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Tory majority chosen Canada's News Story of the Year

Prime Minister Stephen Harper along with his wife Laureen, daughter Rachel and son Ben wave to the crowd as they arrive on stage following his majority win in Calgary, Alta, Monday, May 2, 2011. Prime Minister Stephen Harper takes questions from the media in Burlington, Ont., on Friday, Dec. 2, 2011.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper along with his wife Laureen, daughter Rachel and son Ben wave to the crowd as they arrive on stage following his majority win in Calgary, Alta, Monday, May 2, 2011.

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Date: Monday Dec. 26, 2011 7:47 AM ET

OTTAWA — If he said it once, he said it a thousand times: what Prime Minister Stephen Harper was campaigning for in the 2011 federal election was a "strong, stable, Conservative majority government."

The fact he got it -- and what he's doing with it -- has been named Canada's News Story of the Year by editors and news directors who participated in the annual survey of newsrooms across the country by The Canadian Press.

"I think it presents a sea change in Canadian politics," said Dan Leger, director of news content for the Halifax Chronicle-Herald.

"It was fairly predictable, it was not a surprise, the polls suggested it was going that way, but what has happened is the Tories have supplanted the Liberals for many years to come, I believe, and unless the rest of Canadian politics gets its act together, Stephen Harper is going to be prime minister for as long as he wants."

The Conservative majority captured 25 per cent of the votes in the annual CP survey -- narrowly beating out the NDP's surge to official Opposition status, which earned a nod from 24 per cent of those newsrooms that voted.

Together, those two sides of the Election 2011 coin dominated the other nominees. The post-Stanley Cup riots in Vancouver earned 12 per cent of the vote, the wildfires in Slave Lake 11 per cent and the Occupy protest movement eight per cent.

The end of the mission in Afghanistan and the corruption scandal in Quebec each got three per cent of the vote, with the controversy over head shots and enforcers in hockey, Prince William and Kate's visit to Canada, the decline of the separatist movement in Quebec and the proposed Keystone XL pipeline each getting two per cent.

The declining fortunes of BlackBerry maker Research in Motion, the return of the Winnipeg Jets and Canada's new female premiers each got one per cent of the vote.

The Canadian Press also conducted a parallel survey in conjunction with Yahoo! Canada to allow the public to make its own choices for News Story of the Year.

There, the story of late NDP leader Jack Layton's political triumph dominated, earning 18 per cent of the votes cast, followed by the royal visit at 11 per cent and the Occupy movement at just over 10 per cent.

Indeed, Layton's story had all the drama of a Hollywood script, said Andrew MacDonald, Yahoo! Canada's managing editor for news.

Layton, "the federal underdog, captures the nation's attention throughout an election campaign that Canada had been dreading, gains enough popularity to have the NDP elected Opposition for the first time ever -- and then just a few months later succumbs to the disease he had fought so hard and so publicly," MacDonald said.

"I think a lot of Canadian voters could see a bit of themselves in Jack Layton -- which is not something you heard said about Stephen Harper or (Liberal leader) Michael Ignatieff."

Harper's majority win garnered nine per cent of the public votes, enough to finish fifth in the Yahoo! Canada survey.

The Conservative triumph came precisely because voters were able to connect with Harper after having experienced five years of his minority government, said Guy Giorno, the co-chairman of the party's national campaign.

"Stephen Harper has broadened the base of the Conservative party," Giorno said. "He did it by showing people, demonstrating that as prime minister he would lead a moderate, reasonable, responsive government."

Both the Tories and the NDP ran disciplined campaigns that rarely strayed off message.

The Conservative "strong, stable majority" slogan and a targeted approach to winnable ridings ran up against a NDP electoral machine that was revving at top speed -- and not just in Quebec.

Ron Woodman, who ran the NDP's successful campaign in the Newfoundland-Labrador riding of St. John's South-Mount Pearl, said candidate Ryan Cleary found himself with more money, more volunteers and far more excitement in 2011 than in prior elections.

"The buzz of a winning campaign was certainly there," said Woodman.

"I think we would have won without the surge, but it certainly didn't hurt that it looked like New Democrats, especially in that last week, could possibly form government."

