Shakespeare wrote the most fitting epitaph for Flaherty
Julius Caesar, Scene III, Act II
Marc Anthony speaks:
Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears;
I come to bury Caesar, not praise him.
The evil that men do lives after them
Thus it will be with the late Jim Flaherty.
However it would seem that a collective amnesia has gripped the body politic and public. In death, great honours are being visited upon him, terms like visionary, a great Canadian, etc, etc. are being used to describe this man. Visit any Canadian new outlet web site including the CBC and you would swear that a combination of The Queen, JFK, MLK, the Pope and Christ himself had just died instead a recently retired MP and ex-Finance Minister.
Like Marc Anthony, I come not to praise Flahtery, but bury him.
He was not a great Canadian, nor a good Finance Minister, at best he was a mediocre Finance Minister, at worse he was a hopeless disaster who have left us all poorer for his efforts. As Mike Harris Finance Minister in Ontario, he generated a massive debt before bolting to join Stephen Harper’s (neo-) Conservative Party of Canada. When he left, he claimed he had balanced Ontario's budget, later after going through the books, Ontario found he had left them in a sea of red ink that the Ontario taxpayers will be dealing with for decades.
He then inherited a tidy surplus and stable budget from Paul Martin which he quickly blew through like a drunken sailor let loose in a cat house with a stolen credit card. Not only did he blow through that surplus, he created the largest debt load we Canadians have ever seen, a debt which not only will we be paying off for decades to come, but one our kid and most likely their kids will have to service. And while creating this massive debt, he and Harper were busy cutting the services Canadian have come to expect. So in short, more debt, less services.
And lets not forget the 2008 melt down. We had both Harper and Flaherty telling us firs that there was no recession and later that it would not affect us or our economy. Nice fairy tale that one.
So while condolences are due to his family for his loss, I refuse to lionize the man in death. So let bury him, not praise him.