Decision 2000: Canada Has Its Day
Calvin Trillin
The Canadians, who have always been sensitive about being
ignored by the American press, managed to schedule a national
election during a period in which Americans are so absorbed with
the vote counting in Florida that the President of the U.S.
could barely make the front page with a visit to Vietnam. Not to
worry, Canadians, I was paying attention. Although the
reputation Canadians have for being orderly must irritate them
almost as much as having their country ignored, it is my duty to
report that they had no trouble figuring out who won. I
discovered while perusing the Globe and Mail that the only
problem with vote counting took place in Pictou Landing, Nova
Scotia, where dozens of citizens had to recast their ballots
after a man carried the ballot box out of a polling station and
threw it into a waste-treatment lagoon--a method of slowing down
the count that even Katherine Harris never thought of.
The big winner in the election was Prime Minister Jean Chretien,
a political figure considered old hat by everyone except the
voters. The big loser was the Canadian Alliance's Stockwell Day,
a political figure considered fresh and exciting by everyone
except the voters. (I think the Alliance, a new party, chose an
unfortunate name, by the way. What would you call one of its
followers--an Alliance-ite?) There were two other candidates, both
of whom managed to do better than Ralph Nader without being
nearly as sanctimonious.
Canadian elections have historically been forums for debating
specific programs. That makes sense in a parliamentary system,
since the winner, having won by gaining a legislative majority,
has the power to turn his programs into law. If Canadians
weren't so polite, which goes along with being orderly, they
might point out that the detailed discussions American
presidential candidates engage in about programs are virtually
meaningless. Partly because of the separation of powers, the new
President almost never signs into law the programs he promised.
When you look at it that way, the only really important thing
about George W. Bush's Social Security plan was that he didn't
seem to understand it.
So did the Canadians discuss programs this time around? I am
happy to say that while the American candidates were exchanging
trumped-up numbers about the cost of prescription drugs,
Canadians, thanks to a CBC television program's campaign to
satirize the Alliansistas' belief in national referenda, were
gathering signatures for a referendum that would require
Stockwell Day to change his first name to Doris.
So when you read all this commentary about how the winner of the
American presidential election will in some sense have lost,
think of Stockwell Day. If his party had triumphed, he could have
found himself named Doris Day, the television program's campaign
having drawn more than twice the number of signatures that
Alliance-ators had considered necessary to put an issue before
the people. Every time he rose in Parliament to make a speech,
some Liberal smart aleck would shout from the back benches, "Give
us a song, Doris!" This is a man who won by losing.
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