Experts and observers are divided as to whether Canadian voters are splitting along ideological lines, creating a polarized political atmosphere similar to the Republican versus Democrat scene in the United States.

What the outcome of the 2011 campaign does reflect, however, is how well both parties built their respective brands, said Terry Smith, a branding strategist at ICON Communications & Research Inc. in Nova Scotia.

Smith said Harper took ownership of the economic issue, while Layton's charisma and promise of change made him attractive to voters.

"Having a strong leader is imperative and having that leader as central to the brand is usually imperative for having any kind of political success."

"Brand Layton" was perceived as being largely responsible for the NDP's sweep of 59 of 75 seats in Quebec, but the surge there wasn't an overnight accident, said Anne McGrath, Layton's chief of staff.

One of the first things Layton did when he won the leadership of the party was appoint a Quebec adviser, McGrath said.

"He was just really always very dedicated to the need for a national party to have a base and support in the province of Quebec."

But Layton's death from cancer in August threw the country off its political axis, leaving the NDP rudderless in Ottawa against a majority government with a clear plan.

Since they returned to Ottawa, the Conservatives have set about fulfilling what campaign promises they could; a number of platform pledges were contingent on a balanced budget that's now not expected before 2015, despite a promise during the campaign it would be done a year sooner.

But they are slaying policy giants like the Canadian Wheat Board, the gun registry and the political financing system, while at the same time creating new Goliaths in the form of an omnibus crime bill that's raised the ire of lawyers, criminologists and the observers alike.

"Harper wasted no time using his majority to move on major changes he's clearly been itching to make, changes that are re-shaping Canada," said Murray Wood, news director of News Talk 980 CJME in Regina.

Meanwhile, the NDP searches for their new leader.

The ongoing leadership campaign has knocked several of the party's strongest players off the front benches in the House of Commons, raising questions about the party's overall sustainability as official Opposition.

"At the same time as the NDP are getting elected in this wave in Quebec, you're actually returning a Conservative majority, which means the opposition has even less power against the government," said Bruce Hicks, a political science professor at Concordia University in Montreal.

"So whatever expectations the voters may have had about the NDP, they were destined to fail because the NDP can't stop the government."

Comments are now closed for this story

TM
said

Top news story of 2015: the defeat of the 'Harper' Government.


Joe Szentirmay
said

Congratulations Prime Minister Harper, keep up the fantastic work, and we look forward to giving you an even larger majority next election.The jump in popularity for the NDP, mainly in Quebec, can be compared to another popularity phenominon called Tiny Tim. Does anyone remember him?


Will
said

so the press has finally dropped that nonsensical Orange Crush crap? Good. The implosion continues as people have seen that Layton was nothing but PR and the emperor had no clothes.


George V.
said

2011 is the year the pollsters were proven wrong, during the election we were told by them that the Conservatives were just slightly ahead of the Liberals, it was too close to call who was going to form the gov't. Because this was going to be a minority gov't the NDP were going to be in controll how this country was going to be run and what policies and changes were going to be implemented. The polls missed it by a country mile. The Conservatives won a majority gov't, the NDP became the official opposition, the Liberals were off the radar screen, and what about the Block? When we hear the predictions from these pollsters from now on we will take it with a grain of salt, their predictions will only reflect what party they want in and what party they are affiliated with.


Sam C
said

Thumbs up!


Just Saying - Ottawa
said

So happy the Conservatives are in and finally doing something for the taxpayers and not lining their pockets with AdScam $$$$...change in the Laws is long overdue..The Farmers in the West having the freedom to sell what "they" grown on their "own" farms to who they want to. The Gun Registry..great and to NOT treat farmers and hunters like Criminals...if the Liberals want to ever come back they will have to have "new Young Blood" not what is at the helm at present...Rae as NDP Premier of Ontario did more "harm" to Ontario and should NOT run the Country...but looks like even the Liberal McGuinty could do more. Could it possibly just be a "Liberal thing"...we think so...


Pat
said

It is amusing to hear people talk about the NDP surge, their rise to official opposition, how well they have done, yet the NDP have less power now with 102 seats then they had with 37 seats while in third place. At least now we have a stable government without the constant threat of an election at any minute.


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