The Liberal attack ads aimed at B.C. Conservative leader John Cummins show that Christy Clark was wise to ditch the idea of a fall election.
Because if the campaign matched the ads for sleazy, self-destructive incompetence, the Liberals would be routed.
The Liberals launched the attack last week with radio ads, a website and news releases, with Aboriginal Relations Minister Mary Polak, apparently because of her conservative credentials, charged with leading the attack.
The radio ads capture the tone. A man and a woman are talking about Cummins.
“He opposed Christy’s minimum wage increase but takes a $100,000 pension from taxpayers,” the snarky woman says. “Another unprincipled politician,” the guy responds.
“He says he quote ‘owes it to his offspring,’” the woman snipes. You can’t trust Cummins, they conclude. (The quote about accepting the pension for the sake of his children is 16 years old.)
It’s a fair criticism, but not from the Liberals. They ran on a promise to get rid of MLA pensions, then brought in a rich pension plan that would be the envy of anyone in the private sector. Gordon Campbell will actually be eligible to collect a higher provincial pension — around $125,000 while still on the federal government payroll as high commissioner to London.
In the other ad, the couple grumble that Cummins, who says he voted NDP in the last provincial election, isn’t a real Conservative.
“A joke,” the guy grumps.
“So Cummins pretends he's a Conservative, then votes NDP,” the woman says. “Just what we need, another unprincipled politician."
“How can you trust a politician like Cummins who says one thing and does another?”
Challenging Cummins conservative credentials is ludicrous. He was elected as a Reform MP in 1993, then as a Canadian Alliance member and a Conservative. He’s a strong social and fiscal conservative. (Probably too strong for many B.C. voters.)
His NDP vote just illustrates his disdain for the provincial Liberals.
And how could Clark and company have been so tone deaf as to include the line criticizing politicians who say one thing and do another?
They’ve just been slapped for doing exactly that with the HST. Then there are the promises not to sell B.C. Rail, rip up contracts or expand gambling, all examples of politicians who say one thing and do another.
Cummins has the Liberals in a panic. They are concerned, rightly, that the Conservatives could attract enough of their support to allow an NDP victory. In 1996, Reform took just nine per cent of the vote, and the New Democrats won. The Conservatives were at 18 per cent support in a May Mustel Group poll.
But the ads were a gift to Cummins, who remains unknown in much of the province. The Liberals brought media attention, largely positive, to their nemesis. It was remarkably dumb.
The radio ads, and the anti-Cummins website with the standard attack ad creepy photo and allegations, also tie Clark to dishonest, sleazy, American-style attack ads — hardly a good thing for someone promising a new style of politics.
The ads sometimes work. The federal Conservatives attacked Stephane Dion and Michael Ignatieff relentlessly with slimy ads, and succeeded in defining them in negative ways.
But they are fundamentally dishonest and destructive to democracy and public life, encouraging mindless division and contempt for all politicians.
There are lots of reasons to criticize Cummins and the Conservatives and their policy positions. But these ads are about smearing a person, and presenting him not just as wrong, but as corrupt and “a joke.”
That should concern anyone who hopes for a functioning democracy.
And Liberals should also be concerned that the party has spent money on an amateurish smear campaign that does more damage to its own cause than the target.
Footnote: Cummins is a challenge for the Liberals. He’s skilled and quick — almost two decades in federal politics will do that — and has a reputation for speaking his mind and representing his constituents’ interests. He’s too extreme for many voters, but offers an alternative for people who would never vote NDP, but are angry at the Liberals, as well as voters who sat out the last few elections because they didn’t see a credible party that represented them.
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5 comments:
Cristy and her gang are running scared. I'm no conservative but asked for and received some of Cummings well thought out papers on Aboriginal fisheries.He did a lot of work on fisheries issues , a cause he knows a lot about.The man is no fool and will hurt the BC Liberals just by being here and remaining active in politics. Since many BC Liberals are really conservatives, Cristy may lose a few cabinet ministers when getting closer to the election
A bad week all around for Christie. The attack ads are incredibly short sited for a new premiere who has yet to prove that she has the chops to lead.
Add her decision to reward Harry Bloy with a complex portfolio and responsibility for CLBC which is apparently run by idiots. Her judgement is sadly wanting. I'd hoped she would do well...maybe it's her advisers, but things appear to be unraveling for her.
The ads are dumb. Dumb, dumb, dumb. They have the effect of highlighting the BC Liberals' biggest liability: their dishonesty, which trumps even the trashing of the economy and crippling of Crown Corps because, of course, they lied about all those things. The adds not only attract notice for their stupendous hypocrisy, the premise that BC Conservative leader John Cummins was somehow duplicitous by voting for the NDP in the last election is logically flawed: it's a free country; we can all vote for whomever we want; obviously Mr Cummins couldn't support the BC Liberal candidate, partly because they are not right-wing enough for his liking, but also because of their dishonesty, again highlighting the government's greatest weakness. Dumb.
Worse for the BC Liberals is that the ads have greatly heightened Mr Cummins profile but not, as they had hoped, the profile of a nefarious double-dealer. If voters didn't know there was a non-NDP alternative to the BC Liberals, they do now. Incredibly, even though Cummins had already announced some of his policy platform, some of which is pretty far right, the ads opted for smearing him personally when they might have attacked his plank more legitimately in detail.
Worst of all for the government, the ads make them look desperate and scared.
Why would any government, which is presumably working to win the next election, want, in one fell swoop, to identify itself as dishonest, hypocritical, underhanded and just plain dumb?
Maybe this was just a trial balloon and the ads will be withdrawn or changed before they do any more damage. Fair enough. But considering the BC Liberals' sullied reputation, their circumstance and situation, the ads look more like a big mistake on their part. Hey, anybody can make a mistake. The whole point of being a team, however, is that colleagues should collectively catch such mistakes that an individual might subjectively miss.
There is lots of other evidence that teamwork amongst the BC Liberals is lacking. These dumb ads appear to be some more.
Thanks for noting the corrosive nature of this concerted, pre-meditated multi-pronged attack.
Separate from the short term political usefulness (or not) of this strategy I think that the overarching damage this kind of cynical, morally-bankrupt stuff does to the body politic is the truly important point here.
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My guess is that these ads were paid for and the contracts to run them were signed in anticipation of an election run. That election run evaporated when the polling numbers were crunched and revealed that the future was bleak for the BC liberal crime family.
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