Friday, October 31, 2008

Final McCain and Obama Campaign Ads

Final McCain and Obama Campaign Ads

Final push is on. New ads from both Obama and McCain just 3 days before the election. Obama uses Bush to attack McCain in his negative ad. He then promotes his Powell and Buffet endorsements in a positive one. McCain attacks Obama on wanting to sit down for talks with Iran. McCain than uses an ad with Obama praising Lieberman and McCain on global warming as a positive one. I would imagine ads from both campaigns will be all over the airwaves this weekend South of the border.
-Darryl


Obama Ads





McCain Ads



North Carolina Senate Race gets Nasty. Ad war over religion

North Carolina Senate Race gets Nasty. Ad war over religion

And the media thought our ads on Dion were harsh. The senate race in North Carolina between Elizabeth Dole and Kay Hagan is going to be one of the closest in the United States. It could very well determine if Democrats achieve 60 seats in the Senate giving them a filibuster proof majority. Some of the media and of course Dion complained about Conservative ads against him. Liberals ran attack ads against us trying to link George Bush to Harper. As you can see from the ads below; our negative attack ads are very mild compared to what we see South of the border. Personally I believe that while everyone says they dislike negative advertising, ultimately it works. Of course if you go too far, it backfires big time. Not sure how these ads will impact the outcome on Tuesday, but they are quite interesting. Current polls show Democrat Kay Hagan with a slight lead in the race. Mixing religion and political campaigns could be risky. Any thoughts on these ads or negative ads in general?
-Darryl

Dole campaign ads:









Politics and Religion:





Kay Hagan Response Ads





Social Security Attack



Standard George Bush Ad for Democrats



A little election humour....

A little election humour....

Thanks to my friend Doug who sent this to me...
-Darryl

Hollywood encourages young people to vote

Hollywood encourages young people to vote

I think this will be the first election where we really see a large turnout among young people. It is time for a new generation to have their voices heard.
-Darryl



Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Cruise, Cameron Diaz, Snoop Dogg, Harrison Ford, Julia Roberts, Ben Stiller, Will Smith, Steven Spielberg, Justin Timberlake, along with Sacha Baron Cohen as Borat, Zach Braff, Colin Farrell, Neil Patrick Harris, Scarlett Johansson, Shia LeBeouf, Tobey Maguire, Ryan Reynolds, and Jason Segal, are featured in a second of a series of public service announcements to encourage American youth to vote in partnership with Google, YouTube, Declare Yourself, and MySpace. The non-partisan PSAs, produced by DiCaprios Appian Way, were created to engage and inspire young people to vote and participate in the upcoming election.

McCain looses 'Joe the plumber'

McCain looses 'Joe the plumber'

This is not a big deal, but tells the story about how poorly the McCain campaign is being run. Constantly jumping from one message to another. Constantly in reaction mode and never proactive. Joe the Plumber is now the third person on the McCain ticket and his fame is being extended a few minutes. Yet for some reason, the people running the Republican campaign cannot even coordinate an appearance properly. Not a reason to vote for or against McCain, but you would think with five days to go that the campaign could at least get its act together. Palin and McCain aides fighting amongst themselves in the media. For a decade Hillary was one of the most disliked figures in Republican circles yet during the McCain campaign there were ads that promoted Hillary Clinton and attacked Obama for not selecting her as VP. It would be fair to say that the whole purpose of selecting Palin was to appeal to those upset Clinton supporters following the primaries. A few weeks later, it appears that economic credentials are not present on the Republican ticket at a time when the economy is the top issue. Political opportunism has backfired. All the Republican surrogates seem to have disappeared. Gaffes are taking place everywhere. Palin seemed to suggest that only states that vote Republican are pro-American. The whole campaign has been a complete gong show. In the final weeks where is Mitt Romney? Mike Huckabee? Fred Thompson? Rudy Giuliani? Where is George W. Bush? Donald Rumsfeld? Dick Cheney? Joe Lieberman? Obama is out there with Colin Powell, Warren Buffet, Al Gore and Bill Clinton. John McCain has "Joe the Plumber". Would you not rather have someone like Romney talking about the economic crisis? If you haven't demonstrated that you can put together a compotent campaign, why should anyone have confidence you can run the United States of America?

All the blue states have been given up on. McCain is now desparate to hold red states that in some cases haven't voted Democratic in decades. Even his home state of Arizona is becoming a battleground state because of a surge in Obama support among Hispanic voters. Ironic given how much of a price he paid for his amnesty bill. Obama supporters are enthusiastic, excited and are turning out new voters as we speak. McCain supporters are looking at the polls, see the writing on the wall and were never that enthusiastic or excited to begin with. Stopping the democrats from unchecked power is really the only remaining hope left. The electoral college map and state polls show that mathmatically it is almost impossible for McCain to win.

When you look at the George W. Bush fiscal record and the fact that McCain represents more of the same failed policies; one has to wonder if there is a Conservative option in this race. Under the Republicans spending is up to record levels, the national debt has doubled, unemployment has increased and John McCain opposes Barack Obama's middle class tax cut in favour of continuing the Bush tax cut that he once opposed. The economy has been mismanaged into a likely recession - if not worse. Banks are failing. Corporate welfare is soaring. Home values are collapsing. The volatile stock market is threatening retirement investments and savings. The middle class is far worse off today than 8 years ago. Incomes are falling or staying the same. A massive wealth transfer has taken place to oil producing nations, many of them enemies of the United States. Huge trade deficits are growing. China is loaning Americans money to fight a war in Iraq. George W. Bush has not once balanced the budget. America's standing in the world has drastically fallen. I am not at all sure how that is a conservative record. I see it as a disaster with change more than justified. McCain does not represent change.

The best thing that could happen to the Republican Party on Tuesday would be a complete blow out. They need to lose the White House, Senate and Congress. Once that occurs, Obama and the Democrats can deal with the financial crisis over the next four years. Republicans can use the time to rebuild the Reagan coalition and come back with a platform that appeals to all Conservatives, independents and moderate Democrats - not just their base. Republicans have to go back to their roots. Corruption needs to be cleaned out. Anyone associated with the Bush presidency needs to be fired and not allowed near Washington again. They have to find conservatism again. Maybe in four years this can happen and the Republican party will be credible again. In the short term, the state of the Republican Party in America is in no better shape than the Liberal party in Canada.

Reagan asked Americans if they were better off today than four years ago. The overwhelming majority of Americans can not say they are. When you screw up this badly, someone must be held accountable. Republicans do not deserve another term in power.

In terms of Canada, it will be nice to not be compared to Bush in future campaigns from Harper's perspective. Given our oil reserves, I would not be afraid to open up NAFTA but American should know that we will have some grievences to and not all of the renegotiation would be to their advantage. Free trade has been good for both sides and there is no chance the agreement will be torn up. Obama gave us a "heads up" on that issue during the primaries.

The focus of the remaining Republicans, most of whom call themselves independents should be rebuilding the Reagan coalition. Here is what can happen in America when the ideas of conservatism appeal to a broad base. Until that coalition is rebuilt, the Republican party will not have much influence in American politics going forward. Obama will pick up somewhere around 370 electoral college votes on Tuesday and the Republicans being tossed from power will be well deserved. When you tell people who disagree with you that they do not fit in as a conservative, you find yourselves getting your asses handed to you at election time when they vote for someone else or stay home. There is no doubt we are going to see that happen on Tuesday and the question is how will Republicans respond. Will they blame the media? Will they look in the mirror, realize they messed up America and take responsibility? Will they get the message their views are not mainstream and they need to broden the tent? If they do not return to the conservative roots in the next few years; get use to seeing President Obama for a long time.
-Darryl

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Here is the single best way Canadians can support Barack Obama


Here is the single best way Canadians can support Barack Obama

If you are available to travel from Toronto to Ohio between Monday Nov 3 - Wednesday Nov 5, come help us Get Out The Vote (GOTV).

There are still a few spots available in cars driving down during those dates (one from Vaughn), and there are fantastic Out of State coordinators who will help you find housing if you need it.

Why is this so important?

John McCain has virtually no electoral path to victory without Ohio.

Due to the efforts of a fantastic group of volunteers in Ohio, 94% of Ohioans are registered to vote. We need to get Democrats to the polls.

In 2004, Bush won Ohio (and therefore, the White House) by only 10 votes per precinct. With your help we can get those 10 votes.

The volunteer team in Ohio (and all over the country) is tremendous. Anyone who comes down will be trained, and given all the information and help needed to go out there and get those votes.

If you can come (or if you are driving to Ohio from Toronto and have a few spots in your car), please contact Desiree Sy (until Fri Oct 31st).

Let's win this!

-Desiree Sy
e.lake8@gmail.com
cell (often off, takes messages): 647-403-8296
work: 416-874-8296

Breaking News: New Conservative Cabinet



Breaking News: New Conservative Cabinet


Update: Click here for the official list from the Conservative website

Formal write up coming soon…this is the unofficial list based on the notes I took. Sorry if there are spelling errors...


Quick thoughts: I really like the increase in women in this cabinet as well as the experience this time around. A couple of surprises in terms of portfolio selection, but no real surprises in terms of who got in cabinet. I think this is the strongest cabinet Stephen Harper has put together to date. Personally I think Maxime Bernier should have been brought back in some form, but am not surprised that he was not. Alice Wong, Lois Brown, Shelly Glover, Bob Dechert and Michael Chong should also be considered in the future. Overall I am happy with this cabinet. Clearly the economy will be the top focus moving forward.

-Darryl


Cabinet:

PM – Stephen Harper

Justice – Rob Nicholson

Veterans Affairs – Greg Thompson

Indian Affairs – Chuck Strahl

Treasury Board – Vic Toews

International Cooperation – Bev Oda

Finance – Jim Flaherty

Agriculture – Gerry Ritz

National Revenue – J.P. Blackburn

Senate Leader – Marjory LeBreton

Defense – Peter MacKay

International Trade – Stockwell Day

Labour – Rona Ambrose

HRDC – Diane Finley

Environment – Jim Prentice

Transport – John Baird

Foreign Affairs – Lawrence Cannon

Industry – Tony Clement

Intergovernmental Affairs – Josee Verner

House Leader – Jay Hill

Whip – Gordon O’Connor

Public Safety – Peter Van Loan

Immigration – Jason Kenney

Public Works – Christian Paradis

Heritage – James Moore

Health – Leona Aglukkaq

Natural Resources – Lisa Raitt

Fisheries – Gail Shea

Sport & Olympics – Gary Lunn

Status of Women – Guergis

Small Business – Diane Ablonczy


Secretaries of State

Foreign Affairs responsible for AmericasPeter Kent

Transport – Ron Merrifield

Western Economic Diversification – Lynne Yelich

Democratic Reform – Stephen Fletcher

Science and Technology – Gary Goodyear

Economic Development Agency – Denis Lebel

Atlantic Canada Economic Opportunities Agency – Keith Ashfield

Notes:

*11 women appointed

*Peter Kent, Van Loan will represent York Region

*Cabinet is larger, now 38 members (unless I am missing a post or two)

*At this point I am not sure who the Minister is for Toronto or Ontario.

*No floor crossers or senate appointments.

Bill Clinton reminds Americans of the Good Times

Bill Clinton reminds Americans of the Good Times

Update
: CNN is now showing that Obama will safely win Pennsylvania, Nevada, Colorado, Minnesota and Virgina. He is now projected to win at least 291 electoral college votes to 163 for John McCain. 85 electoral college votes are considered too close to call with MO, FL, IN, OH and NC being the only remaining battleground states. With the exception of Indiana; Obama currently leads in every remaining battleground state. No one should be expecting a close race on Tuesday. Expect Obama to win at least 300 electoral college votes and likely closer to 400. It's over.
-Darryl

It has been a great final week for Barack Obama. Recently he has been endorsed by Colin Powell and other Republicans. Polls are going his way in states currently held by the Republicans. Last night he made headlines and released a great 30 minute television infomercial that not only outlined his vision and platform, but also was 100% positive with no shots at McCain fired. Last night Bill Clinton reminded Democrats of when the economy was strong, when the budget was in surplus and when jobs were being created during his time as president. Bill Clinton on the campaign trail with Obama also guaranteed that Obama would have a good news cycle today and with only 5 days to go that is important.

Now on the US election, perhaps I have been a little overkill. Some people are getting tired of Obamamania. In 5 days, I will no longer be writing about the US election after blogging about it since 2006. It has been a historic primary. An African-American candidate for President. Two prominent women Sarah Palin and Hillary Clinton taking center stage and breaking down barriers for women. A slate of political all stars running in both primaries that included Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul, Mike Huckabee, John McCain, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards and Joe Biden. We have seen endorsements, debates, speeches, a revolutionary internet campaign and a presidential election that really started following the last mid-term race in 2006. Millions have been raised and spent. The campaigning is basically over. The focus now for both sides must be getting out the vote on the ground, particularily in the swing states. This campaign has been exciting and turnout is going to be extremely high.

