorsed Harper
in both the 2006 and 2008 elections, but the bloom appears to be off the rose.
The editorial likens Canadian
ministers to hapless former U.S. president Gerald Ford "who could not walk and
chew gum at the same time."
Harper's government, says the
magazine, "cannot apparently cope with Parliament's deliberations while dealing
with the country's economic troubles and the challenge of hosting the Winter
Olympic games."
It suggests, tongue in cheek, that
Harper should simply shut down Parliament altogether until the economy is
running at full throttle.
The editorial opines that Harper may
in fact be correct that "Canadians care more about the luge than the
legislature, but that is surely true only while their decent system of
government is in good hands. They may soon conclude that it isn't."
The Prime Minister's Office declined
to comment directly on The Economist critique.
Spokesman Andrew MacDougall responded
by email that "beginning tomorrow" the prime minister, Finance Minister Jim
Flaherty and others in cabinet will be "meeting with and hearing from Canadian
families, homeowners, workers, business-owners and industries from across the
country."
In a follow-up email, MacDougall
added that "a large part of the success of the government's Economic Action Plan
is attributable to the time the government took to consult and listen to
Canadians."
The massive Economic Action Plan
spending program followed a December 2008 parliamentary crisis and prorogation,
and was delivered last Jan. 27, exactly two days later than this January's
scheduled resumption date for Commons sittings. But instead of returning Jan.
25, Harper has shut down Parliament until Mar. 3.
While various reasons, including the
Feb. 12-28 Winter Games in Vancouver and Whistler, B.C., have been provided by
the government for suspending Parliament until March, no minister or government
representative has explained why it was necessary to pull the plug on Dec. 30, a
month before parliamentary sittings were even scheduled to resume.
Pollsters and pundits have been
furiously debating whether Harper's decision to prorogue is resonating with the
electorate.
A Facebook site against prorogation
had more than 88,000 members as of mid afternoon Thursday, but a number of
pundits have dismissed the numbers as a statistical blip. Facebook sites on far
less weighty issues routinely rack up six-figure membership lists.
The Economist critique may prove
harder to dismiss.
Liberal MP Gerard Kennedy said the
attention by a serious British magazine might just give Canadians a jolt.
"It's not only insider baseball, it's
international disrepute," Kennedy said of the repercussions of the parliamentary
fracas.
"The distinctiveness of Canada as a
good democracy and as a leader on altruistic issues ... we've lost that. We're
losing that root idea of 'Good old Canada."'
Then-prime minister Jean Chretien was
said to be quite chuffed about the magazine's 2003 cover story that featured a
sunglasses wearing moose and called Canada "rather cool," lauding balanced
budgets, same-sex marriage legislation and informed debate about marijuana
decriminalization.
Serious Conservative pundits,
bloggers and even MPs, meanwhile, routinely cited The Economist after it dubbed
Liberal prime minister Martin "Mister Dithers" in February 2005.
"Because of the source, it could be a
hugely damaging story for the prime minister," conservative blogger and author
Adam Daifallah wrote at the time.
"Could this be to Paul Martin what
the fumbled football was to Robert Stanfield? Impossible to know at this point."
Stanfield was the Progressive
Conservative leader whose electoral fortunes plummeted after he was photographed
dropping a football during the 1974 federal campaign.
Martin never shook the "Dithers"
moniker and less than a year later his Liberal government was voted out of
office.