The Rae solution
By Susan Riley, Ottawa Citizen
September 9, 2011
The immediate solution to the leadership vacuum on the Canadian left is blindingly obvious: Bob Rae either rejoins his former party, or leads an NDP-Liberal coalition to victory over Stephen Harper.
It makes perfect sense. The Liberals are a tired, waning party led by one of the most articulate, engaging and experienced politicians in Ottawa. The New Democrats are bursting with new recruits and renewed vigour, but in desperate need of a seasoned, bilingual, likable leader.
And Rae, while thin-skinned at times, can be likable. His mid-day speech to his diminished Liberal caucus a few weeks ago, while missed by the larger world, was a masterpiece. It was delivered with brio, humour, passion and an urgent call for change. And, refreshingly, not from a printed text.
While he made repeated appeals to Liberal ideas - and called for reform of the party "from the roots" - his underlying message was centrist, pragmatic and unlikely to cause alarm among NDP voters.
When he called the Liberal party "a movement", rather than "a family," he was even speaking their language.
His strategy, he told the Liberal gathering, is to challenge Conservatives on their chosen turf, the economy, calling for a focus on growth instead of Harper's "forced march to austerity." Rae would counter Conservative calls for "cuts, cuts, cuts" - particularly dangerous at a time when global economies are contracting - with "jobs, jobs, jobs", he said.
If you closed your eyes, it could have been Layton speaking, minus the self-deprecating humour.
Both leaders were more democrats than socialists - businessfriendly, deficit-wary, respectful of Quebec's nationalist anxieties and driven by a moral compunction to serve the larger good.
They disagreed on the Afghan mission, but it is hard to find other significant differences. As Toronto Star columnist Tom Walkom has written: "Layton played guitar; Rae plays piano." Not an unbridgeable divide.
But, fortunately, Canadian politics has an army of cynics, insiders, anonymous sources and academics quick to point out obstacles to any sensible, innovative proposal. They have already buried the idea of a united, Rae-led left. Of a united left, period.
First, everyone agrees, the idea is preposterous because the two parties have different roots, histories, traditions and favourite bars.
Longtime party loyalists, in both camps, would lose their titles and their jobs - not a trivial concern (to them). A united party would have to decide on a new name, constitution and colour: orange, red, or a purplish blend. Egos would be bruised; sacrifices required.
And everyone knows that political parties don't just disappear, or spring up, overnight - well, except for the federal Progressive Conservatives, the Reform Party, the Greens, the ADQ in Quebec, Wildrose Alliance in Alberta, the Saskatchewan Party and a few others.
Second, Rae, at 63, is too old for the job - a full two years older than the robust Layton was when he died. In fact, it's a wonder the old gent can make it up the stairs of Centre Block, much less tangle with a frisky 50-something like Harper (52) across the Commons aisle.
The NDP would clearly be better off with a relative youngster like Tom Mulcair (57), or Brian Topp (51), at the helm. As for the Liberals, they are again shopping for some still unknown, youthful genius, unencumbered by family responsibilities, or too much actual experience.
Some overnight success, like Harper, or Layton, or Jean Chrétien, or Michael what's-his-name.
Rae, of course, has a mixed reputation as former NDP Ontario premier, but so does Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, as Mike Harris's sidekick, and it hasn't proved careerlimiting for the Irish imp. Besides, that was a long time ago in a different land.
Finally, there is Rae's vow to serve only as interim leader and not contest the permanent Liberal leadership two years hence. Even if he performs brilliantly, even if he moves into the void left by Layton and Gilles Duceppe, even if he restores his (current) party to contention in the polls - well, he made a promise, and the consistency police will be unrelenting.
Yet Sheila Copps, (also unacceptably old, apparently, at 58) doesn't seem too fussed about Rae changing his mind. She's running to be party president after a sevenyear political hiatus. In her view, if Rae can sell his change of heart to Liberals - which shouldn't be hard if he is leading them towards victory - why not?
The punditry would be shocked, of course; we have barely recovered from the scandalous prospect of a coalition government. And who, among us, predicted that the perennial third wheel of Canadian politics, Layton, would become Opposition leader and sweep Quebec?
Undeterred, the guardians of the status quo are speaking again. No Liberal/NDP merger, no career change for Bob Rae. He'll just have to become leader of the united left organically.
Susan Riley writes on national politics. E-mail: sriley.work@gmail.com.
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