Posted on Wednesday 24 September 2008
TORONTO — Ahh… people say the most wonderful things during elections, don’t they. It’s a time of clear-thinking, honest articulation of where parties and politicians stand on various issues that allows each voter to gain insight into how potential future governments would operate. With such fresh, fact-based insight, the voter is thus empowered to make an informed choice at the ballot box.
Or, is it just me?
Bruce Campion-Smith writes in today’s Toronto Star newspaper (p.A17 in the Toronto edition as well as online) about the difficulties the Liberal Party is having with its platform spending commitments because of the current economic uncertainty, and because Conservatives cut taxes. Campion-Smith quotes Liberal finance critic John McCallum as follows:
In an interview, McCallum accused the Conservatives of using tax cuts to deliberately drain the coffers and prevent future governments from enacting ambitious programs.
“I think the Conservatives are anti-government. I think their philosophy is cut taxes … and then deprive us of room to do Liberal things,” McCallum said yesterday.
– Toronto Star, Sep. 24, 2008 p.A17
Kudos to McCallum
Rarely have words uttered in an election campaign so clearly and concisely outlined a party’s political philosophy. McCallum criticizes the Conservative government for returning unncessary (i.e. “surplus”) tax dollars back to the people who earned them. If I was Conservative Party leader Stephen Harper, I’d be proud to confess: “Guilty as charged!”
As I understand it, governments tax the people in order to pay for programs that the people want and need. If, God forbid, the government takes too much money from the people = if it takes more money than it needs to pay for those wanted/needed programs = if it generates a “surplus” of funds at the end of the year, then, I say, it should return those funds.
After all, if I give you $5 to buy me a coffee while you’re out at Tim Hortons, and it turns out my large double-double only costs $1.49, then I expect some change back, thank you very much! I don’t expect you to decide I should also buy doughnuts for everybody in line with my $3.51 in surplus funds. Nor, do I want you to divide that money up amongst your friends so they will like you.
According to McCallum, it appears that Conservatives must agree with my approach to life. If the taxpayer has paid the government too much money for the services it provides, the taxpayer should get the money back — or, at the very least, the government should stop knowingly taking too much money each time it dips its hand into my pocket! The Conservatives accomplished this by reducing the rate at which they take my money to better match the rate at which they need to spend it = they reduced taxes.
According to McCallum, a Liberal government would keep taking the extra cash from taxpayers and come up with new, unwanted and unnecessary things to spend it on. No thanks!
If the government comes up with a brilliant new thing to spend money on (let’s call it an “ambitious program”) — and it’s soooo good we just have to have one — then they should go to the people and state their case. Then, they can ask for a bigger allowance to pay for it.
What scares politicians like McCallum, of course, is that they know if they had to make a case-by-case pitch for more tax money to pay for their “ambitious programs”, most taxpayers would tell them to piss off. This would vastly reduce their ability to fund unnecessary programs and curry favour in small constituencies.
Politicians like McCallum know it’s politically easier to grab more cash than necessary up front, then divert it into politically untenable programs afterwards. In fact, successive Liberal governments mastered the art of making this political theft look like “good fiscal management.” Wow! They would say… Look how smart we are, we saved billions of (your) dollars. Now we’re going to spend these “bonus” dollars on something you don’t want.
Imagine how much harder it would be if governments had to go to the people with every new ambitious program and say: “OK, we think it would be great to build a government-owned chain of day care centers, managed by civil servants, across the country and we want each and every one of you to cough up $300 per year to pay for it!”
Wouldn’t that be more honest?
Wouldn’t it also be harder to sell?
McCallum’s complaint is an honest one. Liberals like McCallum genuinely believe tax dollars belong to the government. Conservatives, according to McCallum, do not.
Score one for the Conservatives in my book.

