Globe endorsements over the years
As many have read by now, The Globe and Mail has endorsed Stephen Harper's Conservative Party as its party of choice for the 41st general federal election. If interested you can read through the Globe and Mail editorial recommendations published since 1953.
Tortured would be one adjective I would apply to their reasoning in today's endorsement, applicable as well to the justifications offered in their 2008 nod to Stephen Harper's team.
A great many Canadians appear to share my view for reaction to the Globe editorial was overwhelmingly negative. Naturally the Globe published an article about the reaction and went so far as to host an interactive chat to explain the basis of their endorsement. One would think that the endorsement itself should be self-explanatory through the quality of the arguments presented. Apparently not.
Political endorsements are nothing new for the country's newspaper barons. Broadsheets predating Confederation were created by partisans to back their candidates. The Globe and Mail itself is the product of a 1930's era merger between publications founded by two fathers of Confederation to back their political aspirations. It would seem Sir. John A. MacDonald's - a Tory - influence has held more sway since then. Aside from acknowledging obvious faults that demand a change in government -- Diefenbaker's last term is a good example -- the Globe and Mail tends to be Tory friendly .
Here's where the Globe's editorial board has swung over the last sixty years, and what the election of the day actually returned:
Year Endorsed (Prime Minister, Party) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1953 - Progressive Conservative (St-Laurent, Liberal Majority) 1957 - Progressive Conservative (Diefenbaker, P Conservative Minority) 1958 - Progressive Conservative (Diefenbaker, P Conservative Majority) 1962 - Progressive Conservative (Diefenbaker, P Conservative Minority) 1963 - Liberal (Pearson, Liberal Minority) 1965 - Progressive Conservative (Pearson, Trudeau, Liberal Minority) 1968 - Liberal (Trudeau, Liberal Majority) 1972 - Liberal (Trudeau, Liberal Minority) 1974 - Progressive Conservative (Trudeau, Liberal Majority) 1979 - Progressive Conservative (Clark, P Conservative Minority) 1980 - Progressive Conservative (Trudeau, Turner, Liberal Majority) 1984 - Progressive Conservative (Mulroney, P Conservative Majority) 1988 - Progressive Conservative (Mulroney, P Conservative Majority) 1993 - Liberal (Chretien, Liberal Majority) 1997 - Progressive Conservative (Chretien, Liberal Majority) 2000 - Liberal (Chretien, Liberal Majority) 2004 - Liberal (Martin, Liberal Minority) 2006 - Conservative (Harper, Conservative Minority) 2008 - Conservative (Harper, Conservative Minority) 2011 - Conservative (?,?)
An endorsement is clearly no guarantee their pick wins.
While the Globe and Mail has never issued a federal electoral endorsement for New Democrats, and likely never will, in 1991 the editorial board endorsed New Democrats in two provincial elections: British Columbia and Saskatchewan. Both times the NDP went on to win those contests.
In the final analysis, does the opinion of Bay Street's media organ matter? Probably not. Pollster Frank Graves of EKOS late last night said that editorial recommendations have an almost immeasurable impact on voter intentions.
If you disagree with the Globe's choice, don't waste any time complaining about it. Writing the Globe to complain about their choice might feel good, but the effort won't affect a single electoral race. Instead, invest your time in doing something concrete to achieve a different outcome. Go door knocking for a candidate, help out on election day, drive shut-ins to the polls. And don't forget to vote!