Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal |
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A Determined Harper Flexes His Foreign Affairs Muscles Barbara Yaffe |
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Vancouver Sun | 12 October 2006 |
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Few would have predicted a year ago that the boldest aspect of Stephen Harper's leadership would be foreign policy. Yet the Conservative prime minister -- by his own admission, one of the least-travelled PMs in recent Canadian history -- during his first months in office has directed his government's most forceful action on this front. Recently in "We are able to deplore the war, we are able to recognize the victims -- but on both sides," Harper told a news conference. His stand led to a change in the statement so it read: The 72-member Francophonie deplores the suffering of "all civilian populations." That intervention prompted Beryl Wajsman, president of the Montreal-based Institute for Public Affairs, to issue florid praise: "Stephen Harper is raising a bright, new dawn for this nation. It is to be hoped that the brilliant rays of its light will burn off the stagnating smog that has been a protective cloak over the bodyguard of lies under which Canadians have lived far too long." Retired Indeed, in terms of domestic policy, Harper has been nothing but timid, although the same-sex marriage issue could re-emerge this fall. Consider what Conservatives have tackled so far; what could be less controversial than lowering the GST, sending child-care cash to parents of youngsters, passing federal accountability legislation and introducing a Clean Air Act? By contrast, many of Harper's foreign policy stands have been politically dangerous, especially in His commitment to Before being sworn into office last January, Harper elbowed the Declared Harper: "The This dispute is heating up, following a U.S. National Research Council report to Congress that cited a need for "increasing It's not much of a stretch to imagine that this government soon could take another decisive step toward an increasingly principled foreign policy. That is, While in Opposition, B.C. MP Jim Abbott introduced the Taiwan Relations Act as a private members' bill, aimed at normalizing relations with the former Meetings between If the Harper government remains true to form with its hard-nosed foreign affairs perspective, this could well be a front on which © The Vancouver Sun 2006 |