In my home and native land, Bob Rae
announced he would not seek the leadership of Canada’s Liberal
Party.
Rae had taken over the reins of the Liberal Party as its interim
leader following its disastrous performance in the 2011 federal
election when it was supplanted by the NDP as the Official
Oppostion. The results forced the resignation of Liberal Party
leader Michael Ignatieff the following day. Ironically,
Rae and Ignatieff were once college roommates.
At the time, Rae pledged not to seek the leadership of the
Liberal Party on a permanent basis. However, Rae’s performance has
been an improvement over Ignatieff not to mention Stephane Dion.
However, the Liberal Party’s National Executive was apparently
prepared to give Rae their blessings to run. So his decision comes
as a surprise to many.
However, it doesn’t come as a surprise to me. Rae’s biggest
liability isn’t anything he’s done with the Liberals but what he
did with the NDP. Specifically, the term Rae spent as Premier of
Ontario between 1990 and 1995. When Rae surprisingly won the
election in 1990, it was the Liberals he unseated from power. Aside
from the fact that his term in office was a spectacular failure and
that he would eventually have a falling out with the NDP, the
Liberals have never fully embraced Rae. Here is what I
wrote following last year’s election:
Nevertheless, Liberals will be asking themselves where they go
from here. For starters they need a new leader. But whom will the
Liberals embrace? Will they take a leap of faith and back Bob Rae,
a former NDP Premier of Ontario? If Liberals are still leery of Rae
after all these years, they could turn to a francophone with second
generation lineage such as Dominic LeBlanc or Justin Trudeau, son
of the late Pierre Trudeau. Or will Liberals fold in their tents
and join forces with the NDP?
Indeed, before Rae made his announcement, longtime Canadian
political observer Chantal Hebert noted Rae’s less than stellar
numbers as a prospective permanent leader of the Liberal Party.
Hebert
wrote, “His modest ratings suggest that many of the people who
thought poorly of his performance as Ontario premier two decades
ago have not changed their minds.”
While Rae’s decision not to run opens things up, as of right now
the Liberal Party leadership is
Justin Trudeau’s to lose - should he run. In the meantime,
Rae will remain interim leader until the Liberals will choose their
next leader in the spring of 2013.