Toronto – Canada’s Conservatives Win coveted Majority

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    Prime Minister Stephen Harper gives the thumbs up after giving his victory speech in Calgary, Alberta, Monday, May 2, 2011.   Harper won his coveted majority government in elections Monday in Canada.  (AP Photo THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld)Toronto – Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper won his coveted majority government in elections that changed Canada’s political landscape with the opposition Liberals and Quebec separatists suffering a shattering defeat.

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    Harper, who took office in 2006, has won two elections but until Monday’s vote had never held a majority of Parliament’s 308 seats, forcing him to rely on the opposition to pass legislation.

    While Harper’s hold on Parliament has been tenuous during his five-year tenure, he has managed to nudge an instinctively center-left country to the right. He has gradually lowered sales and corporate taxes, avoided climate change legislation, promoted Arctic sovereignty, upped military spending and extended Canada’s military mission in Afghanistan.

    Elections Canada reported preliminary results on its website, giving the Conservatives 167 seats, which will give Harper four years of uninterrupted government.

    “We are grateful, deeply honored, in fact humbled by the decisive endorsement of so many Canadians,” Harper told elated supporters at the Telus Convention Centre in Calgary, Alberta.

    The leftist New Democratic Party was projected to become the main opposition party for the first time in Canadian history with 102 seats, tripling their support in a stunning setback for the Liberals who have always been either in power or leading the opposition.

    “It’s an historic night for New Democrats,” NDP leader Jack Layton told a delirious crowd in downtown Toronto.

    Harper was helped by the NDP surge, which split the left-of-center vote in many districts, handing victory to Conservative candidates, especially in Ontario, where the Liberals were decimated in their last national stronghold.

    Former colleagues of Harper say his long-term goals are to shatter the image of the Liberals — the party of former Prime Ministers Jean Chretien, Lester Pearson and Pierre Trudeau — as the natural party of government in Canada, and to redefine what it means to be Canadian.

    Harper, who comes from the conservative western province of Alberta, took a major step toward that goal on Monday night as the Liberals suffered their worst defeat in Canadian history — dropping to 34 seats from 77, according to the preliminary results.

    Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff congratulated Harper and New Democrat leader Jack Layton and accepted responsibility for the “historic defeat.”

    “Democracy teaches hard lessons, and we have to learn them all,” Ignatieff told a somber gathering in Toronto.

    Ignatieff, who even lost his own seat in a Toronto suburb, said, “I will play any part that the party wishes me to play as we go forward to rebuild.”

    Stephen Clarkson, a professor of political science at the University of Toronto, said the 52-year-old Harper should now be considered a transformative figure in Canadian history.

    “It’s a sea change,” Clarkson said.

    The New Democrats’ gains are being attributed to Layton’s strong performance in the debates, a folksy, upbeat message, and a desire by the French-speakers in Quebec, the second most populous province, for a new face and a federalist option.

    Voters indicated they had grown weary with the separatist Bloc Quebecois, which had a shocking drop to four seats from 47 in the last Parliament. Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe lost his own seat and immediately resigned.

    Quebeckers said separatism was still an important force, despite the province’s rejection of the Bloc.

    “I would caution anyone to think that the independence movement is dead at any time,” said Bruce Hicks, a political scientist at the Universite de Montreal. “This is one of those burning embers things. It takes very little to ignite it, but right now it’s only embers.”

    The Green party won its first seat ever in the House of Commons with leader Elizabeth May winning in a British Columbia district.

    The Conservatives got 40 per cent of the vote, compared to 31 per cent for the NDP and a dismal 19 per cent for the Liberals.

    The NDP’s gains marked a remarkable shift in a campaign that started out weeks ago looking like a straight battle between Harper and Ignatieff, a distinguished academic, with the 60-year-old Layton recovering from prostate cancer and a broken hip.

    Harper counted on the economy to help hand him the majority. Canada has outperformed other major industrialized democracies through the financial crisis, recovering almost all the jobs lost during the recession while its banking sector remains intact. He said he would continue his plan to create jobs and growth without raising taxes.

    He campaigned on a message that the New Democrats stood for higher taxes, higher spending, higher prices and protectionism. He called the election a choice between “a Conservative majority” and “a ramshackle coalition led by the NDP that will not last but will do a lot of destruction.”

    Gerry Nicholls, who worked under Harper at a conservative think tank, has said that having the New Democrats’ as the main opposition party would be ideal for Harper because it would define Canadian politics in clearer terms of left vs. right.

    The Conservatives have built support in rural areas and with the “Tim Horton’s crowd” — a reference to a chain of doughnut shops popular with working class Canadians. They also have blitzed the country with TV attack ads, running them even during telecasts of the Academy Awards and the Super Bowl.

    Lawrence Martin, a political columnist for The Globe and Mail newspaper and author of “Harperland: The Politics of Control,” calls Harper “the most autocratic and partisan prime minister Canada has ever had.”

