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    PM reshaping how Canada is governed...

    "Prime Minister reshaping the way Canada is governed

    Jane Taber, From Saturday's Globe and Mail, Last updated Friday, Dec. 23, 2011 8:48PM EST

    Stephen Harper says the most fun he had in 2011 was winning his majority government. And now Canadians are seeing just how much fun he is having as he pushes through his long-promised agenda of political and justice reforms. Canadians are seeing something else, too – how the Prime Minister is beginning to reshape the way Canada is governed. Those who have worked with Mr. Harper and are close to him are not surprised by his approach to federalism.

    Tom Flanagan, the Prime Minister’s former mentor who is now a political science professor at the University of Calgary, sees Mr. Harper moving away from “executive federalism” – constant negotiations with the provinces – to a “more classical view” of federalism, in which constitutional jurisdictions are respected. The first hint of that came this week with the take-it-or-leave-it health-care accord with the provinces.

    Standing in the living room of 24 Sussex, where he was playing host to reporters at a Christmas reception Monday night just hours after the health deal became public, Mr. Harper was in an engaging mood. He talked about the accord and the style in which it was presented to the provinces, suggesting that he was not one for first ministers’ meetings and long, protracted negotiations.

    In addition, he was adamant that the provinces not be the ones deciding how much the federal government should spend. His deal is generous, by most accounts. The new funding formula guarantees a 6-per-cent annual increase until 2017, then it is tied to the increase in the gross domestic product until 2024. But what the deal doesn’t do is try to impose standards or make provinces accountable for the funding.

    Mr. Harper also spoke about former Liberal prime minister Paul Martin’s marathon session with the premiers that resulted in the 2004 health accord. Mr. Martin had no agenda going in to the meeting, said Mr. Harper, who was dismissive of its results.

    “He’s just not one for those kind of large meetings,” says Doug Finley, who served as the Conservative campaign manager in the 2006 and 2008 elections in which the Tories won their first two governments. Mr. Harper then appointed him to the Senate. “Stephen likes to take things on in a very direct way,” he says. “He’s very focused.”

    So direct that Mr. Harper is putting the onus on the provinces to find a fix for health care. In fact, he told reporters Monday night that he doesn’t know what the answer is. But that’s not his problem. The provinces have expertise and operational responsibility for health and the federal government is nothing but a financial partner, others have pointed out.

    By dealing swiftly with his election promises and now the health-care issue – there were expectations that it would dominate the parliamentary agenda in 2012 – political observers are now looking for what may be the Prime Minister’s “big idea.” Mr. Finley says, however, don’t expect “anything big or sweeping” in 2012. “He’s never really talked about grand visions.”

    Instead, 2012 will be all about dealing with the world economic situation, Mr. Finley says. A large part of next year, he says, will be defined by the budget and the strategic review that is trying to find $4-billion in annual cuts from government spending. “The thing that’s obviously overarching is still the economic situation around the world,” Mr. Finley says. “I think everything of a financial nature ... will be formulated with that very much in mind. He [the Prime Minister] and the caucus are both extraordinarily targeted to a sound fiscal system in Canada.”

    The government’s proposed national security regulator had been part of that plan, Mr. Finley notes. But it was rejected this week by the Supreme Court. The health-care deal fits into the economic strategy by providing financial stability for the provinces and time to plan. And by taking it off the federal table as an issue, it allows Mr. Harper and his Finance Minister, Jim Flaherty, time to focus on the upcoming budget, which will involve what some are describing as “hellish decisions.”

    Prof. Flanagan, meanwhile, notes the Prime Minister “can be bold at times” but “is basically an incremental thinker.” He wonders how far Mr. Harper will take this idea of revamping the way the nation is governed. “Let’s see what happens with equalization,” says Mr. Flanagan, referring to the federal government’s program of making payments to the so-called “have-not” provinces. “This is pretty wonkish stuff, but it could have a major impact over time on the design of the Canadian welfare state.”

