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Rule by the second-place: the coming crisis of legitimacy in federal politics

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau rises during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on June 7.Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press

Then again, maybe the Liberals do need to worry. No doubt there were plenty of sighs of relief in government circles after those four by-elections last month, where the party not only held onto the seats it had but increased its share of the popular vote.

But since then there have been a spate of opinion polls showing the party continuing to slide in public support. Nanos, Abacus, Ipsos, Mainstreet, Angus Reid: all show the Liberals from five to eight percentage points behind the Conservatives. Liberal support remains mired below 30 points, on average – the lowest it has been since they were first elected, in 2015.

The regional numbers (again, taking the average of several recent polls) are still worse. The Liberals have lost the lead they once enjoyed in Ontario. In recent weeks, they have also fallen behind the Bloc in Quebec, while in British Columbia they now stand third, behind both the Conservatives and the NDP. The only region where they remain clearly in the lead is Atlantic Canada.

And yet: as things stand, they are still the party most likely to form a government after the next election. Recall that the Liberals managed to win the last two elections without winning the popular vote. Indeed, the Liberals’ 32.6-per-cent share of the vote in 2021 was not only more than a percentage point less than the Conservatives’, it was the smallest popular mandate any government has received in our history – smaller even than the 33.1-per-cent share the Liberals recorded in 2019.

The Liberal vote is that much more efficiently distributed than the Conservative vote. Even today, the seat-modelling site 338Canada.com has the Liberals projected to win 144 seats – far from a majority, but 10 more than the Conservatives are projected to win and enough, with the support of the NDP, to allow them to carry on governing.

Plus, as they say, campaigns matter. The Liberals have been down before – they entered both the 2015 and 2019 campaigns trailing in the polls – and have come out on top. They may yet do so again.

But here’s what’s new. There is a real chance of them forming a government next time, even if they don’t win the most seats: finishing behind the Conservatives, that is, not only in the popular vote, but also in seats won. We have had plenty of minority governments before, especially in recent times: five of the past seven, 11 of the past 22. But in these at least the governing party won more seats than any other. Welcome to the age, perhaps, of non-plurality government – “defterocracy,” rule by the second-place.

Only once before has this been tried: After the 1925 election, when Liberal prime minister Mackenzie King, beaten by six points in the popular vote and with 15 fewer seats than Arthur Meighen’s Conservatives, insisted on holding onto power, over the reservations of the Governor-General, Lord Byng. And we know how that turned out. Months later, facing defeat on a crucial vote in the House of Commons, King demanded Byng dissolve Parliament and call an election. Byng refused, and asked Meighen to form a government in his place, igniting the crisis known as the King-Byng affair.

Whatever may be thought of his conduct in the latter business, King had a right to try to form a government in the first instance, notwithstanding the election result. Having been confirmed as prime minister by the previous parliament, he remained prime minister until such time as the new parliament voted otherwise. Moreover, as the head of a minority government – the first in Canada’s history, after the inconclusive 1921 election – he had demonstrated an ability to work with the Progressive Party to get legislation passed. It was not unreasonable for him to seek to hold onto power, though it was unprecedented.

But the Trudeau Liberals would be even more well-placed to make the attempt. For where King had governed with the informal co-operation of the Progressives, the Liberals would be able to cite the more formal precedent of their supply-and-confidence agreement with the NDP – itself a first, in federal political history, though not unknown in provincial politics.

Assuming the NDP were game to repeat the arrangement, the Liberals could make a persuasive case that they stood a greater chance of forming a stable government than the Conservatives. Given the special loathing the present Conservative Leader, Pierre Poilievre, excites among progressives, moreover – the sense, often expressed, that he represents something new and dark in Canadian politics – they may well feel entitled, if not morally obliged, to do whatever it takes to keep him away from the reins of power.

So while normally prime ministers do not try to carry on after an election defeat, even where there remains an arithmetic possibility of governing – see Louis St. Laurent in 1957, John Diefenbaker in 1963, Pierre Trudeau in 1979, Paul Martin in 2006 – it would not be entirely surprising to see Justin Trudeau, or his successor, make the attempt. Certainly he (or she) would be entitled to try, not only as the incumbent prime minister, but on the basis of his/her ability to command the support of a majority of the members of Parliament – the only relevant constitutional standard.