For as long as I have been supporting Obama, most of the criticisms have been the same. People say I am not Conservative. They question Obama's experience while insincerely trying to pass off Palin as qualified. There have been accusations that Obama is a Muslim. That he hangs out with terrorists. There was Wright, Ayers and other "scandals" as Republicans chose the route of personal and unsubstantiated attacks because they cannot run on their record over the past eight years. They have called Obama a socialist. They say Obama will ruin the economy as if it has been managed well under Bush. They say George Bush and John McCain are not the same but fail to site any differences. That is because there is no difference except on torture and climate change. On the economy, John McCain is more of the same. On foreign policy, John McCain is more of the same. On domestic priorities, John McCain is more of the same. Under George W. Bush (who inherited a surplus from Bill Clinton) we have seen record deficits, not once a balanced budget, the national debt has doubled, unemployment has increased, spending has skyrocketed, government is the biggest it has ever been in history, and the middle class is not better off than 4 or 8 years ago under this administration. People may point the figer elsewhere, but it is time to take responsibility and show accountability.

John McCain says he is running on change and that he is different from Bush. His policies are the same and his campaign has been nothing but mudslinging and negative attacks. Obama wants to build America up while McCain is focused on tearing Obama down. His low road attacks are not based in truth and his polling numbers show that Americans have rejected the recycled "liberal", "tax and spend", "socialist" and "weak on national security" labels that have been used in past campaigns. I have not seen one person comment about how George W. Bush has done a good job or has been a great president. People on the right and left are united in calling Bush one of the worst presidents in United States history. Unfortunately, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over again and expecting a different result. It is time for real change.

Barack Obama has been tested during these past two years. He has made an immediate impact in the senate dealing with arms control and ethics. He has experience in the state legislature. His campaign has been about unity and moving America forward. He offers the change that Americans and the world are demanding. His platform (or the video last night) shows that many of his policies are no different than what Conservatives are offering in Canada. Unlike McCain, we know exactly where we stands. He is running on the economy, an area McCain admits he is not up to speed on.

In 5 days, this race will be history. America will face many challenges and the results of this election will impact governments all around the world. Barack Obama is the right choice for these times. He is qualified to be president and has put together the best campaign seen in the modern world. He has brought new people into the political process. The enthusiasim and excitment for his campaign is incredible. He is the guy who can restore America's image on the world stage. This Tuesday, Americans should vote for change. Yes we Can!
-Darryl

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Obama's 30 minute television special: American Stories, American Solutions

Obama's 30 minute television special: American Stories, American Solutions

Out of the park...home run for Obama! Congratulations Philadelphia as well on the World Series Championship!
-Darryl


Why is "Joe the Plumber" talking about foreign policy

Why is "Joe the Plumber" talking about foreign policy

What a joke the McCain campaign has become. Conditions are terrible for Republicans in this election cycle, but this is unreal. New desperate attacks each day. No consistent message. Palin and McCain aides fighting each other through the media. Now the campaign is overplaying its hand with "Joe the Plumber" having him stumping on the campaign trail and freelancing on foreign policy - an area where he has no defined credentials. The McCain campaign is going from poorly managed to outright bizarre. Who is the presidential candidate? Is it McCain, Palin or Joe the Plumber.
-Darryl

Obama and McCain attack ads

Obama and McCain final attack ads

With 5 days to go, here is some of the attack ads from both campaigns heading into voting day.
-Darryl

Barack Obama:







John McCain





Hillary needs you to volunteer for Obama

Hillary needs you to volunteer for Obama

Senator Hillary Clinton spoke on October 21, 2008 in Hibbing Minnesota.



Barack Obama: Closing Argument in Norfolk, VA

Barack Obama: Closing Argument in Norfolk, VA

Voting is now underway in more than 30 states. Turnout is high. We are now 5 days away from election day. The Obama ground operation is working hard to turn out voters. Volunteers from safe Democratic states are working in the contested states. Tonight Obama has purchased 30 minutes of prime time television on several channels for an infomercial. All the endorsements have been made. The debates are over. This one is now in the hands of the American voter. The crowd in Virginia last night is an example of the enthusiasim and the growing support we are seeing for Barack Obama's campaign even in formerly Republican states.
-Darryl

Dave Matthews for Obama

Dave Matthews for Obama

Vote Tuesday November 4th. Visit http://www.VoteForChange.com to get all the info you need for election day.

What does John McCain have against Milwaukee?

What does John McCain have against Milwaukee?

I have family who live in Milwaukee and in the surrounding area of Wisconsin. This post is for them. You know how to vote this Tuesday! For the record, despite what John McCain says; I think Milwaukee is a beautiful place to live and visit.
-Darryl

Another round of Trudeaumania?


Another round of Trudeaumania?

Justin Trudeau says he is not running. Same goes for Frank McKenna. According to the poll below, Justin Trudeau would be the best choice to replace Stephane Dion with McKenna and Ignatieff tied in second place. Bob Rae was fourth. Candidates Dominic LeBlanc, Gerard Kennedy, Martha Hall Findlay, Ruby Dhalla and John Manley failed to register any significant support in this pool. Here is a look at some of the potential candidates:

Justin Trudeau - declared he is not interested in the leadership of the Liberal Party at this point in his career

Frank McKenna - also announced he is not running.

Michael Ignatieff - front runner and most likely the next leader

Bob Rae - another front runner candidate

Dominic LeBlanc - the darkhorse or potential compromise candidate. Likely one of the only contenders not from Toronto

John Manley - lacks charisma and likely won't be forgiven for working with Harper. Strong foreign affairs and economic experience at least.

Ken Dryden - huge name recognition but lacks charisma

Gerard Kennedy - likely hurt by playing kingmaker for Dion last time

Scott Brison - always runs when there is a leadership race

Ralph Goodale - from the West but not fluent in French

Ujjal Dosanjh - interested perhaps but only won his riding by 22 votes

Dalton McGuinty - most likely not interested

David McGuinty - probably very interested

Martha Hall Findlay - probably the only credible female candidate that will enter

Ruby Dhalla - young but not fluent in French

Elizabeth May - if she gets turfed as green leader or if she wants to make change in parliament, May should consider getting in this race. Unlikely though.

Joe Volpe - his last leadership campaign was a disaster

Martin Cauchon - Token Quebec representative. Not sure what he brings to the table outside of the Montreal region

Dennis Coderre - See above. The last three Liberal leaders have represented Quebec ridings. I think Liberals should consider looking to another province this time.

Stephane Dion - if the government falls before May...he is the guy!

With McKenna and Trudeau not entering the race, it should be more clear than ever that the problems in the Liberal party extend well past leadership and there will not be an easy quick fix. There is no Barack Obama in the field. I expect a smaller race this time with less than 5 candidates. Ignatieff, Rae, LeBlanc, Manley, Findlay and Kennedy are the only ones who could pass themselves off as serious candidates at this point in time. It looks to be like Michael Ignatieff will take it this time, but LeBlanc could be the compromise this time between Rae and Iggy based on the way this thing is shaping up. Manley, Kennedy and Findlay are serious candidates but do not really have a serious chance of winning.
-Darryl

Canadians prefer Trudeau

Poll shows young heir is top pick to replace Dion

Norma Greenaway , Canwest News Service

Published: Tuesday, October 28, 2008

OTTAWA - He is tall, dark-haired and handsome. He won a seat in the House of Commons on his first try. He's got a famous name. He has a picture-perfect young family. On top of all that, Justin Trudeau is the top pick among Canadians of all political stripes and most age groups as the next leader of the federal Liberal party, according to a new Ipsos Reid poll.

Trouble is, the 36-year-old first-born son of the late Pierre Trudeau says he's not interested in the party's top job this early in his nascent political career.

Pollster John Wright says he suspects most Canadians know Trudeau "can't be taken seriously as a serious candidate" to replace outgoing leader Stephane Dion, given his lack of political and life experience in the face of such economically challenging times.

Pollster John Wright says he suspects most Canadians know Trudeau "can't be taken seriously as a serious candidate."

Pollster John Wright says he suspects most Canadians know Trudeau "can't be taken seriously as a serious candidate."

Wayne Cuddington/Ottawa Citizen

Instead, Wright says he interprets Canadians' choice of Trudeau as meaning either the party is bereft of recognizable leaders, or it has a genuinely clean slate heading into the leadership contest. Wright comes down on the side of the latter.

"There's no heir apparent. There's no air of excitement. There's no air of appointment," Wright, senior vice-president of Ipsos Reid, said in an interview.

The online survey, released Tuesday and conducted exclusively for Canwest News Service and Global National, explored Canadians' support for nine potential Liberal leadership candidates. Among Canadians of all parties, it said, Trudeau finished first with 16 per cent of the vote. He also scored the most support among those aged 18 to 55, and he was the hands-down favourite among women voters.

Michael Ignatieff, the party's current deputy leader, and Frank McKenna, the former New Brunswick premier who announced Tuesday he would not be a candidate, were tied for second with 12 per cent of the vote. The two men also were the most popular choice among Canadians 55 and older, each garnering 16 per cent of the vote. Toronto MP Bob Rae, a former NDP premier of Ontario, finished in third spot at nine per cent.

Other potential contenders were well back. John Manley, a former deputy leader, had five per cent, and Toronto MP Gerard Kennedy, a former leadership candidate, had three per cent. New Brunswick MP Dominic LeBlanc, who has all but officially declared his candidacy, and Toronto-area MPs Martha Hall Findlay and Ruby Dhalla each registered one per cent.

Among the 26 per cent of those surveyed who said they would vote Liberal if an election were held today, Ignatieff and McKenna each pulled 19 per cent of that support and Trudeau pulled 17 per cent, putting the three men into a statistical dead heat, given the survey's margin of error of 3.1 percentage points. Rae was next at 10 per cent.

The other potential contenders finished well back. Kennedy had five per cent support, Manley and Hall Findlay each had three per cent, and LeBlanc and Dhalla came in under one per cent.

Wright said the poll, which also said one in 10 of those surveyed said "none of the above" when asked to make a choice, points to a wide-open race.

"It doesn't rule anybody in. It doesn't rule anybody out. It's an opportunity," he said.

Wright said the findings, taken in conjunction with the results of other surveys, suggest there is a yearning in the Liberal party and the country as a whole for something new, but not necessarily at the expense of experience.

Wright says Trudeau can be "part of the solution" for the party if Liberals use his youth, crowd appeal and fundraising abilities. But they need someone different for leader, he says.

"I think the issue over the next number of years may be how much experience people (potential leaders) have had with the economy and running a government, someone who can go eye-to-eye go toe-to-toe with Stephen Harper and help rebuild the party," he said.

The online survey, involving 1,012 adults, was conducted Wednesday through Saturday. Ipsos Reid said the sample's composition reflects that of the Canadian population according to census data and is considered accurate to within plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=9b14c1bf-e87a-40a6-8053-564930d09ed9

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Full Barack Obama "Closing Argument" Speech

Full Barack Obama "Closing Argument" Speech

Barack Obama made his closing argument speech in Canton Ohio, making the choice in this election starkly clear.

Canada now supports Obama 72%-12% over McCain



Canada now supports Obama 72%-12% over McCain

While these results come as no surprise, should Obama win as expected this Tuesday a lot will change in Canadian politics as well. For starters Jeffrey Simpson from the Globe and Mail points out what I have been saying for a long time. In his editorial, "What's a Canadian to do when there is no Bush to kick around anymore", Simpson points out that in future elections there will no longer be a George W. Bush for opposition parties to compare Harper to any more.

With Barack Obama polling at 72% here, and with previous polls showing he would win a majority regardless of what Canadian party he chose to lead; one has to wonder if anti-American aspects of the Canadian population will become out of touch with the views of mainstream Canadians. Stephen Harper has demonstrated that he is pro-American as oppose to pro-Bush in my opinion. Close relations with Obama could help him in the next election. He will be free to work productively with our US friends and ally without the media and opposition accusing him of being "too close to Bush".

For sure an Obama presidency will change policies in Washington with regard to Afghanistan, Iraq, the economy, climate change and America's role in the world. Gone will be hundreds of thousands of protesters that use to greet George W. Bush here and in Europe. The crowds Obama drew in Germany for example could be a sign of things to come starting in January 2009. This past weekend, I had the pleasure of staying at Deerhurst in Muskoka for a Rotary district conference. The G8 will be coming there in 2010. I wonder if 100,000 Canadians will make the trip up to Huntsville to cheer on Obama as oppose to protests we have seen in the past? Obama has the ability to restore America's image and role in the world. He can regain their moral authority. He can repair declining relations with allies and enemies alike. Obama winning on Tuesday will be good for Canadian relations with the United States, Stephen Harper and in my opinion the United States of America.

Of course one cannot get too caught up in the hype and desire for change. Obama will face a lot of challenges right away as president and there will be no honeymoon period. Is it possible to live up to the expectations? Is the world and American public guarenteed to be let down? Will Obama resort to protectionism or attempt to renegotiate NAFTA? Will the US economy make the next president unpopular regardless of who wins? Will he be tested by a foreign power or act of terrorism?

According to the Globe and Mail, Canadians prefer Obama over McCain by a margin of 72%-12%. Polls and electoral college vote projections in the United States indicate Canada's preference will likely win. Obama will make history and change will come to the United States government after 8 years of Republican rule. The question now is, are Canadians ready for change as well?
-Darryl

Canadians back Obama, seek closer ties with a new president

Majority do not believe Harper has been very effective in promoting Canada's interests with U.S., poll found

From Monday's Globe and Mail

OTTAWA — Canadians are excited about the prospect of a Barack Obama presidency, and want Prime Minister Stephen Harper to work more closely with a new U.S. administration on issues from protecting the environment to dealing with the economic crisis, a new poll suggests.

