But first came the coalition gambit. Layton was a key player in the failed bid to form an opposition governing alliance following the 2008 election. Before the plan collapsed amid Liberal infighting and after Harper had successfully prorogued Parliament, Layton was slated to become a senior cabinet minister in a Dion-led Liberal-NDP government backed by the Bloc Quebecois.
While the planned coalition never materialized, Layton strengthened his national profile over the next two years as he vied with new Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff for the best strategy and timing to defeat Harper's government.
Layton, occasionally referred to as "affable Jack," was nevertheless a combative partisan, at once critical of attack-style politics and a skilled practitioner of the art.
He was relentless in the House of Commons, in media scrums and on the campaign trail in pushing his political agenda, neatly summed up in his trademark promise to "make policies for the kitchen table, not the boardroom table."
Layton was in full stride as NDP leader by 2010. But in early February of that year, ahead of his appearance at a hastily called news conference in Ottawa, there was rampant speculation among media that he must be stepping down from the post. What else would the major announcement be?
Instead, Canadians learned that Layton was seriously ill.
"It's the same kind of prostate cancer that my father was diagnosed with 17 years ago," he told reporters. "His treatments were successful, and I intend to tackle this with the same determination that he did. Like my dad, I am a fighter. And I will beat this."
That fight appeared to be going well as Canadians approached another federal election this spring. But in early March — less than a month before Layton and the other party leaders would embark on an arduous six-week campaign — he was forced to endure a four-hour operation to repair a broken hip, the precise circumstances of the fracture never explained.
The state of Layton's health became a significant tactical issue in the days leading up to the 2011 election call. Who would compel a cancer patient recovering from hip surgery to hit the campaign trail? But Harper — his hand forced by a unanimous opposition motion finding the Conservatives in "contempt of Parliament" — dropped the writ on March 26 for a vote on May 2.
From the outset, Layton played down worries about his health and dismissed concerns he'd be unable to conduct an effective campaign.
"It's time for you to choose a prime minister who will help your family get ahead and put political games aside," he said in his first major speech of the race, in Edmonton. "Well friends, I'm running to be that prime minister."
Initial media reports about small turnouts at Layton campaign stops and the hobbling effects of his hip operation soon gave way to stories about Layton's energetic appearances before large, enthusiastic crowds — particularly in Quebec. The walking stick that seemed to reflect Layton's weaker, marginal position at the beginning of the election came to be seen as a symbol of his scrappiness, humility and sincerity.
Pollsters detected a Layton love-in taking shape among the electorate, with Quebec voters — finally weary of the Bloc's tired messaging — particularly drawn to the easy manner and street-smart French of the mustachioed NDP leader, who talked about in upbeat terms about creating "winning conditions" for federalism in Quebec.
At some unidentifiable moment in mid-April, as Canadians weighed their options ahead of what would prove to be a landmark May 2 vote, an idea had crystallized among an unprecedented portion of the country's voters that the ever-smiling chief of the NDP was the right man to lead the nation's government.
An "orange wave" led by Layton, affectionately nicknamed "Jacq" in his home province, began to roll across Quebec and threatened to recapture the Bloc's separatist stronghold for federalism.
The single most memorable moment of the 2011 campaign had been Layton's bulls-eye strike against Ignatieff during the English-language leaders' debate over the Liberal leader's dismal attendance record in the House of Commons. That sharp exchange between the ascendant Layton and Ignatieff, headed for free fall as it turned out, symbolized the pivotal red-to-orange shift of allegiance that took place among so many voters in the election.
The seismic shift would not be enough to catapult Layton and his New Democratic Party — a perennial also-ran in federal elections since its emergence from the CCF in 1961 — to power in Ottawa.
Yet Layton — all but written off as a serious contender in the early part of the election fight, his campaign initially dogged by doubts about his health and his party's relevance in the "two-way race" expected between Harper's Conservatives and Ignatieff's Liberals — was indeed poised to make history.
While Harper would secure the majority mandate his party had been pursuing for years, the remarkable rise of the Layton-led New Democrats was surely the most startling result of the election. Buoyed by Layton's unmatched personal popularity, the NDP won a stunning total of 103 seats — eclipsing the party's previous record of 43 — and elected 59 of Quebec's 75 MPs, obliterating the Bloc, relegating the Liberals to third place nationally for the first time in the history of Canada's "natural governing party," and seizing the role of official Opposition for the NDP.
And while the Quebec results were truly earth-shaking, Layton's achievement on May 2 was so enormous that the NDP also elected more MPs from outside of that province — 44 — than the party had ever sent in total to the House of Commons.
"My friends, it's a historic night for New Democrats," a jubilant Layton said on election night. "Spring is here, my friends, and a new chapter begins.
"Tommy Douglas, our first leader, said 'Dream no little dreams,' and I've always taken that to heart," he added. "It's time to roll up our sleeves and get back to work, and let's not stop until the job is done."
Becoming Opposition leader proved to have its own challenges. Layton's Quebec caucus, packed with political neophytes and — at least nominally — former separatists, demanded special attention from a leader suddenly juggling more responsibility and a higher profile than any of his NDP predecessors.
And, as Canadians now know, he was also dealing with devastating news about his own health almost as soon as he'd settled into his new, centre-stage role in the political life of the country.
"Oftentimes," Layton observed in his 2006 memoir, "life's highs and lows are inextricably linked."
Political triumphs and setbacks, he noted, seem to tightly follow one another; personal achievements and disappointments, too.
"That has certainly happened to me," he wrote, "and, occasionally, the ups and downs were virtually simultaneous."
From the distant vantage of history, the height of Layton's life will appear to coincide precisely with its end. There may be some solace for his followers — and for all admiring Canadians — that Layton's death will be inextricably linked with his finest hour. |