NDP Dims Liberal Future
Voters with conservative leanings have consistently accounted for about 35 – 40 % of the vote in Canada. But that has often not been good enough to put conservatives into government as it would in most countries. There has too often been more than one party courting conservative votes. The result is that the Liberals have been able to fairly consistently garner enough votes to win. But at times like this when one only party – the Conservative Party – occupies the territory on the right, it is different. As Harper is showing, and Mulroney before him, the party can then win enough seats to form government. This is likely to be the case for the foreseeable future, because there is little possibility of a right wing party other than the official Conservatives having any electoral presence.
This is a problem for the Liberals. But it is a mistake to think of the Liberal’s problem as simply arising from the successful ‘unite the right’ strategy of Harper and MacKay.
To respond, the Liberals need a consolidation of left of centre voters. Without that, they don’t have much of a chance of winning in the foreseeable future. But they face one clear but difficult obstacle – the presence of the NDP.
Surprisingly, not nearly enough Liberals understand this. Too many think that if they just move to the right they can pull enough votes from the Conservatives. This is the view of Ignatieff, and advisers such as John Manley. They are wrong. There are not enough votes there on a on-going basis. They need to get left leaning votes. But the NDP is simply too successful at attracting the support of left leaning voters for the Liberals to win.
The NDP of late has been fairly consistently drawing the support of about 2.5 million votes this decade. This is a lot of votes – about one-half the number received by the winning Conservatives in the last election and about two thirds of the number received by the Liberals. Now we have an Ipsos Reid poll for Canwest News, released November 20th, that shows the NDP at 19 per cent support and Michael Ignatieff’s Liberals at 24 per cent support. The NDP is creeping closer to the level of Liberal support.
But never mind this recent and alarming poll for the Liberals. The problem runs deeper than one poll. For years the Liberal Party in Canada has been blind to the problem it faces with the NDP. It mistakenly sees the NDP as marginal. It counts on the NDP to continually marginalize itself by playing to the more extreme views of its left wing base, and to thus drive the majority of left leaning voters to the Liberals.
There has been some validity to this. But it is not nearly the problem for the NDP that many Liberals believe. While the NDP leadership has frequently trampled on a fairly attractive set of policies by periodically launching over the top and out of touch tirades against some thing that unsettles the voters that they might otherwise capture, things seem to be changing. Layton and his party are more and more standing for sensible action that speaks to the things that are bothering people. People see their direction as the right direction for the country.
The Liberals seem constitutionally unable to really think this through, partly on account of a false hope that the Conservatives and the NDP will self destruct. That’s not going to happen. The opportunity to form a left coalition was rejected last December by the Ignatieff brain trust, made up mostly of Paul Martin acolytes, largely on the belief that there was no need for a consolidation on the left. They had neither the vision nor the courage to work out a coalition that they could have used to consolidate progressive votes around the leadership of Liberal and NDP heavy hitters, forcing the NDP into either a consolidation under a new party dominated by the Liberals or an election in two years which the Liberals would win. There was an arrogant belief among Liberals like the Martin insiders that they could win without the NDP, and ironically, there was fear by others like John Manley that a coalition would result in an NDP take over of the Liberal Party.
As a result the Liberals missed an opportunity to try to transform left politics in Canada, with perhaps fateful consequences. The numbers make it clear that the Liberals will not likely govern again in the foreseeable future, not because of the popularity of the Conservatives, but because the Liberal leadership has no vision and no plan for addressing the persistent strength of the NDP. Layton and his team are impressing with their cool, careful handling of events. It is they, not the Liberals, who are getting voter respect. With that, NDP support is actually increasing. If an election were held today, the NDP would get at least three quarters of the number of votes that the Liberals would get. That may or may not hold. But the block of votes it commands on a continuing basis is large. And if things keep going as they are, and Ignatieff fails to master Canadian politics, the NDP could easily get as many votes as the Liberals in the next election.
The strength of the NDP is not simply a passing thing. The NDP has a solid command over a large and fairly stable block of voters that will not easily be pried loose. The Liberals are going to have to understand this and figure out what it means for them. If they do not, their hopes to govern again are dim. They will likely be perpetual losers. This will be a monumental failure for a party that has long claimed to have a mastery of Canadian politics.