With only eight days until the U.S. election, Canadians overwhelmingly support Mr. Obama over Republican nominee John McCain, and believe the Illinois senator would do a better job of restoring America's credibility in the world and dealing with the global economic crisis.

But regardless of the winner, there remains significant skepticism in Canada over whether the U.S. can be trusted to deal fairly with Canadian concerns, said the survey, which was conducted for the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute. The Calgary-based institute holds its annual conference in Ottawa today, with its focus on Canada-U.S. relations.

And there are concerns that Mr. Obama – together with a Democratic-controlled Congress – could impose protectionist measures that would hurt Canada.

“It's pretty clear that we have a healthy skepticism of the Americans, even with Obama, although there are a lot of hopes with him as president,” said Greg Lyle, managing director for Innovative Research Group, which conducted the online survey for the institute.

Canadians expect their government to work closely with the U.S. on international problems, and do not believe Mr. Harper has been particularly effective in dealing with the administration of George W. Bush.

In the survey, 58 per cent said Mr. Harper has not been effective in advancing Canada's interests with the Bush administration. [The online poll of more than 2,000 people was conducted between Oct. 16 and Oct. 21, and has a margin of error of 2.7 percentage points.]

With the expectation that Mr. Obama will be the next president, 70 per cent of respondents said Canada should work more closely with the U.S. to protect the environment; 60 per cent said the two governments should work more closely in dealing with the economic crisis, and 59 per cent said there should be greater co-operation to reduce drug trafficking.

Colin Robertson, senior fellow with the institute, said he was struck by the pragmatism of Canadians who remain suspicious of the U.S., but recognize the need for close collaboration.

“Arguably, Canadian are the original unAmericans – our origins go back to that,” said Mr. Robertson, who heads the Canada-U.S. project at Carleton University. “But there is nonetheless a realism that says we expect our leaders to work together on problems.”

In fact, 62 per cent of respondents indicated a willingness to adopt American regulatory standards if it would ease restrictions at the border.

On the other hand, Canadians want to see their government move more aggressively to assert sovereignty in the North, despite U.S. opposition. Some 57 per cent say it is unlikely the U.S. will recognize Canada's claims in the North, and 44 per cent want the federal government to unilaterally declare a 200-mile economic zone to cover the Northwest Passage.

Like people around the globe, Canadians are enamoured with Mr. Obama, who outpolls Mr. McCain here by 72 to 12. (In the U.S., Mr. Obama has a commanding eight-point lead over Mr. McCain in an average of national polls assembled by RealClearPolitics website.)

The greatest fear regarding the Democratic candidate is that he would be too protectionist, with 57 per cent saying they worry he would end or renegotiate the North American free-trade agreement, or that he would be too protectionist.

My US Election Prediction: Obama wins 378 to 160


My US Election Prediction: Obama wins 378 to 160

You can put together your own prediction by visiting this link.
-Darryl

Update: These numbers do not come out of thin air. Below is the breakdown.


Obama will win 378 electoral college votes by winning the following states:


Hawaii

California

New Mexico

Oregon

Washington

Nevada

Colorado

North Dakota

Minnesota

Wisconsin

Michigan

Ohio

Pennsylvania

Iowa

Illinois

Indiana

Virginia

North Carolina

New York

New Jersey

Vermont

New Hampshire

Maine

Massachusetts

Rhode Island

Connecticut

Delaware

Maryland

DC

Missouri

Florida


John McCain will win 160 electoral college votes by winning the following states:


Arizona

Alaska

Georgia

Texas

Utah

Idaho

Montana

Wyoming

South Dakota

Nebraska

Kansas

Oklahoma

Arkansas

Louisiana

Mississippi

Alabama

Tennessee

South Carolina

West Virginia

Kentucky

Monday, October 27, 2008

2008 US Electoral College and State Polls Breakdown




2008 US Electoral College and State Polls Breakdown


CNN is the most Conservative calling 277 electoral college votes for Obama. Electoral-vote.com is the most confident predicting 375. Either way an Obama win is likely as 270 are required to win the White House. There will be a lot of focus on the national polls over the next week, but this formula is the only one that matters. The US election is decided by electoral college votes and not the overall popular vote. This is how Bush was able to win in 2000 despite having less total votes. Like in Canada, national polls do not matter unless you factor them into seat counts. The three sites below factor state polling into their projections.
-Darryl


http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/calculator/

http://www.electoral-vote.com/

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/maps/obama_vs_mccain/?map=5

Palin and McCain feuding

Palin and McCain feuding

This is what happens on a losing campaign. John McCain is going down and will not be President. Sarah Palin is a rising star who will likely be the next nominee in 2012. Behind the scenes in the Republican campaign, finger pointing has begun and Palin and her people have ditched the talking points, advice and campaign message that they blame for her negative press and image. In the meantime, McCain has the task of convincing his supporters he can still win. If he fails to do that; turnout and get out the vote efforts will lead to an even more humilating loss to Obama. Sarah Palin has drawn huge crowds, brought energy to an otherwise lame campaign and is now a mainstream celebrity in the United States and around the world. I suspect this will encourage further infighting as Republicans cruise to a certain defeat. Palin is in a great position for 2012, but needs to be careful. The bigger the defeat this year, the more her wagon will be tied to this electoral disaster. I have learned from comments on this blog and elsewhere that Palin has quite the following. Unfortunately for the Republican Party this year, McCain does not. Should be interesting as we go into the final week of this US Presidential election campaign.
-Darryl

New Obama Ads

New Obama Ads

2 minutes. Expensive and highlights the financial advantage Obama will have in the final days. This ad outlines his agenda.



This ad goes after McCain's negative campaign



Jay-Z tries to get out the vote at a concert in Michigan

Thursday, October 23, 2008

12 days to go and Palin still not sure what a VP does


12 days to go and Palin still not sure what a VP does

The Vice President is expected to be ready to serve in the event that the President cannot. It is unclear if she is qualified for her main role should she become VP. They also break tie votes in the Senate and occasionally lobby senators to pass legislation. They are not involved in legislation in the way Palin suggests.
-Darryl

From Wikipedia:

The Vice President of the United States is the first person in the presidential line of succession, becoming the new President of the United States upon the death, resignation, or removal of the president, should he or she accept the position. Every presidential term ends on January 20 of the year immediately after a presidential election. As designated by the Constitution of the United States, the vice president also serves as the President of the Senate, and may break tie votes in that chamber. He or she may be assigned additional duties by the president but, as the Constitution assigns no executive powers to the vice president, in performing such duties he or she acts only as an agent of the president.

President of the Senate

President of the SenateAs President of the Senate (Article I, Section 3), the vice president oversees procedural matters and may cast a tie-breaking vote. There is a strong convention within the U.S. Senate that the vice president not use his or her position as President of the Senate to influence the passage of legislation or act in a partisan manner, except in the case of breaking tie votes. As President of the Senate, John Adams cast twenty-nine tie-breaking votes—a record that no successor except for John C. Calhoun ever threatened. His votes protected the president's sole authority over the removal of appointees, influenced the location of the national capital, and prevented war with Great Britain. On at least one occasion he persuaded senators to vote against legislation that he opposed, and he frequently lectured the Senate on procedural and policy matters. Adams' political views and his active role in the Senate made him a natural target for critics of the Washington administration. Toward the end of his first term, as a result of a threatened resolution that would have silenced him except for procedural and policy matters, he began to exercise more restraint in the hope of realizing the goal shared by many of his successors: election in his own right as president of the United States of America.

In modern times, the vice president rarely presides over day-to-day matters in the Senate; in his place, the Senate chooses a President pro tempore (or "president for a time") to preside in the Vice President's absence, and the Senate maintains a Duty Roster for the post, normally selecting the longest serving senator in the majority party.

When the President is impeached, the Chief Justice of the United States of America presides over the Senate during the impeachment trial. Otherwise, the Vice President, in his capacity as President of the Senate, or the President pro tempore of the Senate presides. This may include the impeachment of the Vice President, although legal theories suggest that allowing a person to be the judge in the case where he or she was the defendant wouldn't be permitted. If the Vice President did not preside over an impeachment, the duties would fall to the President Pro Tempore.

One duty required of President of the Senate is presiding over the counting and presentation of the votes of the U.S. Electoral College. This process occurs in the presence of both houses of Congress, on January 6 of the year following a U.S. presidential election. In this capacity, only four Vice Presidents have been able to announce their own election to the presidency: John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Martin Van Buren, and George H. W. Bush. At the beginning of 1961, it fell to Richard Nixon to preside over this process, which officially announced the election of his 1960 opponent, John F. Kennedy. In 1969, Vice President Hubert Humphrey announced he had lost to Nixon. Later, in 2001, Al Gore announced the election of his opponent, George W. Bush.

Vice President John C. Calhoun became the first vice president to resign the office. He believed he would have more power as a senator. He had been dropped from the ticket by President Andrew Jackson in favor of Martin Van Buren. Already a lame-duck vice president, he was elected to the Senate by the South Carolina state legislature and resigned the vice presidency early to begin his Senate term.

Palin's response to what a VP does a few days ago:



Previous interview where Palin "does not know what a VP does"

McCain hits a new low


McCain hits a new low

John McCain is trailing badly in the polls and by all accounts is going to lose his bid for the White House on November 4. Now he is working on losing his legacy as a man of integrity and someone who promised to take the high road during this campaign. What happened to the straight talk express? As desperation sinks in, it is clear that McCain and Palin are attempting to throw as much mud as possible and simply hoping something sticks. Unfortunately for him, it doesn't change his lack of understanding on the economy, foreign affairs and the record of the Republican Party over the past 8 years. It doesn't change the fact he has turned off independents with his campaigning. It doesn't change the fact he is now on the defensive in states easily won by George W. Bush in 2004. It doesn't change the fact he has lost every debate. It doesn't change the fact he cannot raise anything close to Obama financially. It doesn't change the excitement and desire for change Barack Obama (with the help of George W. Bush) has inspired in America.

McCain is clearly out of ideas, out of touch and losing badly in this campaign. His VP choice is unqualified to be president. His party is not fully behind him. He wants to discuss anything but the economy - the top issue and priority of the day. Today McCain's campaign calls Obama a socialist and a terrorist. I guarantee you soon they will be calling him President of the United States.

It looks like the McCain camp is going to bring back Rev. Wright despite previously saying it was not relevant to the campaign. Just more flip flopping and confused messaging from the McCain camp. This is why people like Colin Powell have endorsed Obama and why I predict many Republicans will stay home on November 4.
-Darryl

My cabinet predictions



My cabinet predictions

Stephen Harper will have a lot of tough challenges ahead of him when he is selecting his new cabinet. Clearly we have a much deeper bench than previously. Here is a cabinet I put together for fun. I wanted to keep stability by leaving our strong ministers from last time where they are. I was also worried about regional, minority and gender representation. There are no surprises such as people crossing the floor or senate appointments. It will be interesting to see how close the real cabinet comes to this. I suspect similar players, but different positions. My cabinet also has a few extra positions than previous, but I suspect that is unlikely. Expect about 30 ministers with some secretary of states similar to previous Harper cabinets. Any feedback would be appreciated. I look forward to hearing who readers would recommend for the various posts. I highlighted York Region representation in bold.
-Darryl

Potential Cabinet


Prime Minister: Stephen Harper (ALB)


Deputy Prime Minister: Peter Van Loan (ONT)


Finance: Jim Flaherty (ONT)


Defense: Peter MacKay (NS)


Agriculture – Kelly Block (Sask)


Atlantic Canada – Gail Shea (PEI)


Heritage, Status of Women and Official Languages – Josee Verner (QUE)


Citizenship & Immigration – Jason Kenney (ALB)


Foreign Affairs – Peter Kent (ONT)


Environment – John Baird (ONT)


Fisheries & Oceans – Greg Thompson (NB)


Health – Tony Clement (ONT)


Veterans Affairs – Gordon O’Connor (ONT)


Human Resources & Social Development – Chuck Strahl (BC)


Indian Affairs & Northern Development – Leona Aglukkaq (NVT)


Industry, Science & Technology – Diane Ablonczy (ALB)


International Trade – Jim Prentice (ALB)


International Cooperation – Alice Wong (BC)


Justice – Rob Nicholson (ONT)


Labour – Jean Pierre Blackburn (QUE)


Quebec - Maxime Bernier (QUE)


House Leader and Whip - Peter Van Loan (ONT)


Minister for Ontario – Michael Chong (ONT)


Democratic Reform – Christian Paradis (QUE)


Senate Leader – Marjory LeBreton (ONT)


National Revenue – Vic Toews (MAN)


Natural Resources – Gary Lunn (BC)


Public Safety – Stockwell Day (BC)


Public Works – Diane Finley (ONT)


Intergovernmental Affairs – Lawrence Cannon (QUE)


Transport, Infrastructure and Communities/Minister for Toronto – Lisa Raitt (ONT)


Treasury Board – Bob Dechert (ONT)


Western Canada, Asia-Pacific Gateway, Wheat board and Olympics – James Moore (BC)


Multiculturalism & Identity – Bev Oda (ONT) or Deepak Obhrai (ALB)


Tourism & Small Business – Rona Ambrose (ALB)


Sport – Helena Guergis (ONT)

Canada and the world want Obama



Canada and the world want Obama

Canada just elected a Conservative government with 143 seats. What is interesting is that when surveyed on the US Race, 67% of Canadians prefer Barack Obama to John McCain who polled at 22%. In the rest of the world, on average non-Americans prefer Obama 4-1 over his Republican opponent. Based on these results, it is clear that the world overwhelming prefers Barack Obama to John McCain. I suspect the past 8 years of George Bush have a lot to do with these numbers. Given that Obama is most likely going to take the WhiteHouse in 13 days, I think these numbers are positive. Obama has the tools to restore America's image in the world. Given that economic, security, climate change and issues such as Iran are going to require international cooperation; I think these numbers demonstrate that Obama has the leadership qualities to get something productive done on all these fronts. I look forward to his first trip to Canada as President. I suspect he will be greeted with a much different reception than George W. Bush has been given here in the past.
-Darryl


U.S. Neighbors Prefer Obama to McCain by 3-to-1 Margin

Canadians more likely to see election’s outcome as relevant to them

by Steve Crabtree

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- When Canadians and Mexicans were asked in recent Gallup Polls whom they would personally rather see elected president of the United States this November, Democratic candidate Barack Obama received about three times as many nods among both populations as Republican contender John McCain.

