Back in June 2003,
Canada's Stephen Harper wrote an essay on Canada as he saw it as leader of the
very short-lived Canadian Alliance Party. This essay was posted on the
Christian Coalition International (Canada) website, a conservative religious
organization that had a strong anti-gay stance. This glimpse into the
mind of Mr. Harper provides Canadian voters with a true, unvarnished, not quite
ready for primetime vision of our current Prime Minister and helps us to better
understand his core beliefs. For my readers from the United States, I appreciate your patience with these postings about Canada, however, with Canada entering yet another election season, there are some points that I feel that I need to make.
As a bit of background,
Mr. Harper attends a Christian
and Missionary Alliance Church, a relatively small Protestant
evangelical and fundamentalist denomination that has approximately 440 churches
across Canada, many of them in the four western provinces. They prioritize
world evangelism through their missions programs and have a
strong belief in the inerrancy of scripture and the imminent return of Jesus
Christ.
Now, let's take a look at
a few key paragraphs from Mr. Harper's 2003 essay. These paragraphs
follow a brief discussion about a potential merger between the Progressive
Conservative Party under the leadership of Peter MacKay and the Canadian
Alliance (officially the Canadian Reform Conservative Alliance) under Stephen
Harper, a merger that took place in December 2003:
"What is the “conservative coalition” of ideas? Actually,
conservatism and conservative parties, as we’ve known them over the decades,
have always been coalitions. Though these coalitions are complex and
continually shifting, two distinctive elements have long been identifiable.
"Ted Byfield
labelled these factions “neo-con” and “theo-con.” More commonly, they are known
simply as economic conservatives and social conservatives. Properly speaking,
they are called classical or enlightenment liberalism and classical or Burkean
conservatism.
The one
called “economic conservatism” does indeed come from classical liberalism. Its
primary value is individual freedom, and to that end it stresses private
enterprise, free trade, religious toleration, limited government and the rule
of law.
The other
philosophy is Burkean conservatism. Its primary value is social order. It
stresses respect for customs and traditions (religious traditions above all),
voluntary association, and personal self-restraint reinforced by moral and
legal sanctions on behaviour.
The essence
of this conservatism is, according to Russell Kirk, “the preservation of the
ancient moral traditions of humanity. Conservatives respect the wisdom of their
ancestors: they are dubious of wholesale alteration. They think society is a
spiritual reality, possessing an eternal life but a delicate constitution: it
cannot be scrapped and recast as if it were a machine.”
In the 19th
century, these two political philosophies, classical liberalism and Burkean
conservatism, formed the basis for distinct political parties that opposed one
another. On the one side was a liberal party in the classical sense –
rationalist, anticlerical but not anti-religious, free-trading, often
republican and usually internationalist. On the other side was an older
conservative party – traditionalist, explicitly or implicitly denominational,
economically protectionist, usually monarchist, and nationalistic.
In the 20th
century, these opposing forces came together as a result of two different
forces: resistance to a common enemy, and commitment to ideas widely shared.
The common
enemy was the rise of radical socialism in its various forms. In this
context, Burkean conservatives and classical liberals discovered a commitment
to a core of common ideas. Both groups favoured private property, small
government and reliance on civil society rather than the state to resolve
social dilemmas and to create social process. Domestically, both groups
resisted those who stood for public ownership, government interventionism,
egalitarian redistribution and state sponsorship of secular humanist values.
Internationally, they stood unequivocally against external enemies – fascism,
communism and socialist totalitarianism in all its forms...." (my bold)
Mr. Harper
goes on to explain how conservatives need to respond to the new challenges that
the world offers in the post-Cold War era since, according to him,
"socialism is dead".
"The
real enemy is no longer socialism. Socialism as a true economic program and
motivating faith is dead. Yes, there are still lots of statist economic
policies and people dependent on big government. But the modern left-liberal
economic philosophy has become corporatism. Corporatism is the use of private
ownership and markets for state-directed objectives. Its tools are
subsidization, public/private partnerships and state investment funds. It is
often bad policy, but it is less clearly different from conventional
conservative economics than any genuine socialism.
The real
challenge is therefore not economic, but the social agenda of the modern Left.
Its system of moral relativism, moral neutrality and moral equivalency is
beginning to dominate its intellectual debate and public-policy objectives.
The
clearest recent evidence of this phenomenon is seen in international affairs in
the emerging post-Cold-War world – most obviously in the response of modern
liberals to the war on terrorism. There is no doubt about the technical
capacity of our society to fight this war. What is evident is the lack of
desire of the modern liberals to fight, and even more, the striking hope on the
Left that we actually lose.
You can see
this if you pay close attention to the response to the war in Iraq from our own
federal Liberals and their cheerleaders in the media and the universities. They
argue one day that there are no weapons of mass destruction, yet warn that such
weapons might be used. They tell us the war was immoral, then moral but
impractical, then practical but unjustified. They argue simultaneously that the
war can’t be won, that it is too easy for the coalition to win and that victory
cannot be sustained anyway. Most striking was their obvious glumness at the
fall of Baghdad. But even previous to that were the dark suggestions on the
anniversary of September 11 (hinted at even by our own prime minister) that “we
deserved it.”
This is
particularly striking given the nature of the enemy here, the bin Ladens and
the Husseins, individuals who embody in the extreme everything the Left
purports to oppose – fundamentalism, fascistic nationalism, misogyny,
bigotry..."
Mr.
Harper's statement that the political Left actually hopes to lose the war on
terrorism is quite striking and goes a long way to explaining his government's
introduction of Bill C-51 in the latest Parliament. His views on backing the United States in Iraq
were well known as we can see in this video clip from 2003 showing a much younger looking Stephen
Harper:
And,
despite the fact that history has shown that American meddling in Iraq has led
to the creation of a geopolitical vacuum that has fostered the development of
ISIS, Mr. Harper still can't seem to get enough of Middle East politicking.
Let's close with this
paragraph that completely sums up Mr. Harper's core beliefs:
"Conservatives
need to reassess our understanding of the modern Left. It has moved beyond old
socialistic morality or even moral relativism to something much darker. It has
become a moral nihilism – the rejection of any tradition or convention of
morality, a post-Marxism with deep resentments, even hatreds of the norms of
free and democratic western civilization."
That is quite a statement and makes it quite clear why Mr. Harper seems unable to play well with Premiers Wynne and Notley.
Keeping in
mind that Mr. Harper and his policies appear, in general, to be appealing to
his evangelical base, it is important to remember than only 12 percent of Canadians identify as
evangelical. This would suggest that the current agenda of the CPC
represents a relatively small fraction of all Canadians but a significant
portion of the 61.1 percent of voters who actually took the
time to pick up a stubby pencil and mark an "X", 39.6 percent of whom picked the local
candidate from the Conservative Party of Canada as their representative in
Ottawa. This means that the Parliamentary process is being driven by 24.2
percent of Canadians, a significant number who share Mr. Harper's religious leanings, which can hardly be termed a
"majority" in any sense of the word.
The clip from '03 was also read by Austra;ian PM Howard, and so who wrote it? I'd believe Republican Party handlers over the monastic reflection of Moral Warriors at the Nat'l Citiz Coal'n. It's Realpolitic and power for itself as shown by actions, not words.True Believer? Toronto style Certainty? Was he spoiled? Who owns him, baby? Thanks for your work
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