Monday Apr. 28, 2008   BACK | NEXT

Elections and Rcmp
by
Angelo Persichilli
THE HILL TIMES

Pundits in Ottawa and at Queen's Park have been wondering why Canada's Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, has been lately so thoroughly attacking Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and his policies. Some are saying that the attack was coordinated with Prime Minister Stephen Harper who is tired of the continuing attacks against his fiscal policies. But others believe that Flaherty's high-profile challenges to the Ontario government has more to do with his interest in provincial politics and the internal dispute in the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario than his own federal government.

Recall that Flaherty was defeated by the present leader of the Ontario Conservatives, John Tory, and has never been seen as one of Tory's supporters. Is it possible that he's interested in returning to provincial politics if Tory will give up the leadership?

Apparently, Flaherty has no intention of giving up his federal job, but his wife, Christine Elliott, who is currently representing the provincial riding of Whitby-Ajax, Ont., for the Conservatives, might be interested in the leadership in case Tory decides to resign.

The change in Flaherty's relationship has been swift, compared to the excellent one he had with the Ontario Liberals during last October's election. Specifically, Flaherty had an excellent relationship with former Ontario finance minister Greg Sorbara.

So I asked McGuinty's former right-hand man the reason for the change of tactics. "I think there is a political agenda here. I think it has to do with Mr. Flaherty trying to attribute the problems in the Ontario economy to things that are taking place in the Ontario government," says Sorbara. But the former minister is convinced that "it is a strategy that wouldn't work because there is not much credibility in what he has been preaching around the country lately."

Asked why there's a change of heart only now, after the provincial election, Sorbara says that, "we are on the edge of a federal election perhaps, even if it doesn't come, I believe, until September. One thing we know for sure about is that they are always preparing the environment for an election. That's why we have seen the negative campaign against Stéphane Dion for so long."

According to Sorbara, because they don't know when the election is coming, "they do as much preliminary work as possible and I believe that this is a specific strategy to try to negate any criticism that will come in that campaign about how Harper and Flaherty have mismanaged the economy, at least in central Canada. Jim and I [got] along very well. I don't consider that he is trying to destabilize the Ontario economy. But, the fact is that the kind of activities he is engaging in could have the effect to destabilize the economic activity in Ontario. And that is unprecedented for the federal minister to engage in activities that can weaken a province or a region in Canada. I've never seen that before and I hope I will never see that again."

But how does Sorbara characterize his excellent relationship during the provincial election, when rumours of a federal election were already out there? "During the provincial election, I'm not sure that Mr. Flaherty was particularly interested in promoting the forces of Mr. Tory, with whom he had contested the leadership of the provincial party. So I'm not surprised that he has waited until now to engage with what is pure politics, but not much substance."

Sorbara is convinced that "he has been engaged in a political exercise. I did the job long enough to know that when you are dealing with substance you evaluate the positive and you try to address the negative and try to strengthen the negative. But this is all negative and that's why it's clearly political."

Whether there is any partisan relationship to the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party and the Ontario Liberal Party or the federal election, "there might be a little of all of that in that. But I tend to suspect that it is an anticipation or preparing the territory for a federal election which still could happen before the leaves are out on the trees."

The former minister of finance says he believes that things eventually will be straightened out: "I do have enough confidence in the Harper government and Mr. Flaherty. So I continue to hope that this political sparring won't interfere with the substance, which is getting on [with] financing things like infrastructure, health care and other items we worked very closely on."
 

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