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Two in three Canadians (67%) prefer Obama, while 22% favor McCain. As in the United States, widespread disapproval of the Bush administration is almost certainly hurting McCain in Canada. Just 22% of Canadians say they approve of the current U.S. leadership, while 71% say they do not.

In Mexico, the ratio of supporters between the two candidates is similar at 3-to-1 in favor of Obama; unlike Canadians however, most Mexicans -- 63% -- do not venture an opinion at all. This is in part a function of Mexicans' lower average socioeconomic status and education level; for example, 76% of Mexicans with elementary education or less say they don't have an opinion about the U.S. election, versus just 35% of those with a four-year degree who say the same.

However, Mexicans' lack of responsiveness may also stem from the fact that only 34% feel the U.S. election outcome will make a difference to their country, while 37% say it will not. Among Canadians, three-fourths say U.S. residents' choice of president will make a difference to Canada, while just 22% disagree.

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NAFTA

One substantive disagreement between McCain and Obama has come on the issue of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Obama wants to renegotiate the agreement to include enforceable labor and environmental standards -- a position that McCain has criticized as harmful to the economic growth brought about by free trade in the region.

A slim majority of Canadians agree with McCain that NAFTA has benefited their country economically; 51% say its effect has been mainly positive, while 39% say it has been mainly negative.

However, another finding suggests most Canadians are not powerfully attached to NAFTA: When asked what they think their government should do if the United States does decide to negotiate a new trade agreement, 45% say the Canadian government should agree to start negotiations, while 34% say the government should try to keep NAFTA intact, and 13% favor having no trade agreement at all. What's more, a September poll for the Council of Canadians found that 61% of Canadians agreed with Obama's intention to renegotiate NAFTA.

With regard to Mexican public opinion, NAFTA may be a wash politically -- 21% of Mexicans say the agreement has had a positive effect on their economy, while 24% say it has been negative. A majority of Mexicans either say the effect has been neither positive nor negative (19%) or that they don't know (36%).

Immigration

Mexicans' relative inattention to the U.S. election may partly reflect the relative lack of discussion by either candidate on one issue of particular concern to Mexicans: immigration policy. Currently, almost one in five Mexicans (18%) say they have family members who have moved abroad in the past five years, and 81% of those family members moved to the United States. Remittances are a significant source of income for many; 78% of Mexicans say those who go to live abroad are "a big help" for their families.

There is little substantive difference between Obama and McCain on immigration, which helps explain their lack of focus on the issue. Both candidates support a legalization process for illegal immigrants living in the United States that includes paying fines and learning English. Both also support guest worker programs, and both voted in 2006 for the construction of a fence along 700 miles of the United States/Mexico border.

Survey Methods

Results from Canada are based on telephone interviews with 1,005 adults, aged 15 and older, conducted Aug. 7-Sept. 7, 2008. For results based on this sample, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±3 percentage points. Results from Mexico are based on face-to-face interviews with 873 adults, aged 15 and older, conducted July 25-30, 2008. For results based on this total sample, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±3 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.

***

The world picks Obama for president - 4 to 1

Gallup poll of 70 countries finds widespread international support for Democratic candidate, including 67 per cent in Canada

Americans may still be undecided, but the rest of the world has made up its mind about who should be elected president of the United States.

A Gallup poll of 70 countries conducted from May through September has found widespread international support for Democratic candidate Barack Obama.

Around the world, respondents favoured Mr. Obama 4 to 1 over Republican John McCain.

In Canada, 67 per cent chose Mr. Obama and 22 per cent Mr. McCain. And 75 per cent of Canadian respondents said the presidential election would make a difference for their own country.

The Globe and Mail

The Democratic nominee also enjoyed levels of support higher than 60 per cent in Australia, Germany, England and Japan, where the U.S. election was viewed as having a global impact.

Around the world, only Georgia, Cambodia, Laos and the Philippines backed the Republican candidate.

Europeans were the most likely to state a preference in the election and to believe the winner would have an impact on their own countries.

Mr. Obama also received an overseas endorsement yesterday from the Conservative mayor of London, Boris Johnson.

"He visibly incarnates change and hope, at a time when America desperately needs both," Mr. Johnson wrote in the Daily Telegraph.

Within the United States, change seemed to be the theme of this week's polls.

A Pew Research Center poll released yesterday found that the Democrat is enjoying his widest margin yet over Mr. McCain among registered voters, at 52 per cent to 38 per cent.

The Rasmussen Report, however, released a daily tracking poll that had Mr. Obama ahead by just four points, leading Mr. McCain 50 per cent to 46 per cent, and Gallup had Mr. Obama ahead 52 per cent to 41 per cent.

But attention is increasingly settling on key battleground states, where the two candidates are competing for the electoral votes they need to win the White House on Nov. 4.

Polls yesterday showed the Democrats leading in all of the battleground states won by John Kerry in 2004 and several won by Republican President George W. Bush.

A CNN poll yesterday had Mr. Obama leading in Colorado by a margin of 51 to 47 per cent. In Florida, he was ahead 49 to 45, within the poll's margin of error. The same poll found Mr. McCain leading in Indiana 51 per cent to 46 per cent, and in Georgia 53 per cent to 45 per cent.

It was reported this week that the McCain campaign had effectively given up on Colorado, Iowa and New Mexico, states the party had once believed would lead them to victory.

But Jill Hazelbaker, Mr. McCain's national communications director, released a statement yesterday denying the report.

"We see the race tightening both internally and in public polling," she said. "We are within striking distance in the key battleground states we need to win."

Who would you personally rather see elected president of the United States?

Obama

McCain

Britain

60%

15%

Canada

67%

27%

Chile

43%

9%

France

64%

4%

Georgia

15%

23%

Germany

62%

10%

Japan

66%

15%

Kenya

89%

3%

Laos

24%

25%

Mexico

27%

9%

Philippines

20%

28%

Rwanda

57%

12%

Note: Totals may not add up to 100% due to rounding.

TONIA COWAN/THE GLOBE AND MAIL // SOURCE: GALLUP

Monday, October 20, 2008

Breaking News: Dion to remain Liberal leader until a new one is chosen


Dion to remain Liberal leader until a new one is chosen

Quick points:

-I think Dion came across very well. I was left with the impression that he is a sincere and genuine human being who has much more to contribute to Canadian politics. I think his point about the loss being about more than just leadership should be listened to by Liberals.

-I think it was a smart move to stay on as leader until after the next Liberal leadership convention. Caucus lobbying for Goodale and McCallum to serve as interim leader was showing that already there is infighting among the various camps within the Liberal party. It seems Ignatieff was pushing hard for McCallum while Rae's people wanted Goodale. Dryden was being proposed as a solution that would be neutral among the two camps. By staying, Dion puts an end to this type of thing.

-Dion wants to make fundraising the top priority within the Liberal Party. He wants to protect the next Liberal leader from being "vulnerable" like he was. Abstaining, not challenging early attack ads on the carbon tax/his leadership and the major Conservative financial advantage were consequences he cited for weak Liberal financing in contrast to the other parties. There is no question that this is true and needs to be addressed by Liberals.

-Dion did not commit if he will run in the next election, but stated he would work hard for the next leader.

-Early front runners include: McKenna, Iggy and Rae. Also likely to run are: Findlay, Kennedy, Manley, Brison, McGuinty (one of them) and Dhalla. Justin Trudeau announced he would NOT run this weekend. Ken Dryden was mentioned as a possible interim leader signalling that he probably does not have an interest in running for the leadership. Joe Volpe might run again based on his early comments calling for Dion to resign. Stephen LeDrew and Warren Kinsella are wild cards in terms of entering the race.

Thanks for reading...

Darryl

Colin Powell Endorses Barack Obama for President

Colin Powell Endorses Barack Obama for President

On NBC's Meet The Press, General Colin Powell announced his support for Barack Obama. October 19, 2008.


Sunday, October 19, 2008

Sarah Palin on SNL


Sarah Palin on SNL






You Tube keeps removing the video due to copyright violations, so click here if you missed last nights Saturday Night Live with Sarah Palin. I think Palin came across well.
-Darryl

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Darryl supports Doug Hawkins for Conservative National Council



Darryl supports Doug Hawkins for Conservative National Council

In a previous post, I endorsed Simon Chapelle and Kara Johnson for 2 out of the 4 Ontario seats on the Conservative national council. Today I am also proud to endorse Doug Hawkins for the third spot. Doug, like myself is originally from Northern Ontario - an area I think has the best potential for a breakthrough that would secure a Conservative majority. He is an advocate of the grassroots. Doug is an MBA graduate, self employed business owner and resident of Durham riding. His political experience is quite strong. I am also impressed with the fact that Doug has gone out of his way to solicit the opinions and priorities of other Conservatives as part of this process. Finally he has taken advantage of new technology such as blogging, Facebook and has proven to be accessible. At the Conservative policy convention in November; Ontario delegates should consider casting a vote for Simon Chapelle, Kara Johnson and Doug Hawkins. I am leaving the fourth spot open until the convention where I will be looking to meet the other candidates who are running.

Thanks for reading...

Darryl

***
______________________


"Announcing My Candidacy For National Council"

My nomination has been supported by a wide range of Ontario Conservatives including campus conservatives, EDA executives, members of both federal and provincial parliaments, senior citizens, farmers and party candidates from all corners of Ontario....

I therefore, as a proud conservative, announce that I, Doug Hawkins,
am running to represent all Conservative Ontarians as a member of our National Council.


"Personal Background"

- Raised in Northern Ontario

-Currently residing in Durham Region

-Husband/father of 2 teenagers

-Self -employed businessman

-MBA graduate

-Vast experience as a hands on campaign chair

-Chaired EDA policy & constitution committees

-As Whitby-Oshawa policy chair submitted a record number of resolutions for Winnipeg convention in collaboration with Ajax-Pickering EDA


"Canadian Conservatism"

Our party, The Conservative Party of Canada, through its
balanced approach to governance, represents the best opportunity
for the fiscal & social well-being of Canada and its citizens.

Our leader, Stephen Harper, through his great integrity, his wisdom and his leading edge vision has proven himself to be both the best party leader and the best choice for Prime Minister.

As party leader Stephen has shown respect for the grassroots of our party.

As a member of National Council I will work to ensure the grassroots of our party have the opportunity to contribute by maintaining our excellent policy development process.

As your Ontario representative I will work towards making decisive election breakthroughs in areas where we have not had success.

I believe that success will come if we work together,
Sincerely,

Doug Hawkins 1-866-525-5477,ext 2028 elect-doug-hawkins@rogers.com

p.s.Please contact me in the next few days;it would be great to hear what you
consider to be your three highest priorities for our Party in the year ahead!!!

Friday, October 17, 2008

Gen. Colin Powell expected to endorse Obama this Sunday


Gen. Colin Powell expected to endorse Obama this Sunday

This has been rumored for quite some time and will likely come true this Sunday on Meet the Press. While most endorsements do not impact voting intentions, this one might be an exception. Powell would give military and foreign affairs credibility to Barack Obama in an area he is still seen as weak. Powell is a former Bush administration Republican, is respected by 75% of Americans, is an African American conservative and an American war hero. He is seen by most as a man of integrity. One in three Americans said a Powell endorsement of Obama would make them more likely to vote Democrat. It would also emphasize his messages on Iraq, bi-partisanship and uniting Americans. Current Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has also not officially endorsed anyone, but that is more likely because of her role in government and not because she is a closet Obama supporter. Meet the Press should be very interesting this Sunday!
-Darryl



****

Chris Cillizza's Politics Blog -- The Fix

washingtonpost.com's Politics Blog

Why the Powell Endorsement (Could) Matter



The news that retired Gen. Colin Powell will appear this Sunday on "Meet the Press" has set off a frenzy of speculation that former secretary of State could throw his endorsement to Barack Obama.

Powell has made little secret of his admiration for the Illinois senator in the past but has always stopped short of outright endorsing him.

Will that change on Sunday? And, if it does, how much is Powell's endorsement really worth?

Seen through the prism of our handy-dandy endorsement hierarchy, Powell's endorsement of Obama would qualify as the highest powered of all endorsements: a symbolic one.

