Pubdate: Wed, 14 Oct 2015 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.torontosun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Joe Warmington Page: 22 HARPER CONFIDENT 'PEOPLE ARE SMART' We have learned Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau is in favour of loosening rules on marijuana and approves of safe heroin injection sites, as well. He's also for wearing the niqab at citizenship ceremonies and for convicted terrorists keeping their Canadian citizenship. Justin supports withdrawing from NATO responsibilities with allies including sending over sleeping bags instead of fighter jets. He is also opposed to the plan to purchase F-35 fighters from the United States. He'll run up multibillion-dollar deficits to fund infrastructure projects, insisting the expenditure will stimulate the economy and job growth. He's in favour of Premier Kathleen Wynne's Ontario pension plan, higher EI premiums and carbon taxes. Meanwhile, Justin is against Harper's universal family child payments, income splitting for families, tax-free savings accounts and mandatory prison time for serious crimes. He has said things like he has "admiration" for China's "basic dictatorship," that he may reopen an embassy in Iran, that Quebecers are "better" than other Canadians, and a "large percentage of small businesses are actually just ways for wealthier Canadians to save on their taxes." Trudeau said deficits are a way to measure a government's success, that "budgets balance themselves" and did not attend his party's $146.5-billion economic platform announcement. He's admitted to smoking marijuana, not in his youth, but at a dinner party at his home. You can imagine the kind of scrutiny that would ensue if former mayor Rob Ford had said or done any of the above. Or Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Trudeau has not been held back for any of his stances, behaviour or comments. There is a different standard for him, just like his father Pierre Elliot Trudeau had during Trudeaumania. And that's the challenge the Conservatives have in this last week of the election campaign. Does steady but perhaps not too exciting governance do it for Canadians or are they going to make a change and give the keys to the country to someone who does draw a crowd and has movie star charisma but lacks depth or experience? Harper told me Sunday he thinks people are going to see through the smoke. "People are smart," he said, adding they know what it means for a government to spend money we don't have. He believes people realize politicians who promise higher taxes for the wealthy are also going to dig deeper into everybody's pockets. "Do voters really want to replace benefits they have with a bunch of deficits and things are going to be taken away, do they really want to replace lower taxes with higher taxes?" asked Harper. "Do they really want to replace an economy that is creating jobs to go down the path of so many economies that have not been creating jobs the past few years?" We will know soon. "I think the choice will be clear," said Harper. "We'll continue to make that pitch to Canadians. You know in terms of change, the change we represent is moving forward with more tax cuts, with balanced budgets that can mean you keep the benefits you have and you can get more. The change proposed on the other side is to go back to the era of tax hikes and deficits, frankly to make a federal government look a lot like the government of Ontario and I don't think that is in our economic interests." So is it going to be the veteran guy telling you to eat your broccoli and live within our means or the sire of a former prime minister with the country's credit card in hand, saying, 'Let's go for it now and get this party started?' Canadians will decide Monday. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt