How to Fix Canada's Political Parties: The Conservatives

In the first of a three-part series, six conservative thinkers suggest one idea each for how the Conservative Party can break Canada's political gridlock and reengage the electorate. Stay tuned for a look at the NDP tomorrow and the Liberals on Thursday.

Illustration special to The Mark, by Ryan James Terry.

number of articles in series
Balance the Books

Balance the Books

Description image by Tasha Kheiriddin Columnist; author; member of National Post editorial board.
  • First Posted: Jun 08 2010 07:37 AM
  • Updated: 8 days ago

The Tories may be thriving despite recent controversies, but they need to deal with the burgeoning national debt.

After a run of polls giving the federal Conservatives as much as a ten point lead over the Liberals, it appears that the Tories have finally been knocked off their perch. Public outrage over the costs of the G8/G20 summit has boosted Liberal fortunes and sent a clear message to the government: big spending is not acceptable in a climate of economic restraint.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper isn’t the only politician feeling the heat on this issue: as world leaders prepare to convene in Toronto, they are facing growing pressure to rein in spending and balance the books. At the same time, they must contend with angry voters who don’t want to see cuts in social services and entitlements. But the Greek debt crisis has sounded the alarm bell: clean house, before it’s too late. While Canada’s books are in better shape than those of our European friends, our burgeoning debt could mean major problems for the Conservatives if they fail to take action soon.

According to economists Niels Veldhuis and Charles Lammam of the Fraser Institute, by 2014-15, federal spending will be $30.6 billion, 11.4 per cent higher than it is today. To finance this increase, the Conservatives plan to run deficits totalling $104.6 billion for the next five years. This will bring our national debt to the record level of $622.1 billion by 2014-15, more than negating all reductions made by the previous Liberal administrations of Jean Chretien and Paul Martin.

In February, Kevin Page, the parliamentary budget officer, also sounded alarm bells on the deficit and debt. He criticized the government for relying on overly optimistic growth projections and for ignoring the looming demographic crunch presented by Canada’s aging population. While the economy has rebounded beyond expectations, to the tune of 1.2 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2009, our recovery is still fragile, as external forces such as the Greek debt crisis continue to negatively impact economies worldwide.

Unless the Conservatives take serious action to rein in spending and balance the books, they risk compromising not only Canada’s economic wellbeing, but also their longer-term re-election prospects. By running large deficits for the next five years, they will all but guarantee the eventual need for higher taxes, a sure-fire vote-killer – and job-killer. An uptick in the unemployment rate, or worse yet, another recession, would certainly sour their standing at the polls.

So if the Tories need any advice, it is this: cut spending, eliminate the deficit, and balance the books now, as opposed to five years from now. From both an economic and an election standpoint, it would be smart politics.

...

Comments

LATEST NEWS

Latino Employment in U.S. Up To Pre-Recession Levels

Half of net new jobs in the U.S. since 2...

India Completes First Polio-Free Year

Education programs geared toward dispell...

PETA Lawsuit Names Five Orcas as Plaintiffs

Do we really want the ocean's smartest p...

Santorum Sweeps Minnesota, Colorado, Missouri

The Republican race is wide open once ag...

Last First World War Veteran Dies

Florence Green, 1901-2012....

Wal-Mart vs. Target, Canadian Version

Wal-Mart expansion signals a renewed rac...

Iran Bans Simpsons Toys

But Superman and Spider-Man are fine bec...

Chilling Video of Homs Emerges as Syrian Shelling Ramps Up

Hundreds of civilians in the seat of the...

760 Million-Year-Old Sponges Were World's First Animals

A new discovery puts the date of the fir...

Celine Dion's Husband Buys Schwartz's Deli

Thousands of Montrealers now forced to d...

Poll Suggests Obama Has Clear Edge over Romney

Obama's approval ratings might not be to...

play

FEATURED VIDEO

This is apparently what news anchors (at least cool ones) do during commercial breaks.  Reminiscent of the coordinated dance routines our own news editor Mike Barber performs after a few beers.

The Life of a News Anchor: Better Than You Thought

This is apparently what news anchors (at least cool ones) do during commercial breaks. Reminiscent of the coordinated dance routines our own news editor Mike Barber performs after a few beers.