Here's several reasons why a Powell endorsement could matter:

1. Turnabout is Fair Play. Powell is best known for his most recent job in government -- as the secretary of State for President George W. Bush. The idea that a high-ranking cabinet official in a Republican administration would come out for the Democrat is simply too juicy a story for the media to ignore. That it would be someone as high profile as Powell would only add to the titillation.

2. The Most Popular Man in America? Powell, unlike almost no other official with ties to the Bush Administration, has retained remarkable popularity ratings. In an August Fox News/Opinion Dynamics poll, more than three-quarters (76 percent) of voters viewed Powell favorably while just 13 percent saw him in an unfavorable light. A large part of Powell's appeal is his perceived bipartisanship -- a direct result of his decision to repeatedly turn down overtures to run for president in his own right. For a certain (not insubstantial) portion of the electorate, when Powell speaks, they listen. The Fox News/Opinion Dynamics poll reinforces that fact; more than one in three voters said a Powell endorsement of Obama would make them more likely to vote for the Democrat. (Hat tip to Jon "The Numbers Man" Cohen for the polling data.)

3. Iraq, All Wrong. Powell, thanks to his immense popularity, was the Bush Administration's choice to make the case in front of the United Nations for the invasion of Iraq. Powell has since called that incident a "blot" on his record, and made clear his disappointment with the prosecution of the war. An endorsement of Obama, who built his candidacy on his early opposition to the conflict, would mark a clean break with the Bush Administration on the war and would add significant heft to Obama's argument that he alone possesses the judgment to lead the U.S. in a dangerous world.

4. The Final Straw. With polling -- both in the key battleground states and nationally -- showing that voters trust Obama more than John McCain to handle the current economic morass, one of McCain's last hopes is that the the election turns back somehow to a foreign policy focus. If Powell does endorse Obama, it would shore up the Illinois senator even if that eventuality occurred; it would be hard for McCain to slam Obama's approach on the war if the Democrat had a Powell endorsement sitting in his back pocket.

Dion likely to resign this Monday


Dion likely to resign this Monday

My early prediction is Frank McKenna. My preferred choice as a Conservative is Bob Rae. I think Liberals should give Dion the time he needs to leave the Liberal job with dignity. Problems with the Liberals go much deeper than leadership in my opinion.
-Darryl

***

For Immediate Release
October 17, 2008

Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion to hold a press conference in Ottawa

Date: Monday, October 20, 2008
Time: 2:00 PM
Location: National Press Theatre, 150 Wellington, Ottawa, Ontario

Welcome to Canada Mr. Sarkozy


Welcome to Canada Mr. Sarkozy

It is great to have French President Nicolas Sarkozy visiting in Quebec City today. Hopefully the two can discuss the current economic crisis and also a potential free trade deal between Canada and the EU. Mr. Sarkozy will also open up the La Francophonie summit today as well before leaving for Camp David. Unfortunately Sarkozy's wife Carla Bruni will not be traveling with the President today. Nicolas Sarkozy is a key leader in Europe and is potentially the most influential Conservative politician in the world right now.
-Darryl

Today marks two years for this blog


Today marks two years for this blog

On October 17, 2006, I wrote my first post on this blog. I have to admit blogging is addictive. I am not really sure why I started, but I am glad I did.

Over the course of the past two years a lot of exciting things have happened. The Conservatives had just won minority government ending 12 years of Liberal rule. The 2007 provincial election, the 2006 US election (that paved the way for the presidential election coming up November 4) and the Newmarket municipal election in 2006 were all fun to cover. The highlight of course was the recent election that saw the Conservative Party expand to 143 seats and of course the historic primaries that led me to campaign for Barack Obama on Super Tuesday in Chicago. Over the next couple of weeks, the focus will return to US politics and in mid-November, the Conservative policy convention in Winnipeg. Finally, I suspect the next Liberal leadership race will also be interesting to follow.

Blogging has led to many opportunities. What motivates me to post, is the people who take the time to read my opinions and engage in discussion through the comments section. The recent segment I did on the CBC National occured because they contacted me through this blog. Working with Reuters Voices without Votes website that is covering the foreign perspective on the US election has also been a priveledge. In the next few months, you will see more relationships with the national and mainstream media and this blog. Finally, expect more of a York Region focus in the future as I do not want to lose the local political perspective that I think is important.

I would like to thank Stephen Taylor and the Blogging Tories for all of the work that has been done to give the Conservatives a huge advantage online. I would like to thank all the people who take the time to visit this website, consider my opinions and express their views through the comments section. I would like to thank my provincial and federal riding associations in Newmarket-Aurora that put up with this blog and allow me to express my political opinions in public without trying to restrict the content. I think blogging and the internet will play a major role in our democracy going forward. I continue to admire blogs like Stephen Taylor, Steve Janke, Strong Conservative, Christian Conservative, Jason Cherniak, Warren Kinsella, Small Dead Animals, Western Standard and many others that offer something extra to political junkies while at the same time keeping the mainstream media on their toes.

Thank you for your support over these past two years. I hope to continue doing this for many years to come.

Thanks for reading...

Darryl

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Final US Presidential Debate


Final US Presidential Debate

All the debates are over at this point. This election has really been ongoing since November 2006. We are close to the finish line. I think Obama won the debate. At this point McCain needs some kind of game changer. He is beginning to lose ground in solid Republican states and has limited opportunities to change any of the blue states to red. I personally think this one is over unless some damaging major new information about Obama comes out or a huge gaffe occurs. We know Stephen Harper will continue as Prime Minister in Canada. In 18 days, I think Barack Obama will be the President of the United States. He is very close to the 270 electoral college votes required to win.

Note: I am not quite sure what is going on in the photo above...
-Darryl


Part 1



2



3



4



5



6



7



8



9



10

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Harper Victory Speech

Harper Victory Speech

Better quality video here



Part 2

Lois Brown Victory Speech


Lois Brown Victory Speech

A long time coming. Congratulations Lois...you earned this!!!
-Darryl


Posted by the Era Banner:

http://www.yrmg.com/streaming/news/0810lois.html

York Region sends 4 Conservatives out of 7 to Ottawa: Congratulations Lois Brown, Peter Van Loan, Peter Kent and Paul Calandra





York Region sends 4 Conservatives out of 7 to Ottawa: Congratulations Lois Brown, Peter Van Loan, Peter Kent and Paul Calandra

Update: I just realized Rahim Jaffer was defeated last night by the NDP. Therefore we did not sweep Alberta. Keith Martin also held his seat by 68 votes. Sorry for the confusion...

Congratulations to Lois Brown, Peter Kent, Peter Van Loan and Paul Calandra who pulled off Conservative wins in York Region last night. York Region now has 4 out of 7 MPs representing the Conservative Party.

It was also great to see gains in Mississauga, Halton, Oakville, Kitchener, London, Brant, Huron-Bruce, Kenora, and general vote increases virtually everywhere else in Ontario including Toronto.

Thanks to Leona Aglukkaq's win in Nunavut, we now have representation in Canada's North!

In Quebec it was great to see Jean-Pierre Blackburn re-elected. I personally hope Maxime Bernier returns to cabinet.

Congratulations to Peter MacKay in Central Nova. We saw gains in the province as Robert Thibault was defeated by Greg Kerr.

It was great to see a gain in PEI with Egmont. Congratulations Gail Shea on taking the seat. Danny Williams ABC campaign obviously cost us in Newfoundland. It also cost Newfoundland representation in the Conservative government and caucus. As far as I am concerned, the onus is on Danny Williams to repair the damaged relations with Harper as a result of this campaign.

And how about New Brunswick?? Goodbye Paul Zed. Liberal Charles Hubbard was also defeated. Keith Ashfield also picked up a seat for the Conservatives in Fredericton.

Congratulations to Shelly Glover in Saint Boniface boosting our seat total in Manitoba!

In Saskatchewan, we came close to sweeping the province. In Alberta we once again swept the province taking 65% of the vote!

Finally, 5 seat pickups in BC. Gary Lunn holds his seat. Donna Cadmen is going to Ottawa. Keith Martin goes down in defeat. Congratulations Alice Wang for the win in Richmond. Congratulations to all Conservative incumbents who held their ridings.

I would also like to congratulate our leader Stephen Harper for growing his seat total to 143. Canadians have trusted us with a larger mandate and it is time to get to work on their behalf.
Liberals finished with 76 seats, the Bloc 50, NDP 37 and the Greens were shut out. Congratulations go out to former Conservative Bill Casey who was re-elected as an independent. Also congratulations to Andre Arthur who also won his seat as an independent in a race where there was no Conservative opponent.

Overall a great election for Conservatives. I am quite satifisfied with the verdict of the people, particularly in Ontario and BC. Thank you to all the Conservative volunteers across the country who made this victory possible.

In Newmarket-Aurora, it feels great to once again be a blue seat. I would like to congratulate Tim Jones and the Liberal team for a strong campaign. I would also like to thank Belinda Stronach for her service to the community as an MP and through various charitable work. I am looking forward to Lois Brown representing us in Ottawa and am extremely happy that her determination over 5 years has finally paid off!!!!

Thanks for reading and voting...

Darryl

Monday, October 13, 2008

Vote for Lois Brown, the Conservative Party and Stephen Harper today in Newmarket-Aurora




Vote for Lois Brown, the Conservative Party and Stephen Harper today in Newmarket-Aurora!!!!!!!!

Note: Comments closed due to Elections Canada requirements on voting day

My predictions: Canadian Federal Election 2008


My predictions: Canadian Federal Election 2008

National Prediction:

CPC: 136, LIB: 85, NDP: 35, BQ: 50, IND: 2, GREEN 0
(155 required for a majority government)


Conservative minority with Stephen Harper as Prime Minister

***Election Turnout will be 56%

York Region:

Liberal 3, Conservative 3

Conservative pick ups in Newmarket-Aurora and Thornhill

***

Conservative: 136

BC: 22, Alberta: 28, Sask 13; Manitoba 8; North 1; Ontario 47; Quebec 9; NB 4; NS 3; PEI 0; NFLD 1

Key predictions:

-Gary Lunn will hold his seat in BC

-Donna Cadmen will win her seat for the Conservatives

-Greens will lose their only seat to the Conservatives in West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country

-Conservatives will win every seat in Alberta

-Conservatives will win all but one in Saskatchewan

-Conservatives will hold their results in Manitoba

-Lisa Raitt will defeat Garth Turner, Newmarket-Aurora will go blue. Other key Ontario wins will come in Mississauga, Oakville, London West and two rural seats Brant and Huron Bruce.

-Gains will come in Ontario and BC. Will take at least one loss in Quebec.

-Michael Fortier will be defeated

-Peter MacKay will defeat Elizabeth May in Nova Scotia

-Robert Thibault will be defeated in West Nova

-Potential gains for the Conservatives in New Brunswick and Nunavut

-Fabian Manning will win his seat in Newfoundland. Conservatives will be shut out of PEI again.

-No wins for Conservatives in Montreal or Toronto

***

Liberal 85

BC 5; ALB: 0; SASK 1; MAN 3; North 1; ONT 42; QUE 14; PEI 4; NB 5; NFLD 5; NS 5

Key Predictions:

-Will lose seats in Ontario and BC

-Justin Trudeau will be elected in Quebec as will Marc Garneau

-Will not win a seat in Alberta

-Will win most seats in Toronto and Montreal

-Gerard Kennedy will be defeated

-Ralph Goodale will win his riding

-Will make a pick up in Newfoundland and potentially elsewhere in Atlantic Canada

NDP 35

BC 9; ALB 0; SASK 0; MAN 3; North 1; ONT 17; QUE 1; NB 1; NS 2; NFLD 1; PEI 0

-Jack Layton and Olivia Chow will win their ridings

-Peggy Nash will hold her seat

-Look for potential NDP gains in BC, Northern Ontario, Beaches in Toronto, Newfoundland and potentially Atlantic Canada

-No additonal seats in Quebec

-Will not beat Ed Broadbent's record or form official opposition

Bloc Quebecois 50

QUE: 50

-Will take out Conservative Minister Jean Pierre Blackburn

-Will defeat Conservative Minister Michael Fortier

-Will be defeated by at least 2 Liberals including Justin Trudeau

-Will remain a strong force in Quebec

Independent Candidates 2

NS 1; QUE 1

-Former Conservative Bill Casey will win his seat in Nova Scotia

-Independent Andre Arthur will win his riding in Quebec where he is not facing a Conservative opponent

Green Party: 0

Canada: No Seats

-Elizabeth May will lose to Peter MacKay

-Greens will do best in Guelph and in Blair Wilson's BC riding

-At least one second place showing but no seats

PREDICTIONS FOR YORK REGION:

York Simcoe: Conservative - Peter Van Loan
Newmarket-Aurora: Conservative - Lois Brown
Thornhill: Conservative - Peter Kent
Oak Ridges Markham: Liberal - Lui Temelkovski
Markham-Unionville: Liberal - John McCallum
Richmond Hill: Liberal - Bryan Wilfert

What is at stake for each party and their leader Tuesday






What is at stake for each party and their leader Tuesday

Today electionprediction.org made their predictions on all 308 ridings and the outcome looks like this:

Conservative 125
Liberal 94
NDP 36
BQ 51
Independent 2 (Arthur, Casey)
Green 0

Democratic Space has not made their final predictions, but right now their numbers are showing:

Conservative 128
Liberal 92
NDP 34
BQ 52
Independent 2
Green 0

Finally voteforenvironment.ca is currently predicting the following:

Conservative 131
Liberal 85
NDP 38
BQ 52
Independent 2
Green 0

Average out all three of those numbers and even be optimistic and add +/- ten seats to the Conservative total and it is clear that we are likely headed into minority government with Stephen Harper remaining Prime Minister. A majority is possible if there is a Thanksgiving shift but that seems unlikely. Equally unlikely would be a Dion minority because it would require a dramatic voting shift from the Conservatives and other parties on the left. The Conservatives currently hold 127 seats in the House of Commons. It looks like the results of the 2008 election are more or less going to keep things the same. Taking these numbers as fact for argument sake, what would these results mean for all the national parties and their leaders October 15?

