Rétrospective on the CPC, redux

Nov 04, 2015 21:03

The record of the CPC over the past several years frequently had me scratching my head in puzzlement: so much of what they did seemed ham-fisted, guaranteed to alienate the voters in the middle whom they would need for re-election; and so it proved in the end, with an election showing the clearest marks of strategic voting I have ever seen ( Read more... )

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chickenfeet2003 November 5 2015, 13:07:04 UTC
The Harper base has always been there, in all the industrialised countries. It's the base that Fascism appeals to. Post 1945, for decades, it was political suicide to appeal directly to to that base (see Powell, E) so big C Conservative parties perpetuated a sort of Whiggish politics with a strong element of noblesse oblige. Once it became possible to be (euphemistically) "crudely populist" it, inevitably I think, began to be used. Naturally this happened first in the USA where there was no real folk memory of Fascism but it spread. I think what's interesting is that, unlike the 1930s, this movement has been entirely captured by corporate capitalism so the rhetoric is populist, libertarian and small government but the reality is a massive transfer of wealth and power to corporate interests. The real winners are not small farmers but Monsanto and, especially Serco, G4, Blackwater and the like who make fortunes out of "services" that are still paid for by the taxpayer but are delivered by for profits ( ... )

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dewline November 5 2015, 14:15:09 UTC
I would say, based on observations by Australian friends and acquaintances here, on Facebook, and elsewhere, that Abbott took it much further in several respects Down Under than Harper got away with up here. In particular, I think of the horror stories making their way out of Manus.

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chickenfeet2003 November 5 2015, 14:21:27 UTC
I don't disagree. I'm a fairly close observer of Australian politics and comparisons are tricky, not least because Australian Labour is such a peculiar beast. Abbott could play the race card much more easily than Harper because, frankly, Australian society is much more racist. In other ways there are lots of similarities; from climate change denialism to a weird insistence on the trappings of Monarchism. The main difference, I suppose, is that in Australia it's all too easy for a party to ditch a leader mid term.

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dewline November 5 2015, 14:47:28 UTC
Michael Chong tried to bring Canada into line with Australia with his legislative proposals re: getting a strongly unwanted party leader out of their corner office. I wonder if it was watered down too far.

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