    Could this be Mr. Harper’s “big idea?”

    #2
    Tom, you are becoming an even greater SHILL for the CONservatives than usual lately...what gives?

    WE don't care what Harper does, some of us DIDN'T vote for the jerk.

    Comment


      #3
      Wilagro;

      Don't read about our Right Honourable Prime Minister if it bothers you.

      Have a great Christmas Eve... in the greatest; free and democratic country in the world. I am privileged to serve my MP Leon, and;

      Our Right Honourable Prime Minister.

      Cheers!

      God Bless Canada!!

      Merry Christmas!!!

      Comment


        #4
        I'm looking forward to CTV's broadcast of their interview with the Harpers on Boxing Day. I've watched his progress for many years now with admiration. Its not that long ago that the media wrote him off as a hopeless idealogue who would never be able to forge consensus between the various fragmented remains of Conservatism in this country. Then he was too imperious to ever manage a minority government. Now look at him.

        I'm proud to call him my Prime Minister.

        Comment


          #5
          Wilagro, I think TOM is seeking to become a Senator. If he can't get elected maybe he can get appointed?

          Comment


            #6
            So instead Wilagro you are like a spoiled child trying everything you can to go against your parents because they instituted some rules and order for your life to make it better. And yet, still expect Christmas presents.

            Stephen Harper IS our prime minister for the next few years and he has a majority government and will enact the party platform no matter how much you stomp your feet and pout and cry.

            You seem to strike me as the kind of person with so very much in material goods, but your happy bank is almost broke.

            And maybe its just a function of social media how pointlessly upset people can be, steamroller is a good example, but with a majority democratically elected government, that party will do its platform. The border between anarchy and freedom of speech vs respectful honour of our government seem so very blurred today

            So get over it Wilagro. Maybe start helping rather than hindering. Every post doesn't have to be negative and how horrible things are going to be. Its getting a little disturbing.

            Comment


              #7
              I'm Proud to say I Didn't vote for this prime minister.

              Comment


                #8
                Perhaps Wilagro is simply a grumpy old man. Offer him the respect any previous generation deserves and move on. There but for the grace of God go I.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Lottsa german people thought Hitler was
                  a good guy in the early days, when he
                  reformed Germany. Butt not long after
                  his package of reforms went off the
                  rails. Building more prisons and jails,
                  taking over the Courts, rounding up
                  undesirables. Gobermont controls over
                  banking and food supplies.
                  Nationalizing essential services,
                  registering and seizing firearms. While
                  all the time telling the masses, he was
                  doing it for their own good. Building a
                  strong well equiped military machine.
                  Hiel Harper das good guy! Be careful,
                  be very careful aboot the reshaping of
                  Comedia.. Mein Kempf would be good
                  readin fer someaya......

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Tom...Leon Benoit SERVES me and the electors of this constituency at my pleasure. I DO NOT SERVE HIM as he is not my OVERLORD. Perhaps you would like to return to the feudal system...not me.

                    This so-called CONservative party is nothing but the old Reform Party in a new skin. I know of some old-guard federal PCers who can't wait to see this upstart amateur banished to the backwoods from whence he came.

                    Do away with the long gun registry Steve then resign...would be my advice for this PM. He has wasted one piss pot full of money even before he got his "majority"...Gawd help us now that he has one.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Why is it in some people's minds only one
                      party is supposed to govern Canada and one
                      party is supposed to govern our
                      province????

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I for one am proud that I did vote for Harper - for the first time in my lifetime a P.M. that does what he said he would. Nothing but a lot of b/s propaganda ever came out of a LIB or NDP in my time.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          BTW how is Canada doing when compared to those in the E.U.? Or the U.S. for that matter?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            It just a little thing called a resource boom oh and because Banks weren't Allowed to deregulate under Marin.
                            If the harpster would have been in power maybe our banks would have needed a major bailout like our southern friends.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              that should read our bank werent allowed to Deregulate when Martin was in.

                              Comment

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