Conservative Party and Stephen Harper:

Prime Minister Stephen Harper called this election and early in the campaign it seemed like a majority was possible and likely. When the election was called, economic concerns primarily had to do with a high Canadian dollar, high gasoline prices and job losses in the manufacturing sector. By mid campaign, the price of oil dropped as did the Canadian dollar. South of the border, a credit crunch, banking and housing crisis and massive government deficits led to an economic crisis in the US. Stocks around the world plunged. In a globalized economy banks in Europe and to a lesser degree Canada found themselves caught up in these sub prime mortgages through other investments. Banks in all of the major G7 nations were forced to take action. In America we saw mergers, a 700 billion dollar bail out plan and interest rate cuts. England nationalized some of their major banks. Iceland found themselves in trouble and took out a loan from Russia. The overall impact of these issues have not just hurt the Western world, oil prices falling means less revenue for the OPEC producing nations, Russia and Canada. Americans trying to pay off debt and reducing their spending means nations such as China and India have less of a market to sell their manufactured goods to. The overall slow down means that issues such as the environment and poverty could be pushed aside while world leaders focus on the economy. Many saw this disaster coming but few expected it to hit this soon. The crisis has derailed Senator John McCain's campaign South of the border and Prime Minister Stephen Harper found himself in the storm as the incumbent in Canada. Most of these challenges are the result of global forces and not any specific action on the part of the government of Canada. Our banking system and economy got strong reviews by organizations such as the IMF for being best prepared to handle this potential worldwide recession. The next couple of years could be challenging and if Stephen Harper remains Prime Minister, many tough decisions will have to be made. He will have a renewed mandate and likely another two years to govern, but will likely have to find a coalition partner (abstaining Liberals) to get anything passed. Otherwise it will be a constant game of chicken on confidence votes meaning the House will be very partisan and the next campaign will stop the parties from working together constructively to get anything done. Fortunately for Stephen Harper; the Liberals will likely face a leadership race; the Greens will not have a seat; the NDP spent the maximum on this campaign and will be broke and in no position to fight another one in the near future; and the BQ is poised to make gains and will not be willing to risk them by going to the polls early. The turnout and outcome will also likely be a clear signal that the public would have no appatite for another election any time soon.

Stephen Harper has said he will step down if the party is defeated. Any scenerio where he is the Prime Minister will mean that he is staying on as leader of the Conservative Party. While Conservatives have every reason to celebrate victory on Tuesday night, afterward the party may want to reflect on what is stopping a majority government if it is infact a minority. A policy convention is set for November and the Conservatives made modest and responsible promises during the campaign that will be possible to keep. The global economic crisis will give Harper an opportunity to show leadership on the world stage. The likely election of Barack Obama should make George Bush a thing of the past in Canadian election campaigns. The mission in Afghanistan will be set to end in 2011. Both John McCain and Barack Obama have signalled a new approach to the environment meaning that in the future an agreement can take place that will include China, India and the United States. Stephen Harper did make a committment to visit China and more exposure on the world stage will only improve Stephen Harper's image. A free trade deal with the EU is possible and it is quite possible that we will need a strong leader to defend NAFTA and the Arctic over the next few years. While there will be several opportunities, there are also threats on the horizon as well. Any kind of recession or worse will hurt the government in power. Opposition parties will look at polls and technically could pull the trigger at any time. A coalition on the left is not out of the question. A new Liberal leader will likely put up more of a challenge than Stephane Dion.

If Prime Minister Stephen Harper gets the opportunity to select a new cabinet, it will be interesting to see who ends up in it. Will there be representation in the North? Newfoundland? PEI? Toronto? Montreal? Vancouver? Is there potential for new Conservative stars should someone like Lisa Raitt get elected in Halton or Peter Kent in Thornhill? Will there be any cabinet casualties in this election? Will Maxime Bernier get another chance? Any surprise senators or floor crossers?

This election is probably going to bring results similar to what Conservative had after the 2006 election. 2004 brought about gains as the right was finally elected. 2006 gave the Conservatives a taste of minority power. 2008 will likely give Harper a chance to demonstrate leadership as we will see a new President in Washington and a new set of challenges on the global agenda. Unless a majority looks guaranteed, it is unlikely Conservatives will be in any rush to get to the polls. What will Harper do different this time to ensure that majority next time?

Liberal Party - Stephane Dion

Stephane Dion has said he will try and stay on as leader even if his party loses, but I do not see how that would be possible. While most leaders are given two chances, Dion was a major liability for Liberals in this election. He was clearly not ready for the job and was really a compromise candidate at the Montreal convention. A loss will mean the knives will come out. Chretien and Martin people are still not united. Leadership contenders are already emerging. "Canada's national governing party" will be looking for a quick fix. Ultimately, unless Dion pulls off a surprise upset victory on Tuesday; I expect he will be quickly replaced.

Potential contenders:

Michael Ignatieff - Runner up last time. Harvard human rights professor. current deputy leader

Bob Rae - Former NDP Ontario Premier. Finished third in the last race. Foreign affairs critic.

Dalton McGuinty - Current Premier of Ontario. Distanced himself from carbon tax. Outsider but his brother already holds the federal seat.

Gerard Kennedy - Young and left leaning, but will he have a seat on Wednesday?

Justin Trudeau - Young and has the Trudeau last name. Will Liberals go for star power?

Ruby Dhalla - Strong in opposition, could be a strong female contender

Martha Hall Findlay - Will we see the return of the red bus?

Ralph Goodale - Last man standing in the West?

Marc Garneau - A career in the military and in space. Could he make gains in Quebec?

Frank McKenna - Perhaps a strong choice with the current economic crisis being front and center?

John Manley - Does the Liberal party need to move back to the center?

Scott Brison - If there is a leadership race, Brison is there.

Ken Dryden - Another star?

Dennis Coderre - Could he improve Liberal fortunes in Quebec?

Ujjal Dosanjh - From BC and could appeal to the West where Liberals will need to rebuild

For Liberals, no leader will be the magic bullet. Issues with raising cash, the loss of rural Canada, the situation in Alberta, Quebec and the Praries will have to be addressed. Declines will be likely in BC, Northern Canada and the 905 region around Toronto. Half of the Liberal caucus will come from Toronto with most of the remainder being from Montreal. Financially, many of the previous leadership contenders remain in debt. The party borrowed money to spend the maximum during this campaign. They will borrow again if there is another leadership race. The election return will be reduced if they secure less votes than last time. Liberals have still not recovered and adapted to election financing changes. The combination of all of these factors will lead to paralysis and likely a coalition partner for the Conservatives during the next session.

If Dion does in fact lose this race, Liberals need a new leader and time to adapt to the new realities of the Canadian political landscape. They need to improve their oganization. They need to rebuild in various regions of the country. They need a platform that moves the party back to the center and back into the mainstream with regular Canadians. Exploring a coalition on the left might also have to be talked about.

New Democratic Party - Jack Layton

This was Jack's big moment. At parliament's disolution, the NDP had 30 seats. If you look at all the numbers above, they will gain; but not in a huge way. It seems unlikely they will beat Ed Broadbent's total. It seems even less likely they will form the official opposition, let alone government. For the first time they spent the maximum and will now be in debt. They ran a lot of ads. They had the sponsorship scandal last time and 43 times that Dion abstained this time yet were unable to really take advantage and bury the Liberals. Reviews of the NDP campaign and Jack Layton's leadership and debate performance was strong. At the end of the day though, the NDP doesn't find itself much further ahead and as a result need to evaluate what they offer to the Canadian people.

Do they keep Jack Layton? He is more popular than the party but hasn't really taken them where they want to go. Thomas Mulcair, Buzz Hargrove and David Miller might be possible successors. The NDP will also be in no position to call another election due to their debt. This will make them think twice about playing chicken with the Liberals on confidence votes.

The NDP are unlikely to see major breakthroughs in Quebec. They might see gains elsewhere and a strong campaign might be enough to keep Jack Layton as leader for one more chance. Still after 60 years, the NDP has not demonstrated that they can form opposition or government, and may have to accept that a minority coalition is their only chance at power.

Green Party and Elizabeth May

This will be the most intersting party to watch after the election. They were in the debates, received mainstream media attention and they will likely earn 10% of the popular vote. May has gotten strong reviews for her leadership by some and many would argue the Greens were a true force in this election. Problem is, May will likely lose in Central Nova and the prospects for any seat pick ups elsewhere are not good. Blair Wilson will be defeated, meaning the Greens will have no MPs in the house and might have to fight for their right to be in the next debates all over again.

What is next for the Greens? Elizabeth May is sure to take heat for her strategic voting comments. At the same time, she took Greens to an all time high in this election. Next time around do not expect any kind of deals with the Liberals or anyone else. May might also be wise to find a riding where she has a chance to win.

The Greens will be the big winners on Tuesday night but could find themselves fading away on Wednesday due to their lack of representation in the House. The next major fight for them has to be proportional representation.

Bloc Quebecois and Gilles Duceppe

The BQ is on pace for 50 seats and will likely continue to block the prospects of a majority for either the Liberals or Conservatives for as long as they remain strong. Gilles Duceppe wants to be leader of the PQ, but must wait until after the next Quebec provincial election. The BQ will play a role in a minority parliament. Politically though, it will be tough for either the Liberals or the Conservatives to work with them. Frankly they caught a break in Quebec with the culture community's opposition to Harper. If this election puts them in a position of strength, it is unlikely they will want to go to the polls. This might make them a candidate for a coalition partner in the next parliament.

Harper's hopes for a majority come with the fall of the Bloc. The Bloc will not want to go to an election while they are weak and defending their role in Canada's parliament. Therefore it could be the BQ that brings stability to the next parliament.

The future of the Bloc will be determined by the next provincial race. Quebec is in a minority government and if the PQ is looking for a leader, Duceppe might get in the race for real this time. That would allow a successor for the federal wing of the movement; and possibly a new direction for the BQ under these Canadian political realities.

Prediction for the life of the next minority government:

One year and a few months. I think the first budget will pass with the government falling on the second budget in February 2010. That will leave enough time for any leadership races but not much time to get anything done in the next parliament.

Thanks for reading...

Darryl

Sunday, October 12, 2008

A Thanksgiving Message from Stephen Harper

A Thanksgiving Message from Stephen Harper

Great message...
-Darryl

Top 10 Factors that will determine the election on Tuesday


Top 10 Factors that will determine the election on Tuesday

Tonight I had thanksgiving dinner with my family and it was terrific. Politics came up at the dinner table as I am sure it will tomorrow and across the country in many people's homes. As we look at the polls on balance; Conservatives have ranged from 31-42. Liberals from 30-20. NDP from 15-25. Greens 8-12 and the Bloc consistently strong in Quebec. Some of the vote is volatile. I suspect a portion of the Conservative vote around the center makes up part of the undecided swing voters. The remainder of volatile votes seem to be between the left wing parties. The reality is a lot of stock is put into the national polls, but to be honest they have little impact on the overall results without factoring in the local ridings and geographic considerations of Canada. Our riding of Newmarket-Aurora will likely be an indicator of what is happening nationally in the general election.

Top 10 Factors that will determine the election outcome on Tuesday:

1. Ontario GTA and Nothern Ontario

The battleground of Ontario is going to decide who wins this election and a lot of it is split between the Conservatives, Liberals and some pockets of NDP support. In Toronto proper and Southern York Region, every riding is likely to go Liberal. Outside of Toronto however, the Liberals are in decline. In Toronto, I suspect Jack Layton, Olivia Chow and Peggy Nash will all hold their seats meaning Gerard Kennedy will be defeated. On a good day for the NDP, a couple more seats in Toronto's core might swing their way. In Windsor we will likely see NDP candidates hold their seats. Northern Ontario also looks strong for the NDP with some opportunities for a Conservative seat here and there due to vote splitting. The NDP will pick up seats such as Algoma-Manitoulin-Kapuskasing and ridings in Thunder Bay. Ottawa will be interesting as the Eastern part of the province is generally Conservative, but the city itself may send a Liberal, NDP and some Conservatives to parliament. Most of the rural ridings, Muskoka, Simcoe, Durham, Dufferin-Caledon, Brant and others will all be strong Conservative. Look for almost all Conservative incumbents hold on to their seats in Oshawa, St. Catherines, Burlington Peterborugh and elsewhere. The 905 and 519 is where the Conservatives have the best chances to pick up seats. Overall there is about 30 competitive seats in the province right now.

