Tom Mulcair and the NDP try to figure out where to go next - Action News
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Tom Mulcair and the NDP try to figure out where to go next

As the NDP gathers in Edmonton for its party convention, there are questions about last year's campaign, the party's direction and leadership of Tom Mulcair.

NDP delegates gather in Edmonton to review the campaign, debate policy and pass judgment on leader

Mulcair speaks to Peter Mansbridge about his leadership of the NDP

8 years ago
Duration 0:42
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair spoke with CBC Chief Correspodent Peter Mansbridge today in Ottawa you can see the whole interview tonight on The National

It is a cruel irony that New Democrats should have to live with the loss of their best shot to form a federal NDP government at the same time that socialism is having a bit of a moment in the English-speaking world,courtesy of Democraticpresidential hopefulBernie Sanders in the United States and Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn in Britain.

It is crueller still that Tom Mulcair, the stern and stiff political veteran once caricatured as Angry Tom and now accused of being too restrained on the debate stage, should have to languish as the diminished leader of the third party while a grumpy old man (Sanders) and a bearded old man (Corbyn) are invested with socialist hopes and dreams.

In an alternate reality, Mulcair is prime minister of Canada and one-third of a hotnew trend.

In actual reality, Mulcair might be entering his final weekend as leader of the NDP.

Democracy, of course, is neither gentle nor simple nor particularly predictable. And as such, the New Democrats gathering in Edmonton for the party's biennial convention are deserving of some sympathy.If putting a New Democrat in the Prime Minister's Office were particularly easy, somebody probably would have done it by now.

Watch Peter Mansbridge's full interview with Tom Mulcair:

Tom Mulcair speaks with Peter Mansbridge ahead of NDP convention

8 years ago
Duration 11:26
Peter Mansbridge interviews Tom Mulcair just days before the NDP votes on his future.

Explaining the NDP'sdefeat

That the party's last campaign was a failure is fairly easy to conclude. It is more difficult to explain why.

The theory that Mulcair's NDP was outflanked to the left by the Liberals hangs too simplistically on the Liberal willingness to run a budget deficit and is undermined by any number of other political positions: the NDP promising new national programs for child care and pharmacare, higher corporate taxes and an increased federal minimum wage, the Liberals taking centrist positions between the Conservatives and New Democrats on taxes, national security, the military mission against ISIS, climate change and the Senate.

That commitment to a deficit did give the Liberals greater room to promise more, but any suggestion that the NDP should have done likewise has to compete with the argument that voters wouldn't have trusted New Democrats to do so responsibly.

The promise of a balanced budget may havecome to define the party's offer as "cautious change," but the notionthe NDP should have been bolder might only seem obvious in hindsight.

It might simply be that Mulcair would be prime minister right now if Justin Trudeau hadn't come along. Or if the NDP campaign had just done better with its TV advertising. Or if Mulcair had shaved his beard before the campaign (only once in federal history has a man with a beard led his party to the most seats in a general election, and that was in 1874).

Mulcair on the Leap Manifesto

8 years ago
Duration 0:33
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair speaks to CBC Chief Correspondent Peter Mansbridge ahead of the NDP weekend policy convention in Edmonton

Will the NDP take a leap?

It is in the interests of being bold that New Democrats might now turn to the Leap Manifesto, so named for how far its authors imagine federal policy should move.

As advocated by activist journalists Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis, the Leap Manifesto is an all-encompassing, but lightondetail, call for indigenous reconciliation, economic reorientation and aggressive action against climate change.

A proposal championed by former MPs Libby Davies and Craig Scott would put the manifesto at the centre of discussion toward a new agenda for the party.

There is the possibility here for another of the NDP's semi-regular existential crises. Like the Waffle movement of the late 1960s orthe New Politics Initiative of 2001, the Leap Manifesto would seem to aim further left than the current NDP: increasing taxes, rejecting trade deals and pipelines. Uncomfortable questions might be asked about popular appeal.

But it might at least be something to grab onto right now, at a moment when the NDP would seem to be at sea: not only back in third place, but now facing a government that carries the promise of a decidedly progressive agenda.

New Democrats can, of course, tell themselves that the Liberal government will betray that promise. But then again the Liberals might not. And even if the government does somehow fail, the NDP would need it tofail in such a way that the electorate moves to a different (or more dramatically) progressive option in 2019.

Of course, even if Mulcairis still leader of the NDP on Monday morning, he might not be the leader in 2019 (particularly, one imagines, if his party continues to poll at 11 per cent). But then there also isn't a clearlysuperior successor in waiting.

Some solace might be found in the fact that five years ago it was the Liberal Party that seemed hopelessly adrift. Indeed, the elections of 2011 and 2015 demonstrate that much can change. The NDP just needs it to change again.

Mulcair speaks to Mansbridge about fossil fuels development debate

8 years ago
Duration 0:46
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair spoke to CBC Chief Correspondent Peter Mansbridge today in Ottawa they discuss the party's policy debate on whether to develop the oil sands

The Sanders and Corbyn examples

"Bernie Sanders, an unabashed democratic socialist, is making waves in the United States.Jeremy Corbyn has inspired hundreds of thousands of people to join his newlyleft Labour Party in the United Kingdom," aggrieved young New Democrats at McGill and Concordiadeclared in an open letter last month, venturing that Mulcair was not of the same stuff.

It is perhaps useful to note that Sanders and Corbyn weregiven no chance of success when they first declared their candidacies last year. But perhaps more crucially,it is unclear whether Corbyn (struggling to hold his party together) or Sanders (still unlikely to beat Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination) will ever lead their respective countries. The odds are against it.

So whatever inspiration they can provide now, they might ultimately end up just aboutwhere Mulcair is now.