The history teacher in front of the class of bright little faces warned the young people time and again: “There’s nothing so uncertain as a dead sure thing.” It was advice offered very long ago in a small town in northern New Brunswick. I was one of those “little faces” and much as I took it to heart, I didn’t always heed it.
Which brings us to a few events in modern Nova Scotia politics.
Surely Vince MacLean’s Liberals will easily crush an old, tired, and discredited John Buchanan-led Conservative party.
Surely health care reform in Nova Scotia will finally move forward with Dr. John Savage recruiting a brilliant, native-born, and internationally renowned physician, Dr. Ron Stewart, to formulate and enact the changes.
Surely there will be a seamless transition of power from a much-admired Tory premier, John Hamm, to his most able cabinet minister and longtime finance minister Neil LeBlanc.
And then there was the coming of the “New Jerusalem.” After a long struggle, the New Democratic Party, under the leadership of a moderate, avuncular Darrell Dexter, was set to “do politics differently” in Nova Scotia. On June 9, 2009, the electorate gave the party a mandate only its most starry eyed acolytes could have dreamed of twenty years before.
“There is nothing as uncertain as a dead sure thing.”
In this book Graham Steele not only explains how things came undone, but he says that on the night the party faithful celebrated victory, the seeds for their fall had already been planted.
As the finance minister for this new government, Graham’s perspective on this is unique. He points out in the book that a government’s real priorities are not to be found in campaign literature or in stump speeches. You must follow the money. What a government believes in, what it cares about, what it really stands for, can be understood by what it does and doesn’t spend (our) money on.
Graham refers in the book to “the iron grip of the status quo.” He refers here to the immense difficulty of finding new ways to operate any government. Where do you find programs and projects to defund so that new and hopefully better ones can be supported? In opposition, you might naively think you can comb through departmental budgets and find enough “loose change” to make a big difference. It just ain’t so.
And new finance ministers very quickly realize that things are worse than the previous government led the citizens to believe. Such realities lead governments to look at subsidies for a Yarmouth ferry as a nice little chunk of change that could be spent better elsewhere. How did that one work out for you?
Most books about politics are written by academics, reporters, or politicians who come at the Art of the Possible from an angle different than Steele. A conventional book about this period in Nova Scotia might be expected to have more of the personal and anecdotal. It would contain more stories of the people and the strange tribal loyalties that make politics as interesting as it is in the province.
Graham does not shy from any discussion of personalities. He discusses his relationship with Premier Dexter, in all its complexities. He very clearly understands the unique duality within the party. There may have been Conservatives loyal to Neil LeBlanc and others faithful to Rodney MacDonald—that’s a temporary thing. Many Liberals loyal to Jim Cowan (who lost the leadership to Vince MacLean) sat out the next election, which greatly helped John Buchanan win a third term. Most of these Liberals have gotten over that.
Graham understands and explains very well the struggle between the political pragmatists like Dexter and those longtime supporters of the party like Howard Epstein who espouse a more traditional social democratic line.
The choice not to focus on personalities and the everyday cut and thrust at the House or on the hustings gives Graham greater scope to look at areas and issues that a political scientist or political reporter might not care about as much…and could never understand without the benefit of having been an elected politician, never mind a senior cabinet minister.
Graham provides a detailed series of chapters that amount to a “how” of politics, not just here is Nova Scotia but just about anywhere else where a comparable system is in place. And trust me on this, it isn’t always pretty. This is where the bit about not wanting to know how sausages and laws are made might be invoked.
One of the most interesting and insightful aspects of the book is Graham’s personal journey into and out of active politics.
My grandfather was an MLA in New Brunswick for twenty-nine years. In his house, in our house, and all around the town, we talked partisan politics. The experience led to a lifelong love of the game and it inoculated me against any fever that might prompt me to seek public office.
Steele didn’t come from an experience like that, and we as readers of the book are better for it. There is—and I mean this in the most positive sense—a bit of Mr. Smith Goes to Washington in Graham. (He even looks a little like a young James Stewart.) He went into the game for the right reasons, he tried to do the right thing(s), and he left for perfectly sound reasons about which he is both honest and forthcoming. His book is part memoir, part manual, and part cautionary tale.
Don Connolly
Information Morning
CBC Radio