Ridings to watch in Ontario:

Halton
All eyes will be on this one until the results come in. Conservatives badly want to send Garth Turner packing, but will his digital democracy and maverick status help him in the riding? Conservative candidate and Toronto Port Authority CEO Lisa Raitt is giving him a good run for his money. Many pundits are predicting she will take the seat. A crucial seat for the Conservatives in the GTA.

Newmarket-Aurora
Belinda Stronach is leaving politics and this one is wide open. Lois Brown has a strong chance of beating Liberal Tim Jones and returning this seat back to the blue column. In the GTA, York Region and the crucial 905 area code. This will be a bellwether of the night elsewhere.

Oakville
Terence Young is putting up a strong Conservative challenge to Liberal Bonnie Brown. This riding, like Newmarket-Aurora is crucial to Conservative gains in the 905 area code.

Don Valley West
If the Conservatives win a seat in Toronto it will be in Don Valley West. John Tory lost in the provincial election here. John Carmichael is carrying the federal banner in a riding where Laureen Harper has visited and knocked on doors.

Oshawa
Currently held by Conservative Colin Carrie. A key riding that has been highly impacted by current economic conditions, especially in the auto sector.

Brampton West
Conservative Kyle Seeback might take this seat from Liberal Andrew Kania. The race is close and it is the former provincial riding of Health Minister Tony Clement

Thornhill
Peter Kent is a star candidate for the Conservatives but will it be enough to unseat Susan Kadis in this York Region 905 GTA riding?

Guelph
A by-election riding that could be a tight four way race between Conservative Gloria Kovach, Liberal Frank Valeriote, Green Mike Nagy and NDP Tom King. If the Green Party wins a seat in parliament, it will most likely be here. Kovach may come up the middle depending on how this vote splits.

Mississauga-Streetsville
Wajid Khan crossed the floor from the Liberals and joined the Conservatives. Will his constituents forgive him? Unlike David Emerson and Joe Comuzzi, Khan is facing re-election.

Mississauga-South
Harper has paid a lot of attention to this riding in particular. Hugh Arrison is expected to defeat Liberal incumbent Paul Szabo

Kitchener Centre
Liberal whip Karen Redman is trying to hang on against Conservative Stephen Woodworth.

Welland
Liberal John Maloney finds himself in a tough three way battle in this Southern Ontario riding. Any of the three parties could take it.

London West
Conservative Ed Holder has a good chance of taking this London seat from Liberal Sue Barnes. This is a crucial 519 riding to take.

Kenora
A tight three way race in Ontario's North. Conservative Greg Rickford has a good chance of knocking off Liberal Roger Valley. NDP also in this tight three way fight.

Algoma-Manitoulin-Kapuskasing
Will NDP Carol Hughes defeat Liberal Brent St. Denis in the riding that includes my birth town of Kapuskasing in Northern Ontario?

Thunder Bay-Superior North
Joe Comuzzi crossed the floor from the Liberals and joined the Conservatives. Now that Comuzzi has retired, who is going to win this close three way race?

Thunder Bay-Rainy River
A close three way race in Northern Ontario. Last time less than 3000 votes separated the Conservative, NDP and Liberal seat. Currently the seat is held by Liberal Ken Boshcoff.

Trinity Spadina
Always a close race...is Olivia Chow's seat safe?

Parkdale High Park
Will Gerard Kennedy go down to Peggy Nash the NDP incumbent?

Beaches-East York
Can Marilyn Churley defeat Maria Minna and pull off a steal in Toronto for the NDP?

2. Quebec - Bloc Quebecois

A majority or minority will be determined by the strength of the Bloc Quebecois. Liberals will likely hold their current seats in Montreal and gain a seat with Justin Trudeau. Beyond that there is little prospect for gains, but a prospect for losses if the NDP vote increases in Montreal either resulting in a steal for the NDP (like Outremont) or a win for the BQ as a result of the split.
In Quebec City and rural Quebec, the battle is between the Conservatives and the Bloc. A bad day for the Conservatives and a minority government would mean staying with the same amount of seats or even losing a couple. A good day would be an ADQ breakthrough similar to what was witnessed in the provincial election. Gaining a net total of 5 seats in Quebec would be success for the Conservatives at this point. The cultural community has done its damage. The BQ is riding high in the polls despite separation not being an election issue. Jean Charest has not really helped us the way we assisted him in the provincial election. Harper did have a huge rally in Quebec today that might have an impact leading to a surprise or two. 10 seats last time was frankly a surprise. Let's hope Quebec has another good election day surprise for Conservatives this time as well.

Ridings to Watch in Quebec

Westmount-Ville-Marie
Liberal and former astronaut Marc Garneau should win this safe Liberal riding.

Papineau
Liberal Justin Trudeau is widely expected to defeat BQ MP Vivian Barbot

Outremont
Will NDP Thomas Mulcair keep his seat. Will his election lead to any more seats for the NDP in the city of Montreal?

Vaudreuil-Soulanges
Senator and Conservative Minister Michael Fortier will attempt to win a seat in this riding. Bloc MP Meili Faille is looking like she might hold the seat. Liberal Brigitte Legault is also running.

Portneuf-Jacques-Cartier
Independent Andre Arthur is expected to win this riding. The Conservatives have not fielded a candidate against Arthur and for the most part he votes Conservative. Could become important if a few seats separate Harper from a majority.

Beauce
Maxime Bernier should have no problem holding his seat here.

Jonquière-Alma
Conservative cabinet minister John Pierre Blackburn is in a tough fight to keep his own riding.

Quebec
A Bloc held riding in the area that is friendly to Conservatives. Myriam Taschereau is the local candidate and Stephen Harper held a riding here today.

Roberval-Lac Saint-Jean
Denis Lebel won this riding for the Conservatives in a by-election. Can he hold it from the Bloc in the general election given that turnout should be higher?

Ahuntsic
Liberal Eleni Bakopanos is trying to return to parliament against BQ incumbent Maria Mourani

3. British Columbia

BC along with Ontario and Quebec are the battlegrounds that will decide the outcome of this election, both in terms of the Prime Minister and the prospects of majority or minority. Natural Resources Minister Gary Lunn is in some trouble and David Emerson is not running this time in Vancouver Kingsway. The province is interesting in that there is a three way race in many parts of the province. Having said that Liberals are falling and the NDP and Conservatives seem to have made some gains. With the exception of Ujjal Dosanjh in Vancouver South, there are not many safe Liberal seats left. Conservatives and NDP are likely to at least hold what they have. Green Blair Wilson will likely not be re-elected as a Green MP in West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country. Gains in this province will come down to ridings like Surrey North where Conservative Donna Cadmen is in a tough three way race with no incumbant. Ontario and BC will likely produce more gains for the Conservatives at this point than will be found in Quebec.

Ridings in BC to watch:

Surrey North
Donna Cadmen's riding. Expect some attention here, but also a potential seat gain.

Newton-North Delta
Won by the Conservatives in 2004. Sandeep Pandher has a strong chance of taking it back from Liberal Sukh Dhaliwal.

Richmond
Liberal Raymond Chan has a good chance of being defeated by Conservative Alice Wong.

Vancouver Island North
Conservative John Duncan finds himself in a head to head fight with NDP incumbant Catherine Bell

Saanich-Gulf Islands

Is Conservative Gary Lunn in trouble???

Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca
Is Liberal Keith Martin in any kind of trouble in this tight three way race???

West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country
Green MP Blair Wilson will attempt to defend this seat under his new colours. This is the only current Green seat. Wilson is expected to drop it, most likely to Conservative John Weston.

North Vancouver
Liberal incumbant Don Bell is facing a tough challenge from Conservative Andrew Saxton.

Vancouver Centre
Will the NDP take out Liberal leadership contender Hedy Fry?

Vancouver Kingsway
What will happen in David Emerson's former riding? NDP seems to be leading right now.

Vancouver Quadra
Conservatives almost won this in the by-election. Can Deborah Meredith beat Joyce Murray this time around?

Pitt Meadows-Maple Ridge-Mission
Conservative Randy Camp will try and hold this seat from the NDP challenge.

4. Other regional representation and the rest of Canada

Every party would like to have representation in all parts of the country. For Liberals, this means a seat in Alberta, holding on to Ralph Goodale's seat, holding the few seats they have in BC, Manitoba and the North. Conservatives would like to see Fabian Manning retain his seat and avoid getting shut out of Newfoundland thanks to Danny Williams ABC campaign. A win in PEI with the seat of Egmont would be nice. Having Conservative representation in the North through winning the seat in Nunavut would also be a bonus. The Greens also want representation and outside of Guelph, their best chance is their leader in Central Nova against Peter MacKay. All of these seats will be important for positioning in the next election campaign.

Ridings to watch elsewhere in the country

Central Nova
Green leader Elizabeth May made a questionable decision to run in Central Nova. Conservative Minister and potential future Prime Minister Peter MacKay should take this riding, but it could get interesting. No Liberal is running here, but polls show a strong NDP showing as well.

West Nova
Conservative Greg Kerr has a great show at knocking off Liberal Robert Thibault.

Avalon
Fabian Manning is likely the only chance of the Conservative Party being sweeped from Newfoundland. Manning has stood up to Danny Williams in the past and is attempting to do so again. How successful was the ABC campaign? Will Newfoundland have a representative in the government? Both of those questions will be answered here.

Egmont
Best shot at a Conservative seat in PEI. Best shot at a representative inside government for PEI. Gail Shea will attempt to bring some blue to the island.

Fredericton
Won by Liberal Andy Scott who is leaving politics. Keith Ashfield has a strong chance of bringing this one to the Tories.

Madawaska-Restigouche
Another potential pickup in New Brunswick for the Conservatives. Liberal Jean Claude D'Amours will again face Jean Pierre Ouellet. Last time less than 1000 votes split this riding

Nunavut
Leona Aglukkaq has a good chance of winning this tight three way race. Nunavut's Premier has come out against the carbon tax and the Liberal incumbant is retiring. All three leaders have been here showing a tight three way race.

Saint Boniface
Liberal Raymond Simard could drop this Winnipeg area riding to Conservative Shelly Glover.

Churchill
The NDP might take this one from Liberal Tina Keeper now that their vote isn't split this time.

Wascana
Ralph Goodale's seat and the only Liberal won left in Saskatchewan

Saskatoon-Rosetown-Biggar
Conservative incumbant Carol Skelton is leaving politics. She leaves a tough two way fight between Conservative Kelly Block and NDP Nettie Wiebe

Edmonton Center

Landslide Annie is gone. Don't count on this one going red. It was the last Liberal seat in Alberta. Conservative Laurie Hawn should have no problems with Anne McLellan no longer running.

4. Voter Turnout

I expect voter turnout. What will the turnout be and how will it impact the results. Some argue that it is harder to get your people to come out when you are in government. Others argue Liberal voters may stay home because of Dion. NDP supporters will likely turnout because they have a chance to form the opposition. Green supporters will likely turnout because their party has run a mainstream campaign. Conservatives can win a majority or lose. Liberals can win a minority or lose bad. Turnout will likely affect all of these things.

5. Green and the NDP party

The left is split and how well the NDP and Greens do, could cost the Liberals seats in many close ridings. In three way races, the more equally the vote is split between NDP, Liberal and Green voters, the less vote they need to come up the middle. Will there be any surprise Conservative wins because strategic voting did not take place? Will there be that usual last minute rush to the Liberals to stop a Conservative majority? It will be interesting to see if there is any strategic voting impact in this campaign, votefortheenvironment.ca got a million hits during the course of this campaign. Vote swap groups on Facebook have also been set up. Will there be motivation to strategically vote during an election where there is likely to be low turnout and minimal emotion on the major issues? Liberals need strategic voting to keep this election to a Harper minority.

6. Majority or minority

A majority government will mean all of the parties will have four years to rebuild. A minority means an election could take place as early as the first budget or within a couple of years time. A minority minus a few seats could be interesting. Would Bill Casey or Andre Arthur join the party? Would any Liberals cross the floor in the middle of a leadership race to grant a majority to Harper? The stronger the minority the less coalition partners you need to pass legislation. Numbers will be important as they will suggest how long the next parliament will last.

7. Any leadership races on the horizon?

Stephen Harper - says the Conservative party will find a new leader if he loses power

Stephane Dion - says he will stay on as leader even if he loses, but that is not realistic

Jack Layton - more popular than his party but is it time for someone new?

Gilles Duceppe - wants the PQ job but will stay in his role until timing is right

Elizabeth May - will face trouble for her relations with Dion but will take the Greens to their best election performance even without a seat.

If Dion loses, it is widely expected that candidates like Trudeau, McGuinty, Ignatieff, Rae, Findlay and others could start their leadership races on Tuesday night.

8. Economy surprises on election day

Will the markets deliver any news or decline that may impact Canadians as they are about to vote? Given what we have seen over the past few weeks, anything is possible on Monday or Tuesday.

9. Thanksgiving

Last time Canadians had a family dinner was over the Christmas break in December. It seemed to benefit Stephen Harper. Will family conversations lead to more Conservative votes or Liberal ones? Will it encourage the strategic voting? This is the wildcard and there will not be any time to change minds after the holiday.

10. Women, new Canadian, Quebec, urban and young voters

Did the Conservative Party breakthrough to any of these groups required to win a majority? They will be required to pull of victories in the targeted swing ridings. Results Tuesday will demonstrate if Conservative efforts to target these demographics paid off.

Thanks for reading...

