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The Longer I'm Prime Minister

Stephen Harper and Canada, 2006-

ebook
4 of 6 copies available
4 of 6 copies available

WINNER 2014 – Ottawa Book Award for Non-Fiction
The definitive portrait of Stephen Harper in power by this country’s most trenchant, influential and surprising political commentator.
 
Oh, he won, but he won’t last. Oh, he may win again but he won’t get a majority. Oh, his trick bag is emptying fast, the ads are backfiring, the people are onto him, and soon his own party will turn on him. And let me tell you, it couldn’t happen to a nicer guy . . .
Despite a constant barrage of outrage and disbelief from his detractors, Stephen Harper is on his way to becoming one of Canada’s most significant prime ministers. He has already been in power longer than Lester B. Pearson and John Diefenbaker. By 2015, and the end of this majority term, he’ll have caught up to Brian Mulroney. No matter the ups and downs, the triumphs and the self-inflicted wounds, Harper has been moving to build the Canada he wants—the Canada a significant proportion of Canadian voters want or they wouldn’t have elected him three times. As Wells writes, “He could not win elections without widespread support in the land. . . . Which suggests that Harper has what every successful federal leader has needed to survive over a long stretch of time: a superior understanding of Canada.”
In The Longer I’m Prime Minister, Paul Wells explores just what Harper’s understanding of Canada is, and who he speaks for in the national conversation. He explains Harper not only to Harper supporters but also to readers who can’t believe he is still Canada’s prime minister. In this authoritative, engaging and sometimes deeply critical account of the man, Paul Wells also brings us an illuminating portrait of Canadian democracy: “glorious, a little dented, and free.”

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 14, 2013
      Noted author and journalist Wells takes an incisive look at the ongoing career of three-time Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Determinedly conservative, Harper stepped into 24 Sussex following the self-inflicted implosion of the Liberal Party in the mid-aughts. Since then Harper has inexorably tightened his often authoritarian grasp on Canada, building his support from election to election while reshaping political consensus in the country. Wells makes a convincing case that although Harper was greatly aided by the Liberals' incompetenceâfirst replacing the hapless Paul Martin with the bumbling Stephan Dion, then turning to the catastrophically inept Michael Ignatieff to lead the Liberals to calamitous defeatâthat is not enough to explain Harper's slow but steady progress. His support is nation-wide and enough, as long as his opposition is split, to win a majority of seats, and he has been skilled enough to survive scandals and crises. Wells paints a portrait of a man who while not necessarily understood by those who watch, often aghast, as he works steadfastly to push Canada away from social democracy, demonstrates a keen understanding of the nation he now commands, a domineering figure whose legacy may prove as enduring as Mackenzie King's or Trudeau's. Agent: Jackie Kaiser, Westwood Creative Artists.

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  • English

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