That doesn’t mean it wouldn’t cause a ruckus. Indeed, there is every prospect of a deep crisis ensuing. The Liberals could cite constitutional principle all they liked, but in attempting to govern from second place they would still be pushing the limits of popular legitimacy. And if there is one thing we know about the present-day Conservative Party, it is that they delight in pushing limits themselves.

We don’t have to speculate too much about this. We already know what the Conservative position is: The party that wins the most seats governs, period. We know this because the issue has come up before. In the “coalition crisis” of 2008, the Liberals, in coalition with the NDP and with the support of the Bloc, attempted to bring down Stephen Harper’s minority Conservative government and replace it, by leave of the Governor-General, without an election. It was, after all, just two months since the last one.

It was entirely legal, but spectacularly illegitimate – not only because of the involvement of the Bloc, but because of the remarkably weak position of the Liberals, fresh from one of their worst election defeats in history: With just 77 seats, they would not have held a majority within their own coalition. Not to mention that their leader, Stéphane Dion, had just pledged to resign. Public opinion revolted, the prime minister prevailed upon the Governor-General to prorogue Parliament, and the Liberals lost their nerve.

Ever since, the Conservatives have raised the spectre of an “undemocratic” coalition attempting to “overturn the results of an election.” It was a feature of both the 2011 and 2015 election campaigns, in which it was anticipated the Conservatives might win the most seats, but not a majority. The point, one supposes, was to scare wavering centrist voters into the Conservative camp: better a “strong, stable” Conservative majority, they were encouraged to believe, than a “risky, unstable” coalition.

But had the Conservatives in fact won a minority, it was not unreasonable to expect a repeat of the 2008 experience, if not King-Byng: the Conservatives, defeated in the House, refusing to yield power; the Governor-General perhaps this time siding with the opposition; the government appealing “over her head” to public opinion, everyone drawing lines in the sand, with who knows what result.

In the event, the worst-case scenario did not arise: the Conservatives won a majority in 2011, as the Liberals did in 2015. But the issue has not gone away, not least because there appears to be no expert consensus on how such a crisis should be resolved.

The current situation is a little different, in that the Liberals are in power: Should they win fewer seats than the Conservatives in the next election, they would nevertheless be the incumbents. The Tories might put up a fuss, but once the prime minister had met the House and won a vote of confidence, with the help of the NDP, there would seem little they could do.

That doesn’t mean the Conservatives would not try everything in their power to call the government’s legitimacy into doubt, appealing to precedent and popular belief – the government is the party that wins the most seats – over constitutional principle: The government is the party that has the support of a majority of the House.

We should not assume they would not find a sympathetic hearing, at least among partisan Conservatives. It is one thing for Conservatives to accept that they are unlikely to win a majority (they have only managed it five times, after all, in the past 100 years). But to be told that they will not be permitted even to form a minority government may be more than many of them can bear. The danger of this resulting in some sort of crisis is real.

The longer the Liberal-NDP arrangement endures, and the more solidified it becomes, the greater the danger. So long as the Liberals and NDP remain separate and independent parties, with distinct agendas and interests, the Tories could always dream of fluking into a majority: all they needed was the vote to split just right. At the very least, they could hope to form a strong minority government, and bluff their way through, à la Harper in 2006-11. But if the present agreement is a sign of things to come – a more or less permanent Liberal-NDP alliance – that possibility recedes from view.

If the upper limit on the Conservatives’ share of the vote is 35 per cent to 40 per cent; if the remainder (aside from the smaller parties) should henceforth be viewed not as being divided between two parties, but as a single progressive voting bloc, to be configured and reconfigured into formal or informal coalitions in which the only question is how many seats will be Liberal and how many will be NDP; if there is no possibility for the Conservatives to win power, ever, then we all have some thinking to do: the Conservatives, most of all.

 

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Gould calls Poilievre a ‘fraudster’ over his carbon price warning

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OTTAWA – Liberal House leader Karina Gould lambasted Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre as a “fraudster” this morning after he said the federal carbon price is going to cause a “nuclear winter.”

Gould was speaking just before the House of Commons is set to reopen following the summer break.

