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Only reason to renew Finance contract is for comforting optics
Don Martin, National Post Published: Tuesday, October 28, 2008
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OTTAWA -When rookie MPs are ushered into the House of Commons for the first time, tradition dictates they put up a mild show of resistance, as if they are being dragged to their seat.
For one Cabinet minister expected to be sworn in on Thursday, being reluctantly hauled before the Governor-General shouldn?t be an act.
There is no safer bet for ministerial reappointment than Jim Flaherty. There will be no lousier assignment than to be saddled with finance minister responsibilities that no longer come with a Santa clause for big-ticket spending.
Before this economic downturn hits bottom, it?s almost a given Mr. Flaherty will wear the Deficit Jim label as the Conservative who put the red back into Canada?s budget books for the first time since they were balanced in the mid-1990s.
That would be an ugly legacy for the charismatic Mr. Flaherty, who served as Ontario?s finance minister in 2001 when federal Liberals were racking up the largest surpluses in fiscal history.
It?s been almost two years since his most notorious flip-flop ? the Halloween announcement the government would break its pre-election promise and start taxing income trusts ? and now he?s careening toward another big-gulp policy reversal. Mr. Flaherty, it seems certain, will have to renege on his hell-or-high-water vow that the Conservatives would not lurch into deficit.
He?s now waffling on that campaign promise in the face of $10-billion deficit projections by some economists, a red tidal wave that could not be rebuffed with spending cuts or tax increases.
To cut a nickel off every dollar of spending by the federal government, no matter how braced the voters are for tough times, is an impossible mission and poor fit with the times.
That?s why, beyond serving as the reassuring face of continuity during a financial crisis, Mr. Flaherty?s record doesn?t necessarily crown
him as the best steady hand and confidence booster for troubled times.
There have been several performance hiccups and policy inconsistencies. His office broke the government?s own contracting rules by hiring a speechwriter without putting the job to tender. There was Mr. Flaherty?s infamous crack about overtaxed Ontario being a lousy place to invest, which, with the benefit of the current meltdown as hindsight, was prophetic.
His budgets have featured steep spending boosts averaging roughly 6% per year, a surge described as ?reckless? by the Canadian Taxpayers? Federation.
He decried the Liberal practice of underestimating budget surpluses ? and proceeded to low-ball all but one during his three years in finance.
Mr. Flaherty advanced the $6-billion GST cut by four years, knowing it was poor economic policy, and left the government without a contingency cushion to absorb an oncoming recession of a severity that seemed to catch him by surprise.
All the queasy economics point to a November update that will graphically illustrate the grim intersection between rising expenditures and falling revenues, making it difficult for the government to deliver on its earlier budget promises, never mind election goodies from the recent campaign.
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The day's news headlines from Global National's Kevin Newman for Tuesday, October 28, 2008.
Mon, Oct 27 - Ottawa's effort to restrict the supply of medical marijuana has been denied. Kevin Newman reports.
Mon, Oct 27 - For centuries, the original stage where Shakespeare's dramas played out was lost...until now. Tara Nelson reports.
Mon, Oct 27 - CNS correspondent David Akin reports on the markets taking a tumble towards the end of the day.
Mon, Oct 27 - Jacques Bourbeau has the results of our exclusive poll on how Canadians feel about how the government and our troubled economy.
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