Friday, August 7, 2009

Where are the new ideas?

One of the biggest problems I see with the current version of the LPC is its continuing failure to highlight what it would do differently than the Conservatives. I've often heard it said that those in opposition have a duty to oppose the government's agenda. That isn't enough, though; they should be articulating their vision to the public and providing suggestions to make improvements. It makes me wonder what they're waiting for, which is very likely just the opportunity to implement their own agenda on their own terms.

Take this recent press release from their website in regards to unemployment.

Failed Conservative infrastructure plan to blame for job losses: Liberals

OTTAWA - The bad fruits of an overly partisan and ineffective approach to infrastructure stimulus spending by the Harper Conservatives are clear in the latest unemployment numbers from Statistics Canada, Liberal Infrastructure Critic Gerard Kennedy said today.

Job losses in construction would be much less severe if Conservatives were handling infrastructure spending properly, Kennedy charged. Construction sector employment decreased by 18,000 in July, bringing total construction job losses since October to 120,000. Over 80,000 construction jobs have been lost since the budget promised help.

“Sadly, the Conservatives are making the recession much worse than it needs to be,” said Mr. Kennedy. "Mr. Harper has the gall to tell unemployed workers and their families that new jobs are ’underway’, knowing full well they aren't."

Parliament authorized $11 billion in new infrastructure spending to create 100,000 jobs but the Conservatives have failed to produce anything but negative numbers. The Conservatives rejected the direction of Parliament and the consensus of municipalities and the construction industry alike and instead chose a delay ridden, partisan approach.

As a result, only 55 percent of the Infrastructure Stimulus Fund has been pledged to date, and a very small amount has created jobs. The construction season has been lost in many parts of the country with no funds flowing in Quebec, 63 percent of Nova Scotia’s funding has yet to be announced and 75 percent of the funding isn’t even promised yet in BC.

In the Township of North Glengarry, Ontario the Alexandria Water System Upgrade won’t be able to go to tender until January with construction starting next spring. A similar situation exists for the Archives expansion in the County of Simcoe, Ontario where no tenders have been released and construction isn’t expected to start until spring 2010. For the Fire Hall Construction project in Gander, Newfoundland, the municipality has released a tender which has not yet closed and construction isn’t expected to begin until September.

"Families are feeling pain and hardship simply because Mr. Harper and his government are in a bubble and just don't get it,” Mr. Kennedy added. "People need jobs and a government that cares, not photo ops."

Naturally, there is to be expected a certain degree of partisan rhetoric this being politics and all. The trouble for the LPC, especially coming from someone that I would think they are trying to convince to vote for them, is that they propose no solutions. When I look at these kinds of press releases I don't see anything but whining and complaining. You know what, Liberals? I get that you don't like these policies, I really do. So why the hell aren't you telling me what you'd do differently? Why do your keen minds at party HQ think that you need to wait for an election writ to start letting Canadians know how you would run the country? Isn't this about how best to serve Canadians in general?

To be fair, all politicians do this far too much and therein lies the problem with so much of our current political discourse. We don't talk about ideas, we only tear the other side down. And as in the case with most arguments, each side generally become further entrenched in their own perspective. Is it any wonder why increasing numbers of Canadians are simply tuning out of the political process?

I won't pretend to have all the answers because I know that I don't. What I can do is try to make a meaningful contribution to the health of the democracy that I believe in. I, for example, try to teach my students how to look at multiple sides of an issue so that they can make an informed decision about what they believe. I try to foster discussion and debate that doesn't simply result in name-calling and slander, which admittedly is tough to do. I try to highlight how the rising generation can actually contribute to the form of government and make it work for them. All lofty goals but very worthwhile.

I think that all of our politicians would do well to tone down the rhetoric just a tad. I'll be the first to admit that I don't like enough of the policies of the LPC, let alone the NDP or Greens, to justify my voting for them. However, if they want to earn my vote, they need to start talking about real ideas and how they would take advantage of them instead of just pointing fingers and saying how wrong the other side is.

3 comments:

treb said...

I would say only the opposition need to tone down the rhetoric.Conservatives are not cowards like the opposition are.If a coward yells names at a Conservative from the back of the crowd and then the crowd parts and the Conservative gives the coward a good beating,is that rhetoric or just not taking Opposition bull-shit anymore.And i am 68 but there is not a GD Liberal that lies to my face.Only the GD cowardly MSM and opposition yell names from the back of the crowd,but as you know the MSM are getting their beating,by going bankrupt and the opposition will get theirs come election time.Cowards always end up getting a well deserved beating and thats not rhetoric.

wilson said...

Liberals are grasping at straws, there is no need for a temporary fix of a temporary problem.
The recent job loses are explained very well in this article, making the Libs attacks really really out of touch with reality: a rainy month for tourism and construction

''Looking across the country, the numbers look like this: of the 44,500 lost jobs, nearly all were in the hotel and restaurant industry, down by 22,200, and construction, down by 17,800.
In the hotel and restaurant industry, most of the downturn was in Quebec.
In construction, another industry influenced by weather, nearly all the decline was in Ontario, which also suffered an exceptionally rainy July.''

http://www.montrealgazette.com/business/fp/gloom+passing+cloud/1872941/story.html

Russell said...

As a left-leaning individual, I have to agree that it's frustrating to see the Liberals not having clear policy ideas. At this point, from my perspective, one would vote for the Liberals only to oppose the Conservatives, not because of any particularly brilliant Liberal policy proposals. That obviously shouldn't be the case. If there were an election today, I don't know who I'd vote for simply because I do not see any party as capable of forming a viable government.

Which leaves me with voting for the best candidate in my riding which, I suppose, I should be doing anyways.