“What I heard yesterday from Mr. Poilievre was so over the top, so irresponsible, so immature, and something that only a fraudster would do,” she said from Parliament Hill.

On Sunday Poilievre said increasing the carbon price will cause a “nuclear winter,” painting a dystopian picture of people starving and freezing because they can’t afford food or heat due the carbon price.

He said the Liberals’ obsession with carbon pricing is “an existential threat to our economy and our way of life.”

The carbon price currently adds about 17.6 cents to every litre of gasoline, but that cost is offset by carbon rebates mailed to Canadians every three months. The Parliamentary Budget Office provided analysis that showed eight in 10 households receive more from the rebates than they pay in carbon pricing, though the office also warned that long-term economic effects could harm jobs and wage growth.

Gould accused Poilievre of ignoring the rebates, and refusing to tell Canadians how he would make life more affordable while battling climate change. The Liberals have also accused the Conservatives of dismissing the expertise of more than 200 economists who wrote a letter earlier this year describing the carbon price as the least expensive, most efficient way to lower emissions.

Poilievre is pushing for the other opposition parties to vote the government down and trigger what he calls a “carbon tax election.”

The recent decision by the NDP to break its political pact with the government makes an early election more likely, but there does not seem to be an interest from either the Bloc Québécois or the NDP to have it happen immediately.

Poilievre intends to bring a non-confidence motion against the government as early as this week but would likely need both the Bloc and NDP to support it.

Gould said she has no “crystal ball” over when or how often Poilievre might try to bring down the government

“I know that the end of the supply and confidence agreement makes things a bit different, but really all it does is returns us to a normal minority parliament,” she said. “And that means that we will work case-by-case, legislation-by-legislation with whichever party wants to work with us. I have already been in touch with all of the House leaders in the opposition parties and my job now is to make Parliament work for Canadians.”

She also insisted the government has listened to the concerns raised by Canadians, and received the message when the Liberals lost a Toronto byelection in June in seat the party had held since 1997.

“We certainly got the message from Toronto-St. Paul’s and have spent the summer reflecting on what that means and are coming back to Parliament, I think, very clearly focused on ensuring that Canadians are at the centre of everything that we do moving forward,” she said.

The Liberals are bracing, however, for the possibility of another blow Monday night, in a tight race to hold a Montreal seat in a byelection there. Voters in LaSalle—Émard—Verdun are casting ballots today to replace former justice minister David Lametti, who was removed from cabinet in 2023 and resigned as an MP in January.

The Conservatives and NDP are also in a tight race in Elmwood-Transcona, a Winnipeg seat that has mostly been held by the NDP over the last several decades.

There are several key bills making their way through the legislative process, including the online harms act and the NDP-endorsed pharmacare bill, which is currently in the Senate.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 16, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Voters head to the polls for byelections in Montreal and Winnipeg

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OTTAWA – Canadians in two federal ridings are choosing their next member of Parliament today, and political parties are closely watching the results.

Winnipeg’s Elmwood —Transcona seat has been vacant since the NDP’s Daniel Blaikie left federal politics.

The New Democrats are hoping to hold onto the riding and polls suggest the Conservatives are in the running.

The Montreal seat of LaSalle—Émard—Verdun opened up when former justice minister David Lametti left politics.

Polls suggest the race is tight between the Liberal candidate and the Bloc Québécois, but the NDP is also hopeful it can win.

The Conservatives took over a Liberal stronghold seat in another byelection in Toronto earlier this summer, a loss that sent shock waves through the governing party and intensified calls for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to step down as leader.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 16, 2024.

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Next phase of federal foreign interference inquiry to begin today in Ottawa

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OTTAWA – The latest phase of a federal inquiry into foreign interference is set to kick off today with remarks from commissioner Marie-Josée Hogue.

Several weeks of public hearings will focus on the capacity of federal agencies to detect, deter and counter foreign interference.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and key government officials took part in hearings earlier this year as the inquiry explored allegations that Beijing tried to meddle in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections.

Hogue’s interim report, released in early May, said Beijing’s actions did not affect the overall results of the two general elections.

The report said while outcomes in a small number of ridings may have been affected by interference, this cannot be said with certainty.

Trudeau, members of his inner circle and senior security officials are slated to return to the inquiry in coming weeks.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 16, 2024.

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