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of Covid security any Anglophone democracy attempted. His demonisation of mere political opponents — “the truckers” — and deployment of anti-terrorism laws against them were grotesque.
Justin Trudeau’s agenda went hand in hand with eugenicist euthanasia against the old, poor and weak and reliance upon the slanderous cod history of endorsing pretended genocide and falsified mass graves. In doing so, Trudeau and his Canadian liberals have casually insulted every such real crime the twentieth century offered.
Jon Kay’s piece on the falsification of Canadian history in our April issue should, though, be understood in the context that Trudeau’s Liberal party has been as dominant there as the Tories have been here. Liberals rarely lose on the strategic and society-defining issues of our Canadian future.
, , Canadian Conservatives have found a winner who polls even more handsomely than Starmer does here. The lesson that Poilievre should teach British Conservatives is to build, build, build, to know who your enemies are and do something to counter them.
That a country as vast as Canada has home ownership problems comparable to those that beset the densely-populated UK is astounding. It is a situation that Poilievre, even before he became Tory leader, has credibly promised to address.
By contrast, Britain’s Tories failed to build and now pretend that in the future there will be a mega-city where once there was Cambridge, and other embarrassing fabrications. Canadian Conservatives have addressed their voters’ issues. As Mrs Thatcher would have vulgarly put it : they are intent upon looking after their people.
Poilievre goes further though, fully intending to take an axe to the Canadian “blob” — most noticeably CBC. Canada’s version of the BBC is so transparently parti pris in favour of the Liberal Party that it makes the BBC look fair and detached by comparison. What have Tories at Westminster done about the blob since 2010? Talked then walked, leaving the blob as firmly in control as ever.
government somehow tackle the problems the Tories have taken thirteen years to make worse? Perhaps they could, if they had cleaved to the Blue Labour mantra of Left on economics but Right on social issues.
However, as Sebastian Milbank sets out, there is no serious prospect of Starmer adopting this approach. Indeed, armed with the vast majority that Rishi Sunak is going to hand him, but also without the money Blair in 1997 inherited, idle Labour hands will most likely revert to baleful meddling type.
“By any objective measure” Milbank writes, this has been the most liberal government in British history. The Tory modernisers, “the heirs to Blair” — Cameron, Osborne, Gove — won, and this is the country they have left us: broken, bust and despairingly crying out even for stolid Labour.
There’s a lot of ruin in the country, and more now thanks to this government. Opposing it will be the hard task of the next Tory opposition. ●
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THE CRITIC 3 OCT 2023