Are you speaking as yourself, or playing out at a strategy for the Liberals? Strategically, I think he should get Harper to play ball on E.I., and then start selling some sort of vision (deficit exit strategy). If he's only going to attack Harper on gaffs, he'll always look like the leader of the opposition. A fall election is more acceptable, but a summer election needs a little more justification. "I'm not Harper" isn't good enough.
Frankly, that taxpayer-funded infomercial with that disgrace of an ex-"journalist" was reason enough. It was an insult to Parliament and to the electorate. Harper has been in power now for nearly a year. He has not a solitary legislative achievement (not that he had much during his previous two years, either). His cabinet has been through a parade of gaffes and missteps that I don't need to list. He lied through all of last election claiming that there was no deficit, only to pop and say there was a $36 billion deficit shortly thereafter. Then it rose to $50 billion. I understand the need for deficit spending in a recession, but he seems utterly incapable of getting his hands on the finances. Generally speaking, he's been a complete disappointment as Prime Minister. Even his own supporters, like Tom Flanagan, are saying it.
This isn't about Ignatieff. In a parliamentary system, this is about Harper and whether the opposition can have confidence in his government. If the PM is running a lousy government and you don't have confidence, you've got to vote against him.
Dion factor. When the candidates are playing at the same level, I think these kind of things start to matter.
Harper forced an election over Christmas when "Canadians didn't want one." Didn't hurt him. Chretien called an early election in 2000. He won a massively increased majority. The Liberals forced a quick election in 1980 when they didn't even have a leader. They won a huge majority.
The Dion factor became so extreme only because Harper had month after month to saturate the airwaves with negative ads about Dion being a wimp, and the dozens of missed opportunities to bring Harper down did little to dispel that image.
Regardless of what the self-appointed tribunes of the Canadian People in the media have to say, election timing is almost never a significant issue. More importantly, the Ottawa media absolutely pile on to any leader who looks weak. Look at the column that literally said, "Where do the Liberals get these beta males?" Leaving aside the question of whether having the disposition of a schoolyard bully or overly hormonal jock is the most important qualification for running the country, these prejudices colour their coverage and that moves votes.
As an aside, is it just me or do the NDP look absolutely ridiculous in all this? Their position, frequently repeated, is "We don't want an election. We will be voting against the government on this confidence motion." If that contradiction isn't a crystal clear illustration of why they can't seem to ever become a governing party, I don't know what is.
Moreover, I would not underestimate the cumulative effect of having an election virtually every year. At some point, it is going to look like the Liberals only care about getting back into power and aren't too concerned about the best interests of the country. That's why I like the way Iggy is going about trying to get Harper to trigger the election.
I completely agree with you about the latter point, but the Conservatives triggered all of the recent elections. Doesn't it seem much more like they're the ones who will do anything, including throwing their own election date law in the garbage, for the chance at a majority?
I'm not sure the Liberals are really aching for an election right now
Haha...in case it isn't already clear to everyone, I'm really aching for an election right now.
Now, for the matter of Ignatieff not articulating a platform: what leader has a full, coherent platform released two months after they are elected leader? It is not at all unreasonable for the Liberals to keep their platform secret while it is being developed, and any pronouncements now only serve to limit the development of their platform/the directions it can take.
This is one of the most odious aspects of the media coverage. The hounding of Ignatieff about apparently needing to release a platform immediately after being elected while in opposition is particularly ridiculous when you realize that Harper didn't even bother to release a platform last election until after the advanced polls had closed--and even then the document was only released after the Liberal economic action platform started to gain traction and the document had more pictures of Harper than it did text.
That being said, I think Ignatieff should do more to at least outline broad strokes about his vision for the country. Not to make an Obama comparison, but Obama was rarely particularly specific in his speeches, but he gave people a good idea of his perspective and orientation.