Unite The Left

Posted in Canadian Politics, Politics on December 5th, 2008 by SlimDude

A Liberal-New Democrat coalition with confidence motion support from the Bloc, should they manage to survive, ought to give respective party elders pause for thought to the idea of joining forces in a more permanent fashion. After all, if they can work together then why not work together. The NDP will never form a government in Canada. Jack gave it his best in the latest campaign and didn’t overwhelm. Too, the Liberals can’t hope to secure anything but a weak minority and even that appears to be a lost cause. Here’s why I think they should unite.

The right has united. And they seem to have avoided serious cracks in the resulting mixture. Even together they only muster support from a third of those who bother to vote. But the Liberals and the NDP split the remainder of what is left after the Bloc takes their share of seats in Quebec.  So neither can raise enough support to successfully counter the Conservatives.

If the Liberals united with the NDP they could draw upon the vision of social-democrat dreamers in the New Democrats and temper that with the conservative economists in the Liberal fold. The Liberals after all, have historically been the best stewards of the Canadian economy. New Democrats have traditionally embraced the needs of citizens. We would not have our cherished universal health care without New Democrats.  Granted, there would likely be some right-leaning Liberals who would defect to the Conservatives, in the event of such a merger. But that would be countered by some pickup from the Bloc, and possibly the Green Party.

What would you call the new party? You can’t use the word Liberal. That brand is sufficiently tarnished. This is especially so in Quebec and Alberta. But Liberals outnumber New Democrats and besides, New New Democrats just sounds stupid. I’d like to suggest The Democratic Party of Canada as a name for the new party. There just so happens to be a new and very popular center-left president of our neighbour to the south and he hails from a Democratic party. And it would be very difficult for a Conservative to call Democratic Party members undemocratic.

What surprised me most in the reaction of Canadians to the recent turmoil in the House of Commons is the expressed dismay over Harper’s bullying and the support for a cooperative effort between the Liberals and NDP. Though that support was clearly qualified by a rejection of any “old guard” leadership of said coalition. Canadians want a new center-left government and presented with such an alternative, many who have chosen to abstain from voting would show up at the polls. Uniting the New Democrats and the Liberals under a new banner, with a new constitution and modern voting policies, one vote per member, I truly believe would be embraced by Canadians across the country.

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