Can Chrystia Freeland overcome the Liberals' 'elite' problem? - Action News
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Can Chrystia Freeland overcome the Liberals' 'elite' problem?

Newly elected Conservative leader Erin O'Toole is already signalling his party's election-year messaging the claim that the Liberals are a cadre of out-of-touch elitists indifferent to the needs of the average Canadian. Could Chrystia Freeland do a better job of countering that argument than her boss?

The Liberals worked to build a brand around the middle class but the WE scandal may make that a harder sell

As finance minister, Chrystia Freeland's task will be to reconstruct the Liberals' economic argument for the middle class and to sell it on behalf of a government accused by its critics of governing for the well-connected few. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

"We need a new New Deal," Chrystia Freeland said back in June 2013, invoking the reforms and support programs President Franklin D.Roosevelt implemented in the United States inthe face of the Great Depression.

This was beforeFreeland was elected as the Liberal MP for Toronto Centre, before the Liberals formed government in 2015 andbefore she was appointed to cabinet and long before she became the finance minister who will end up playinga significant role in designing and defending a planto rebuild the economy coming out of the global pandemic.

"Today, we are living through an era of economic transformation comparable in its scale and its scope to the Industrial Revolution," she said at the time. "To be sure that this new economy benefits us all and not just the plutocrats, we need to embark on an era of comparably ambitious social and political change."

If anything, the case for such ambition is only more obvious now.

But whenErinO'Toole who became leader of the Conservative Party just days afterFreelandbecame the minister of finance began to make his argument against the Liberal government this week, he offered a twist on that idea of unequal advantage.

Watch: Erin O'Toole lays out priorities as Conservative leader

Erin OToole outlines priorities, differences with Trudeau

4 years ago
Duration 2:02
Newly elected Conservative Party Leader Erin O'Toole is beginning the task of letting Canadians know what he stands for, and one tactic seems to be contrasting himself with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

"If you want to stop insiders from getting aheadwhile you are falling back, you should be voting Conservative," O'Toole told a news conference Tuesday.

Freeland'swords from seven years agomight now seem even more suited to the current political moment.But ifFreelandand the Liberals are to successfully implement their own kind of new deal, they'll have to overcome the claim thattheythemselveshave becomemembers (orenablers) of the lucky elite.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau congratulates Chrystia Freeland as she is sworn into cabinet at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Wednesday, November 4, 2015. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick)

In 2013, Freeland was promoting her second book, Plutocrats, which focused on the rise of the super-rich, the increasing concentration of wealth at the top of western societies and the hollowing-out of the middle class. Hersurvey of the situation includedthe concept of "crony capitalism" the notion that those at the top have waged "successful political efforts to tilt the rules of the game in their favour."

The ideas and trends that she wrote about became the backbone of the Liberal election campaign in 2015, with its signature promises to eliminate tax breaks for the wealthy, raise taxes on the top one per cent and provide greater support (largely through the Canada Child Benefit)to the middle class and low-income earners. Now, five years later, a global pandemic hasexposed,exacerbated or generateda set of weaknesses and inequalities in this countrythat are crying out for renewed attention.

"We need a long-term plan for recovery and renewal that addresses the fundamental gaps that have been revealed by the pandemic," Freeland said in an email to Liberal supporters on Thursday. "We need more better-paying middle-class jobs in a resilient, fairer economy. And we need to keep building a future that gives everyone a real chance at success, not just the wealthiest one per cent."

One crisis, many victims

The potential basis for an agenda focused on equality, security and resilience is broad.The pandemic will leave behind profoundeconomic damage that must be addressed.Significant doubts about the future of the oil and gas industry have been amplified.COVID-19has dampened the careerprospects of young people,hasaggravated racial disparities andthreatens to put further obstacles in the way of womenin the workforce.It has exposed the vulnerability of low-wage workers and the fragility of global supply chains.

Meanwhile, the Black Lives Matter movement has refocused attention on systemic racism. And the work of Indigenous reconciliation remains incomplete.

The argument for significant action now is that long-term economic security depends on maximizing the inclusion of all citizens and preparing for anticipated futureshocks(climate change,anotherpandemic). Freeland's task will be to fit the pieces together within a defensible fiscal track.

The Conservative Party's response to this moment remains to be seen. But the last eight months also haveundercut the Trudeau government's claim to be the champion for the 99 per cent.

A question of trust

Though Conservatives have not embraced economic inequality as a primary policyconcern,they'vefounda groupat which to direct their scorn the prime minister and the members of his government.Through the WE Charity affairand recent revelations about lobbying conducted by the husband of Trudeau's chief of staff,Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other LiberalshavesuppliedConservatives with ample materialto paint a caricature of a governingcadreof out-of-touchelites.

In neither of those cases, nor in any of the previous controversies involving this government and questions about its adherence to ethics rules, has actual corruption been found. But in politics, that'sa limited defence.

In 2015, when the Liberals won power, internal Liberal polling showed that Trudeau still trailed Conservative leader Stephen Harper when Canadians were asked who they trusted to manage the economy. But Trudeau had a 20-point lead when voters were asked who would do the most for the middle class.

The Liberals likely can't afford to surrender that advantage. But every ethical lapse risks weakening the government's ability to insist that it is focused on average families.

O'Toole as Andrew Scheerdid before him has been keen to emphasize his own middle class upbringing and lifestyle. When he accepted the Conservative leadership in the wee hours of Monday morning, O'Toole said that the country needed a leader with "real world experience."

Freeland's previous career in journalism was international and cosmopolitan, but she does not have the personal or family wealth of her predecessor, Bill Morneau. She frequentlymentions her family farm in Alberta. Crucially,she has not beenimplicated in the WE affairor any other previous controversy.SoFreelandcouldcounterbalance (rather than exacerbate) the prime minister's own personal weaknesses.

The best response to accusations of self-interest will always be smart policies that address the real concerns of Canadians. But a government's ability to get a hearing for those proposals inevitably willsuffer if there is a lingering lack of trust.

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