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Canadian Tories step up courting of ethnic voters

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  • Canadian Tories step up courting of ethnic voters

    CANADIAN PRESS
    August 10, 2006 Thursday



    Tories step up courting of ethnic voters

    by Jennifer Ditchburn, canadian press


    These days, you're just as likely to see Conservative politicians
    pressing the flesh at a Sikh temple or a Greek food festival as you
    are at a corn roast or backyard barbecue.

    Top Tories, including Prime Minister Stephen Harper, have
    substantially increased their visibility in Canada's ethnic
    communities.

    Harper has also made at least a half-dozen policy moves or important
    statements about various cultural groups - the most aggressive action
    the party has taken yet to score a breakthrough with ethnic voters.

    This week, Harper made the symbolic gesture of appointing a Liberal
    MP, Muslim-Canadian Wajid Khan, as his adviser on the Middle East and
    South Asia. The announcement comes as the Conservative Mideast policy
    threatens to alienate the Lebanese and Arab communities.

    List of announcements

    Other announcements over the past six months include:

    þ An apology and redress for the Chinese head tax.

    þ An inquiry into the Air India tragedy.

    þ A statement recognizing the Armenian genocide.

    þ A promise last weekend to address the turning away of hundreds of
    Indian passengers aboard the Kamagata Maru in 1914.

    Harper also issued a statement congratulating Italian Canadians on
    the victory of the Italian soccer team in the World Cup.

    Conservatives say they're challenging the conventional wisdom that
    the Liberals are the party for immigrants by showing that they're
    actually putting money where their mouth is.

    "The bar is higher for us," said Goldy Hyder, a Tory strategist and
    longtime advocate of outreach to cultural communities.

    "Whereas Liberals can get away with lip service, Conservatives have
    to actually deliver . . . in order to say we just didn't talk about
    it. That builds credibility in the constituencies."

    The outreach is also part of an effort to shake the intolerance label
    that the Liberals successfully attached to the Conservatives and
    their predecessors in past elections.

    Sometimes it was the candidates and MPs who provided the fodder.
    There was Canadian Alliance candidate Betty Granger's comment about
    an "Asian invasion" during the 2000 election. And Calgary incumbent
    Eric Lowther once suggested the country could hold a referendum on
    immigration.

    Visibility is key to the new strategy, and so there are emissaries.

    Environment Minister Rona Ambrose speaks Portuguese and often attends
    that community's events. MP Barry Devolin speaks Korean and does his
    part. Health Minister Tony Clement, whose father was a Greek Cypriot,
    will be at the Taste of the Danforth Greek food festival this
    weekend.

    Busy weekends

    Then there's the king of the cultural event, Alberta MP Jason Kenney,
    a parliamentary secretary to the prime minister charged with
    outreach.

    One particular weekend, Kenney attended a dozen events, including
    gatherings of Afghans, Tamils, Sikhs, Armenians, Hindus and the
    Jewish community.

    On a non-partisan level, Kenney said the various communities are
    simply appreciative of having a federal government representative at
    their events.

    On a political level, he said the party is shaking loose some of the
    support that's traditionally gone to the Liberals with a combination
    of targeted announcements, but also by promoting tax cuts, a tough
    law-and-order policy and respect for the "family unit."

    "These are universal aspirations, and they just respect a government
    that is accountable, that keeps its promises, that gives more freedom
    to individuals economically and respects the family unit."

    Rattan Mall, editor of The Indo-Canadian Voice newspaper in British
    Columbia, said the party's gestures are making a difference.

    "Despite the suspicions against the former Reform party and the
    traditional backing for the federal Liberal party, there is a shift -
    it's taking place very gingerly, people are just testing the waters,
    but people are very impressed with what Harper is doing," he said.

    But he noted that immigration is often at the heart of the
    community's concerns, and Harper will be watched closely for what he
    does on that file.

    Victor Wong of the Chinese Canadian National Council said the Chinese
    head tax in particular has had a "restorative" impact on that
    community, but Chinese Canadians won't necessarily support a party
    based on a single issue.

    "I think for some, there will be more checkmarks in the Conservative
    column," said Wong. "But they'll still have to see the whole
    package."

    And there are still Conservatives who oppose Canada's immigration
    policy.

    GRAPHIC: Prime Minister Stephen Harper gives the "thumbs up" with a
    group of Indian dancers as they have their picture taken in Surrey,
    B.C., last Sunday.
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