I recommend reading Ezra Levant's
latest blog post on the Liberals receiving advice from Ekos pollster Frank Graves on invoking a culture war, and how that advice in congruency with Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff's position and support of the highly controversial NDP private members bill requiring all Supreme Court justices to be bilingual.
Even (former?) Ignatieff strategist,
has commented that if this culture war is the new Liberal strategy, that they shouldn't talk about it publicly.
As the Globe and Mail
reported:
In his advice, Mr. Graves could hardly have been more blunt. “I told them that they should invoke a culture war. Cosmopolitanism versus parochialism, secularism versus moralism, Obama versus Palin, tolerance versus racism and homophobia, democracy versus autocracy. If the cranky old men in Alberta don’t like it, too bad. Go south and vote for Palin.”
Nice. Real nice. If Iggy and the Grits are taking this advice, which it appears they already are, then in my opinion, I think Canadians from coast to coast are really sick and tired of it. I agree with Ezra here in that this culture war strategy will backfire, as Iggy himself, wanted to unite Canadians:
Michael Ignatieff: "A prime minister has one simple job: To keep the country together and not seek polarization...."
So why do you want to polarize then by taking polarizing advice from your own pollster?
Official bilingualism is one of those polarizing issues.
What's my opinion on it? It doesn't work and never has and is costing our country in wasted tax dollars, and in actually dividing the nation more than it unites us. Why? Anytime the government forces culture and language upon another culture, you get backlash, not only against the government, but against the other culture. Quebec separatists can then say, "See! Canadians don't like bilingulism. They don't like French and they don't like Quebec." That's the trap that legitimizes their political existence.
And it appears that Iggy and the Grits are falling into this trap. You watch, with this culture war, the
one the Liberals now appear to be using, they're going for the default federalist vote in Quebec, which also makes core Torontonians happy. It's an old strategy, one that worked for Trudeau and Chretien. But again, you'll recall, that it was under Trudeau (1980) and Chretien (1995) where the separatists got their referendum, reinvigorating the original Canadian culture war, the one between French and English, dividing the country... again.
If Ignatieff understood Canada, he'd know this. But maybe he actually does and doesn't care. If it gets him and the Liberals into power, then that's all that matters, damn the country.