Straight news on 'fresh' faces
Stockwell Day
National Post
Wednesday, January 07, 2004
Stephen Harper and Peter MacKay have too much "baggage." The new Conservative Party needs a "fresh" face. This "mainstream" media mantra is pervasive and monotonous. It is grudgingly accepted by many simply because it falls from the mouths of the high priests and priestesses of Canada's cloistered newsrooms.
Am I talking like this because I am biased and somewhat jaded from my leadership experience? Of course.
However, the points I raise are valid in spite of my bias. For instance, why are the "baggage" and "fresh face" indictments never applied to my friend (I say that sincerely), Paul Martin?
He reduced the deficit by horrendously slashing the provinces' health care payments and raising taxes over 60 different times. He supported and presided over every Chretien boondoggle and policy disaster.
His team reluctantly and half-heartedly withdraws from serious conflict of interest charges only when exposed. Patronage remained the order of day when he jacked his supporter's salaries almost 30% while freezing public servants. These items, and others, should be enough "baggage" to sink a steamship line.
Yet in spite of his record, and the fact he's been a fixture on the Hill (to his credit) for decades, the media rarely apply the terms "baggage" or the need of a "fresh face" to him.
It is neither reactionary nor paranoid to point out that the vast majority of national media admit to being philosophically liberal and far more to the left than mainstream Canadians. That's not a problem in itself. The problem is their pretense of neutrality. It beguiles the public into thinking they're getting straight news.
What are conservatives to do? First, realize when you can't win the air war, you must get out and fight the ground war. When people get to see leaders like Harper (or MacKay for that matter) without the media filter, they will not see "baggage". They will see "fresh faces." They will see competence and capability. So we must "get out from under the dome" as Ralph Klein says.
Secondly, as nomination and leadership races unfold, we conservatives and reformers absolutely must stifle our historic and destructive impulse to publicly trash one another if our horse doesn't win.
The problem is media love to magnify our infighting and minimize similar Liberal antics. Witness the lack of media magnification when a former deputy prime minister and long-time colleague of the new Prime Minister, trashed him for his alleged anti-woman behaviour.
Had that accusation come against Harper or MacKay, the national bards would have ranted for weeks. That's life, folks. No sense crying about it. But it does make sense to realize what we're up against.
Conservatives can win this battle. But we must have focus, discipline and endurance. And who knows, maybe we'll all get a refreshing break one day when the demand for less "baggage" and more "fresh faces" applies to some of the lead ducks in the national media.
Stockwell Day is the Canadian Alliance MP for Okanagan-Coquihalla, B.C.
http://www.canada.com/national/nationalpost/news/comment/story.html?id=c5b64a59-dcd2-4f06-900e-2a2adedd0133
Stockwell Day
National Post
Wednesday, January 07, 2004
Stephen Harper and Peter MacKay have too much "baggage." The new Conservative Party needs a "fresh" face. This "mainstream" media mantra is pervasive and monotonous. It is grudgingly accepted by many simply because it falls from the mouths of the high priests and priestesses of Canada's cloistered newsrooms.
Am I talking like this because I am biased and somewhat jaded from my leadership experience? Of course.
However, the points I raise are valid in spite of my bias. For instance, why are the "baggage" and "fresh face" indictments never applied to my friend (I say that sincerely), Paul Martin?
He reduced the deficit by horrendously slashing the provinces' health care payments and raising taxes over 60 different times. He supported and presided over every Chretien boondoggle and policy disaster.
His team reluctantly and half-heartedly withdraws from serious conflict of interest charges only when exposed. Patronage remained the order of day when he jacked his supporter's salaries almost 30% while freezing public servants. These items, and others, should be enough "baggage" to sink a steamship line.
Yet in spite of his record, and the fact he's been a fixture on the Hill (to his credit) for decades, the media rarely apply the terms "baggage" or the need of a "fresh face" to him.
It is neither reactionary nor paranoid to point out that the vast majority of national media admit to being philosophically liberal and far more to the left than mainstream Canadians. That's not a problem in itself. The problem is their pretense of neutrality. It beguiles the public into thinking they're getting straight news.
What are conservatives to do? First, realize when you can't win the air war, you must get out and fight the ground war. When people get to see leaders like Harper (or MacKay for that matter) without the media filter, they will not see "baggage". They will see "fresh faces." They will see competence and capability. So we must "get out from under the dome" as Ralph Klein says.
Secondly, as nomination and leadership races unfold, we conservatives and reformers absolutely must stifle our historic and destructive impulse to publicly trash one another if our horse doesn't win.
The problem is media love to magnify our infighting and minimize similar Liberal antics. Witness the lack of media magnification when a former deputy prime minister and long-time colleague of the new Prime Minister, trashed him for his alleged anti-woman behaviour.
Had that accusation come against Harper or MacKay, the national bards would have ranted for weeks. That's life, folks. No sense crying about it. But it does make sense to realize what we're up against.
Conservatives can win this battle. But we must have focus, discipline and endurance. And who knows, maybe we'll all get a refreshing break one day when the demand for less "baggage" and more "fresh faces" applies to some of the lead ducks in the national media.
Stockwell Day is the Canadian Alliance MP for Okanagan-Coquihalla, B.C.
http://www.canada.com/national/nationalpost/news/comment/story.html?id=c5b64a59-dcd2-4f06-900e-2a2adedd0133
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