    But to remain in office through the longest period of minority government in Canadian history, Harper had to engage in a constant balancing act. The three opposition parties combined held 160 seats in the last Parliament, while the Conservatives held 143. The Liberals held 77, the New Democrats 36 and the Bloc Quebecois 47.

    Harper has deliberately avoided sweeping policy changes that could derail his government, but now has an opportunity to pass any legislation he wants with his new majority.

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    charliehall
    charliehall
    14 years ago

    The big news I see is the complete collapse of the Quebec Separatist party, and their almost complete replacement by the mildly socialist New Democratic Party in most of Quebec. When has the NDP ever won anything in Quebec? What is going on? Canadian commenters, please explain!

    pbalaw
    pbalaw
    14 years ago

    Great news, great friend of israel and America

    mannie
    mannie
    14 years ago

    burech hashem

    Paskunyak
    Paskunyak
    14 years ago

    A really bad sign for the Liberal Demorats in 2012!!! Burich Hashem!!!

    Maybe Der Abishter will open the eyes of the blind voters so we can finally get rid of liberal left wingnuts like Barney Frank, Gary Ackerman, Maxine Waters, and the weasel of the house Henry Waxman among others……..

    Ariber
    Ariber
    14 years ago

    Huge victory for Israel’s best friend in the world today, Prime Minister Stephen Harper. He received his critically important majority government (which was not expected) with the tremendous help of the Jewish ridings, almost all of which surprised everyone and won. He and his government are well aware of this help and are most appreciative. One of his key MP’s and also a great friend of Israel, John Baird, gave public thanks to all who voted for him and for the Conservatives and, during his victory speech, twice threw out the words, “Toda Rabba, Toda Rabba”, a clear signal of thanks to Jews across the country who worked hard for the Conservatives. 2 years ago, the only Jewish riding to go Conservative was Thornhill, just outside Toronto. It was considered a major breakthrough at the time. This election, all the other Jewish ridings in Toronto and vicinity surprised absolutely everyone and, for the first time in years, also went Conservative! The Canadian Jewish community is now a force to be reckoned with!

    torontonian
    torontonian
    14 years ago

    We were partially able to overcome the apathy of Jewish voters, many of whom are imbued with a Ghetto mentality of fence-sitting and not backing a candidate. In the predominantly Jewish ridings both conservative candidates won. Many sons and daughters home for Pesach voted on Chol Hamoed in the advanced polls. Israel’s staunch supporter in the UN continues his mandate for four more years. Boruch Hashem

    MONTREALYID
    MONTREALYID
    14 years ago

    ‘Those who bless Israel and stand with Israel will be rewarded..Those who dont will be punished.’

    The Liberals all throughout the Intifada always hedged their bets when it came to Isreal. They couldnt bring themselves to say in very simple terms that Israel had the right to protect itself.

    The Liberal finally had their heads handed to them.

    The Liberal leader, Mr. Ignatieff called Israel’s war in 2006 against Hezbollah a ‘war crime’.

    PM Harper has stood with Israel more than any PM in Canada’s history.

    He is considered the greatest friend Israel has in the world today.

    Thank you to all those Yidden who voted for him.

    mannie
    mannie
    14 years ago

    We are so happy that Harper made it. B”h

    kollelfaker
    kollelfaker
    14 years ago

    charlie this is a repudiation of everything you hold so dear blind liberalism the world is turning its back on a give away society on socialism and getting righted time for you to see the light too

    Glassman
    Glassman
    14 years ago

    It was starting to look a bit bleak a few days ago. However, Hashem firred der velt and thanks to Him, Harper received an absolute majority.

    dspiegel
    dspiegel
    14 years ago

    The election victory was due to many factors:
    Among them:
    – Mr. Harper’s popularity and recognition for a job well-done (foreign and economic policy)
    – A complete and utter rejection of Michael Ignatieff (he even lost his own seat) and punishment for forcing an unnecessary election which cost $300,000,000

    chaimbrooklyn
    chaimbrooklyn
    14 years ago

    I was in Montreal for Pessach and i don’t know why no one was asking the Canadian guest to go vote by the early voting, i would run and vote for Steven Harper!!! thanks god he won!!!

    Mark Levin
    Mark Levin
    14 years ago

    Liberalism is a LIE. One cannot get elected spouting liberalism or even worse, socialism. That is why they MUST lie and sound slightly conservative in order to get elected.

    k9hora
    k9hora
    14 years ago

    as good as harper seems to be for the heiligge Yidden, unfortunately our geographically large canada is a small peanut on the world scene. it is a shame. if they ever mature you will notice it when they stop US bashing. numerous upsets of long standing encumbents including volpe. alder won as did oliver. lev mlochim vsorim byad Hashem! happy to see the liberal chazeirim smashed. will they ever repeal same gender marriage or will it deteriorate further and even become manditory, Hashem y’racheim. too much liberalism. time for back to sanity