The strange case of Bill Casey

Nova Scotia Premier Rodney MacDonald will have his head served to him on a stick by the electorate soon. There is no escape, no reprieve, and no uncertainty. Any goodwill the Premier of Nova Scotia accrued by brokering a deal with Harper over off-shore oil revenues and redressing the amendments of the Atlantic Accord have been spent when he sided with Stephen Harper over Bill Casey.

Casey, the genteel and obstreperous Cumberland-Colchester-Musquodoboit M.P. who voted against Harper’s budget for its erosive approach to the Atlantic Accord — and who was subsequently kicked in the caucus — is an even larger figure now as an exiled independent than he was as a Conservative.

When Premier Macdonald announced that when it came to supporting Casey in the upcoming Federal election he is a Conservative first, and that he would be supporting the Conservative party ahead of Casey the independent, he gave up any chance of staying on as Premier.

Simply put, Bill Casey is considered the conscience of Nova Scotia. He lost his job over principle. Casey, and the vociferously acid Premier Danny Williams, was the “bad cop” to Rodney MacDonald’s “good cop” during the whole Atlantic Accord crisis. In reaching a deal, the goal for Harper was as much about showing up Casey and Williams as it was about recovering Maritime votes.

Here in Nova Scotia, the public has a problem with Rodney. His “go softly” approach over the Atlantic Accords dispute process frustrated many who yearned for a rambunctious, spirited, defense of  the Province in the wake of weasel economics by the Feds: You’ve heard of the Charlottetown Accord, this is the “Charlatan Accord” — and Maritimers know it. And until the deal was reached last week with Harper seemingly caving, many felt Rodney’s approach was wrong, and his mettle weak.

Now it is a case of too little, too late. Many voters just don’t believe the Feds anymore and don’t understand the mechanics of Atlantic Accord economic policy or economic formulas. Why should they?

The fact that Rodney MacDonald has appeared too timid to upset Harper and too willing to please, has been, and is, the image problem. Remember, it was the Premier of Nova Scotia that phoned Bill Casey when he was locked in a room with Tories surrounding him before the vote to allegedly urge him to support Harper, to support the government, to stay in line. Rodney was being a good boy and doing what he was told – that was the impression; that was/is the image.

So, now that he has everything he wants from Harper by reaching an agreement and announcing it, why the suck up? Why support Harper over Bill Casey? Harper is going to cost him votes, not gain them. What is Rodney doing? Instead of being consistent, he should act like a politician.

Rodney is not Peter Mackay. Mackay has to listen to the boss – Rodney doesn’t. Just look at the “Conservative” Danny Williams! He sounds like a Green party member at a Dow Chemical parade. Brand loyalty with Danny Williams doesn’t have a place anymore than it does with provincial governments in Quebec or Ontario – they may be, or have been, Liberal, but they fought both Martin and Chrétien when they needed to for their Province knowing that the party brand means nothing — it is about getting elected. The Feds and the Province have huge separations, no matter the political stripe. Even fundraising is separate in many instances.

Yet, the bodaciously incorrigible columnist for the Chronicle Herald, one Stephen Maher, said on my broadcast today that Rodney sounds like he thinks Harper is his boss. And that is the impression. In politics, it is all about impressions.

Rodney wasn’t angry enough during the Atlantic Accord process according to lot of voters, but he claimed his sugar over vinegar approach (remember Rodney showed earnestness and concern, not anger, not a get-evenness; the Maritimes is about being proud and indignant when wronged, not acting like a lawyer who looks for an angle and who avoids exposure) was working.

Here’s what works politically here: guts; a display of guts — risk, and intestinal fortitude, crassly characterized as “balls.”

Bill Casey bestrides the Province of Nova Scotia like a colossus; a scarecrow. “Don’t go here Tories”, the scarecrow says. “Don’t go here.”

6 Responses to “The strange case of Bill Casey”

  1. dennis lil book Says:

    “charlatan accord” I love that! said it in two words, good job.
    just like deal or no deal [tv show] this is now an ongoing series of half ass guessing on hidden prizes, with a new contestant/ premiere,trying to win a new accord each week/term.
    rodney not being supportive of casey shows how baffled by harper’s bull he is. I believe rodney thinks harper’s sincere and this deal will win back his popularity. but we know better don’t we….
    next term tories give rodney the golden boot, can you say premier casey… you read it here first on ak blog.
    ps macabe is money!lol

  2. Paul D Says:

    I have to agree AK, the Premier has performed badly on this, not the first time he has screwed up and had to backtrack. I have to wonder why anyone ever thought he was fit to lead the party. Rodney is sealing the fate of the provincial tories who are bound to lose seats, but make no mistake, I am sure the good little lackey will get his golden handshake when he leaves. An ambassadorship to some little known country or a consular plum to be sure.

  3. richard Says:

    Excellent article Andrew, thank you. Best summing-up of events about this topic I’ve read. I am a long-time conservative and must admit Mr. Harper really screwed up this entire Atlantic accord deal for no other reason than “it was a liberal deal brokered by Paul Martin originally” and this was simply not going to be rubber stamped by Harper. Well done to Mr. Casey who stood up for the rights of his constituents and as for premier Macdonald who knows what his thinking was in all of that … all I know is this: It can’t be good when a federal backbencher from Nova Scotia has more balls than the premier of the same province. I’ll end my comment by a quote from Alexa McDonough “I think any self-respecting Nova Scotian or Newfoundland politician from any political stripe has an obligation to vote against the budget that sticks it to Atlantic Canada.”

  4. mike Says:

    This is unreal. I am so ashamed to say I voted Conservative last election. Why is the public skeptical when it comes to our political leaders? Here is an example. Bill Casey remembers why we have the a democracy. He represents the interests of those who voted for him. Well said AK, appreciate your blog and program. When did things change from voting for a representative to voting for a party leader who demands unquestioned obedience. Who the heck is tired of elections? Why are we told we are? I for one can’t wait for an election. Who knows where my vote will go, but i can assure you I will not be voting Conservative. The thought of them having a majority government scares me.

  5. A. Bastarache Says:

    Are we Atlantic Canadians that stupid? I would like to see Atlantic Canada shut out every Conservitive in this area. MacKay is a back-stabber from way back. He back-stabbed a fellow Progressive Conservitive during the fight that broke up that party and MacKay went with Harper, now he is backstabbing a fellow Nova Scotian. Is there a honest member of this party? Yes Bill Casey is self-serving … he serves the people that voted for him, how selfish can you get?

  6. Dominic Says:

    Rodney asked for the Federal MPs to stand up and vote against the Federal budget - Casey did. Now the Premier turns his back on him and supports Harper. Brutal.

    Don’t trust Rodney MacDonald. Simple as that.

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