In the end, it鈥檚 probably just as well for both the Conservative Party and Canadians that leader Andrew Scheer resigned.
Drawing, quartering and hanging might have been all the rage in the Elizabethan era. But it is, to paraphrase a certain prime minister, 2019, and no one gains today by having public political execution preceded by private party dismemberment.
Scheer鈥檚 fate was sealed not so much by the results of October鈥檚 election as by his inability in the few weeks after voting day to back-spin the devastating Liberal front-spin about him 小蓝视频 unfit for the job.
The Trudeau team began that campaign with the release of a video of Scheer arguing against the legalization of same-sex marriage. It was an outrageous assault on the truth, on Scheer鈥檚 privileges as a Member of Parliament and on the freedom of Canadians to peacefully disagree on critical social policy.
The video was almost 15 years old. It showed Scheer in the House of Commons addressing what was 鈥 back then 鈥 highly controversial legislation that a significant percentage of Canadians opposed. In other words, it caught the Saskatchewan MP doing his job.
Neither the Conservatives nor Scheer displayed the remotest capacity to fight back by hammering home the counter message about a Liberal Party in disarray over the SNC-Lavalin scandal, deep fractures within its own cabinet and caucus over the mistreatment of former attorney-general Jody Wilson-Raybould, and the leadership of a prime minister twice found guilty of serious ethical violations.
No. The Conservatives stumbled and staggered through the pre-campaign period 鈥 then walked into a baited trap about Scheer鈥檚 faith-based opposition to abortion. The best defence they could mount was that the leader鈥檚 beliefs were a private matter that he would never impose on Canadians.
That line should have been jettisoned five minutes after it became clear it wasn鈥檛 working. A powerful substitute was at hand. It required only that Scheer say something like:
鈥淭he Liberals keep wanting to talk about what I won鈥檛 do. Let鈥檚 talk about what they did do. They imposed an ideological loyalty test on Canadians through the Canada Summer Jobs program that took money from the pockets of young men and women trying to earn tuition for crucially-needed higher education. They then turned around and assaulted the rule of law by interfering in a legal case that sought to bring corporate plutocrats to account for corrupt involvement with the terrorist Gaddafi family. No wonder they want to talk about what isn鈥檛 going to happen. It helps them hide what they鈥檝e done.鈥
Nothing of the sort passed the Conservative leader鈥檚 lips. Even without it, he still managed to pick up sufficient seats to put his party within next-election striking distance of the Liberals.
The election aftermath, not the actual campaign failures, should go down in history as one of the most futile efforts ever waged by a Canadian political leader simply to hold on to what he鈥檇 already won.
Beyond the relief of 小蓝视频 spared watching a party leader鈥檚 political blood spilled repeatedly during the three-month eternity of inevitable knifings before the Conservatives鈥 spring convention, Canadians should feel genuine concern about the long-term result of elevating Scheer鈥檚 rookie bungling into alleged bone-deep unfitness for the role. The harm done far transcends any ego wounds or sense of personal injustice he might feel at 小蓝视频 forced out.
What has been crushed is the spirit of vivid political dissent.
What has been violated is the democratic entitlement, protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, to peacefully and conscientiously disagree with the fashions of the day while accepting the obligation to govern according to the balance of majority will.
What has been tossed aside is the foundational ideal that parliamentary opposition remains, in our Westminster system, inherently an act of loyalty and so a public good.
What Canadians must hope for now is a successor with both the talent and the tenacity to renew the spirit of dissent, to oppose what merits opposing loyally and well.
Peter Stockland is publisher of and senior writer at the think-tank .
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