Letter From Canada: The New Christian
Right
by Chris Hedges
The Nation magazine, November
27, 2006
When things get bad in the United States
it is reassuring to turn to Canada, a country with a high standard
of living, a small military and a national healthcare plan. Canada
always seemed to be, if a bit duller than America, also a bit
saner.
But this is changing. The new Canadian
prime minister, Stephen Harper, inspired by the neocons to the
south, appears determined to visit the worst excesses of George
Bush's presidency on his own country. He plans to pull Canada
out of the Kyoto Protocol and expand military spending. He defended
Israel's massive bombing of southern Lebanon, even as Israeli
warplanes bombed a clearly marked UN observation post, killing
a Canadian peacekeeper. He was the first world leader to cut off
funding after Hamas took over the Palestinian Authority. The decision
was made despite Hamas having taken power after winning democratic
elections that not only were recognized as free and fair but fulfilled
demands made by the West. Harper has extended the mission for
the 2,200 Canadian soldiers fighting in Afghanistan, where forty-two
have died so far. He has slashed $1 billion in funding that assists
the most vulnerable Canadians, including cuts in adult literacy
programs, legal aid to gays and lesbians, and measures to assist
unemployed youth, despite a near-record surplus of $13.2 billion
for 2005-06. If the Bush Administration launches an attack on
Iran there is little doubt that Harper would line up behind Washington.
When the Canadian prime minister was asked about Iran before his
recent speech to the UN General Assembly, he called Iran "the
biggest single threat the planet faces." And he sneers at
Canada's long tradition of antimilitarism and generous social
services, once calling Canada "a second-tier socialistic
country, boasting ever more loudly about its...social services
to mask its second-rate status."
But that is not the worst of it. The prime
minister, who has begun, in very un-Canadian fashion, to close
his speeches with the words "God Bless Canada," is also
a born-again Christian. And Harper is rapidly building an alliance
with the worst elements of the US Christian right.
Harper, who heads a minority government,
is a member of the East Gate Alliance Church, part of the Christian
and Missionary Alliance, a denomination with 400,000 members that
believes in the literal word of the Bible, faith-healing and the
imminent return of Jesus Christ. Women cannot be ordained in his
church, homosexuality is a sin and abortion is murder. Canada,
however, is unused to public displays of faith, and Harper has
had to tread more lightly than George Bush. But many fear the
prime minister is taking a cue from the Bush Administration and
slowly mobilizing Canada's 3.5 million evangelicals--along with
the 44 percent of Canadians who say they have committed themselves
to Christ--as a power base. Harper has spent the past three years
methodically knitting a coalition of social conservatives and
evangelicals that looks ominously similar to the American model.
"While the Ottawa press corps has
been preoccupied with Harper's ability to keep the most blooper-prone
Christians in his caucus buttoned up, he has quietly but determinedly
nurtured a coalition of evangelicals, Catholics, and conservative
Jews that brought him to power and that will put every effort
into ensuring that he stays there," wrote Marci McDonald
in the October issue of the Canadian magazine Walrus.
Harper's Conservative government, for
the first time since the January 2006 election that brought him
to power, is tied in the polls with the Liberal Party, which is
locked in a leadership battle that includes frontrunner Michael
Ignatieff, a prolific author on ethnic conflict, a former Harvard
professor and a vocal supporter of the Iraq War. A poll done for
the Toronto Globe and Mail and CTV News has the Conservatives
and Liberals tied with 32 percent support, although no date has
been set for new elections.
Harper's combination of bellicosity, slash-and-burn
attitude toward Canadian social programs and religious fervor
makes many Canadians nervous. Unfortunately for Canada, Harper
has a lot of American help. James Dobson has set up a Canadian
branch of his Focus on the Family three blocks from the Parliament
Buildings in Ottawa. The organization, called the Institute of
Marriage and Family Canada, provides political expertise to and
otherwise supports Harper's allies in the bid to turn Canada into
an Americanized Christian state. Dobson, who rails against Canada's
defense of gay rights and legalization of same-sex marriage, buys
radio time in Canada to attack the nation's tolerance of gays
and calls for legislation to roll back these measures. The proliferation
of new Christian groups is dizzying, with organizations such as
the National House of Prayer, the Institute for Canadian Values
and the Canada Family Action Coalition, whose mission is "to
see Judeo-Christian moral principles restored in Canada,"
publishing election guides, working with sympathetic legislators
and mobilizing Canadian evangelicals in local and national campaigns.
These groups turn frequently to American Christian leaders like
Jerry Falwell, who came to Canada two years ago for an "Emergency
Pastors Briefing" to rally 400 evangelical ministers against
a bill before Parliament that included a provision making it a
hate crime to denounce homosexuals. Other stalwarts, like former
Christian Coalition leader Ralph Reed and televangelist John Hagee,
have come north to spread their toxic message to the newly energized
Canadian evangelical church. And in the Harper government they
have found not only a willing convert but an important ally.
Harper's hold on power, like that of George
Bush, is shaky. He too has no clear mandate to transform Canada,
but this has not stopped his minority government from steadily
undermining social programs and a once enlightened foreign policy
that liberal Americans could only envy. The tools he is using
are familiar to many Americans, who stood sleepily by as Pat Robertson
and other religious bigots hijacked the Republican Party and moved
into the legislative and executive branches of government. As
I walk the windy streets of Toronto I wonder if those who push
past me will wake up and see in Harper's government our own malaise
or watch passively as Canada becomes a demented reflection of
George Bush's America.
Canada page
Home Page