Darryl


Protests welcome Dion in Newmarket-Aurora and elsewhere in the area





Protests welcome Dion in Newmarket-Aurora and elsewhere in the area.

It was a pretty good day in Newmarket-Aurora for the Conservative Party today. Stephane Dion visited the Magna Center in Newmarket and was greeted by a sea of blue signs and some protesters who showed up opposing the carbon tax and Dion's lack of leadership. In Orillia earlier, a green party sign popped up during his speech. Not a good day for Dion on this final day of campaigning. Today's polls likely made his day even worse. This will now come down to who is better at getting out the vote, the conversations that occur at the Thanksgiving dinner table and momentum that the Conservatives have regained locally and nationally.

Newmarket-Aurora is a crucial Ontario 905 GTA swing riding that both the Liberals and Conservatives are targeting. The seat has no incumbant as Belinda Stronach has retired from politics and now the race is between former Aurora mayor Tim Jones and Conservative national councilor and small business owner Lois Brown. Today is likely the final day of campaigning as tomorrow and Monday people do not want to have their Thanksgiving holiday disturbed by politicians asking for their vote. A bad national rally for Dion was a good way to conclude the campaign today for Harper and Lois Brown today. Liberal morale is down.

Our vote has been identified and the results are looking positive compared to previous elections in 2004 and 2006. Internal polls look good. National polls are increasing for Conservatives in the final days and the Star reported Harper is leading in the 905. I am confident this riding will go blue on Tuesday, but we will be working the whole day on Tuesday to make sure it happens. Every vote is crucial and Tuesday we have do complete the final sprint and get that vote out for Lois and the Conservative Party nationally.

Update 3: The scene inside the Magna Centre with Dion. What is with the face paint and feathers?

Update 2: Local supporter gets an image of Dion's bus leaving Newmarket with Lois Brown signs all along Muluck St. Not the welcome into Newmarket-Aurora that Mr. Dion was expecting I am sure.

Update: On CTV, I also caught protests at Dion's speech in Vaughn where Liberals won last time by 20,000 votes. Images in York Region today of small crowds and growing Conservative support in the crucial GTA\905 area cannot be great optics for the rest of the Liberal campaign nationally. We now stop campaigning for Thanksgiving day, and vote on Tuesday. Leader tours are all about optics in the media. They show momentum and impact the local race. Today we saw no momentum for Dion in the suburbs including in safe ridings. If signs could vote, Lois Brown would be in Ottawa right now. Hopefully on Tuesday that will become a reality as is now projected according to most polls and sites such as electionprediction.org. Dion today said he would not implement much of his campaign promises with the exception of the green shaft for years. That is not acceptable during these challenging economic times and it further demonstrates the weak leadership of Stephane Dion.

...and seriously, what was with the "leather caps and feather boas, with the Liberal leader’s surname painted on their faces"? Bringing Dion here was a risk that did not pay off for Liberals today. Hopefully this plays well in the papers and television media tomorrow. It is unlikely to be covered by either of our local papers prior to election day due to the Thanksgiving holiday.
-Darryl

Blog Coverage from MacLeans, Toronto Star and Others:

More with Dion from Magna-land

Think about this: a Parliament with Belinda Stronach or without. Which is the boring choice? I mean, is Bill Clinton going to go out with Diane Finley? (I pick her only because she's married.) Ms. Stronach certainly added a certain je ne sais quoi to Parliament while she dabbled in politics. In Newmarket, she told my colleague Les Whittington she has one more day as MP (not sure how that works) for Newmarket-Aurora. She will be missed. Plus, she has set a strong example for women by speaking out about breast cancer.

Stronach greeted Stéphane Dion an hour ago at a four-plex sports centre in Newmarket, funded with Magna Corporation money. Wow, four rinks, a couple of pools. My dad used a hose in the backyard. (Oh, and that reference to not having a mortgage in a previous post. It's because I don't have a house.) As Dion got off his bus, teenaged cheerleaders in feathers and sequins began a series of tinny chants. Weird. Even weirder, they were almost drowned out by a small knot of protesters across the street yelling, "No Dion."

Stay tuned.

http://thestar.blogs.com/decoder/


The Final Days: Newmarket

This afternoon’s stop at a rather palatial community centre north of Toronto included guest appearances by Belinda Stronach and, traveling separately, a dozen protesters carrying signs upon which were written slogans that corresponded neatly with Conservative party talking points. One wore a poorly fitting hockey jersey. Another insisted on holding his sign upside down (better to express his objection to the carbon tax perhaps).

Mr. Dion and the local candidate strolled around the community centre, flanked by two young girls sporting leather caps and feather boas, with the Liberal leader’s surname painted on their faces. The two politicians talked hockey while overlooking an ice rink, then stopped to pick up some popcorn from the refreshment stand. In keeping with his commitment to a proper social safety net, Mr. Dion gave his to a group of children.

http://blog.macleans.ca/2008/10/11/the-final-days-newmarket/

***

Blogging from the Dion bus

I'm disappointed. On the Dion bus, the Liberal staffers don't have little mics in their collars and talk into them like RCMP - or like Conservative handlers with Stephen Harper. I had wanted to see political staffers put on the intel thing, but I guess I'll have to settle with civilians just acting like civilians. The Conservatives do sound cool. They must be very important people. I think baggage handlers need high-tech gizmos.

Dion is buoyant as we tootle through southern Ontario, urging a Saturday crowd in Orillia they've got to send Liberal candidates (Simcoe North and Barrie) because the only way to stop Harper is to vote Liberal - not NDP or Green. What an amazing day for wandering around a farmer's market; problem is, that's not how campaigns work. You rush through watching the candidate shake hands and pose for pix and rush back to the bus. Janine Krieber, Dion's wife, sometimes gets squashed back in the crowd but she's arm-in-arm with their daughter, Jeanne, 20, who's on the campaign for the final push.

Got to say, though, the mood among Liberal operatives - not necessarily on the bus - is hardly euphoric this weekend. The weekend polls have started to put the Conservatives around 8 points ahead and with the wind back in their sails, it looks like an impossible feat for Liberals to do as well as some were hoping last Monday or Tuesday. A starry-eyed little moment of optimism. Guess that bump in the polls was an illusion, If the Conservatives keep pushing the fear button - the economy will go to hell under Dion, higher taxes, etc. - Libs are worried about what they can do over this holiday weekend. The m-word has slipped back into the mouths of some Liberals. They're not talking about a Conservative minority. And, even though three days is a long time in politics, Liberals think of all those families sitting down to Thanksgiving dinner and giving Harper a little holiday bump, just as they did at Christmas, 2005.

http://thestar.blogs.com/decoder/

***

Dion says economy will slow pace of his platform

During a whistle stop in Aurora, Ont., retiring MP Belinda Stronach said Dion's decision to tilt upfront spending in the platform to create jobs is necessary because the Conservatives "squandered" the $12 billion surplus they inherited from the Liberals and "circumstances are changing very rapidly."

"We have no choice but to juggle priorities or it's on the back of future generations," Stronach told reporters. "People must have employment, they must have good quality jobs to maintain our quality of life. We need to generate income so we have a good social safety net."

Dion stopped in the riding to boost the campaign of former mayor Tim Jones, the Liberal who hopes to succeed Stronach.

http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/news/story.html?id=a5df7367-e58f-402c-810e-f8dd0d3d837c


***

Dion won't step down if he loses

Juliet O'Neill, Canwest News Service

Published: Sunday, October 12, 2008

OTTAWA - Declaring several times that "I am not a quitter," Stephane Dion indicated Sunday he will not step down as Liberal leader if he loses the election that he says is "a choice between lies and honesty."

Liberal leader Stephane Dion buys a bag of popcorn as he visits a recreational center in Newmarket.

Liberal leader Stephane Dion buys a bag of popcorn as he visits a recreational center in Newmarket.

Photograph by : Reuters

The Montreal MP emphasized his determination several times to reporters as he blitzed three Ontario ridings, calling on New Democrats and Greens to shift their votes to the Liberals and potentially elect enough MPs on Tuesday to defeat "the most secretive, very conservative government in history."

The only exception Dion made was in the Nova Scotia riding of Central Nova, where the Liberals are not running a candidate against Green Party Leader Elizabeth May and are campaigning to help her defeat Defence Minister Peter MacKay.

Falling short of a direct appeal for strategic voting, May hinted supporters should calculate their chances of defeating Conservatives by voting Liberal.

She said Greens could not alone put Liberals over the top in many ridings, but they should "vote accordingly."

Later in the day Dion made his strongest pitch yet for Green party supporters to vote for the Grits in Tuesday's election, saying he's been endorsed by a Nobel-Prize winning scientist as the only leader who will actually deal with climate change.

At a boisterous rally in the Ottawa riding of Orleans, Dion boasted that climate change scientist Andrew Weaver of the University of Victoria had endorsed him, that 250 economists are calling for a price on fossil fuels and that Green Party Leader Elizabeth May repeated again Sunday that she wants him to be prime minister.

"Elizabeth May and I can be counted on to level with Canadians," Dion pledged. "By coming together we can defeat Stephen Harper and give to Canada the greener prime minister you may have. So go green: vote red."

Dion appeared to misspeak slightly; he usually promises to be the "greenest" prime minister.

Dion called for the defeat of "the most secretive prime minister in Canadian history." Among the secrets he claimed Harper is keeping is the true cost of the government's proposed green plan. Harper said Saturday that the government plan would raise electricity costs by four per cent over a decade but Dion said "it must be much more than that."

Earlier Dion cited a call for Greens to vote Liberal by three Canadian scientists who shared in the 2007 Nobel Prize to former U.S. vice-president Al Gore and the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Weaver, William Peltier and John Stone had issued a statement Saturday saying "Greens alone can help make the difference between the Harper majority that the climate scientists fear and a Liberal minority under which great progress can be made to fight climate change."

He said when so many economists and environmentalists agree with the principle behind the Liberal Green Shift plan "it's a large coalition far beyond usual partisan politics."

On the heels of Prime Minister Stephen Harper saying the Conservatives would look for a new leader if he fails to win the Tuesday vote, a feisty Dion told a Toronto TV interviewer: "Well he's a quitter; I'm not."

Dion, leading a national campaign for his first time, repeated his declaration in other encounters with reporters during a bus tour of ridings in Toronto, Norwood, Ont. and Ottawa.

And he'll conduct a final push Monday when Dion will travel from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

Liberals announced they have dubbed Dion's campaign plane "Progress Air" to reflect his call for unity among all "progressive voters" and that he will travel from Fredericton, N.B. to Vancouver on Monday, with whistle stops in Montreal and Winnipeg before returning to his home riding in Montreal on election day.

At a rally in Toronto Dion urged New Democrats and Greens to vote Liberal - avoiding a three-way split of anti-government votes that would leave the Conservatives in office. The Liberals need the other two parties to block Harper's re-election, he said.

"This is only possible if we pull together."

"This election is a choice between lies and honesty," he told about 150 supporters gathered in a restaurant hall, referring to Harper's repeated claims the Liberals will raise taxes even though their platform promises across-the-board tax cuts through the Green Shift tax on fossil fuels.

"Stephen Harper built his campaign on a lie. He must lose on this lie."

Other lies the Liberals have cited during the campaign are the Conservative's false claim the Liberals would claw back the $100 monthly child care benefit when they are increasing it; and a false claim by the Conservatives that the Liberals would raise the GST, when Dion was on record for more than a year saying he would not do that.

The Liberal war room on Sunday challenged Harper's claim that he keeps his commitments, citing the government's flip-flop on taxation of income trusts, Harper's call for an election a year before the fixed election date, an alleged breach of the Atlantic accord, the lack of a promised national patient wait times guarantee and the appointment of an unelected senator.

Dion also professed to be single minded about winning the election, rather than casting ahead to a possible loss and what the Liberal party would want.

"I will say I am not a quitter but the only goal we have now in the next two days is to win this election," he said on CTV's Question Period program.

Responding to three friendly callers to a TV call-in show in Toronto, Dion vigorously defended his Green Shift plan to impose a tax on diesel and other fossil fuels and distribute the revenues in income tax cuts.

When asked what he has to be thankful for on Thanksgiving, Dion said his country, wife Janine Krieber and daughter Jeanne.

"I'm married to my wife and my country and she's nice enough, kind enough, to accept it," he added.

http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news/decisioncanada/story.html?id=885cb067-c31e-4352-bd91-04355f01afdd

Toronto Sun endorses Harper and the Conservatives



Toronto Sun endorses Harper and the Conservatives



Comment Editorial
Harper is the best choice
By SUN MEDIA
Last Updated: 12th October 2008, 5:17am



Elections are about making choices and because fallible human beings are involved, there will never be a perfect choice.
While we respect all the national party leaders, realistically, Canadians Tuesday must choose between Stephen Harper and Stephane Dion to lead us through tough economic times.
To us, the choice for prime minister is clear. It's Harper.
For 31 months, Harper provided Canada with a stable minority government, the longest-serving continuous minority in our history.
He pursued sensible, tax-cutting policies, fulfilling the Conservative pledges to lower the GST two points, to get tough-on-crime laws enacted in a soft-on-crime Parliament, to pass a new accountability act in the wake of the Liberal sponsorship scandal and to target more money to help working families.
Harper has also proven himself on the world stage.
He's unafraid to make tough decisions and, unlike the Liberals, committed to properly funding our military and giving it a clear mandate and mission, before sending our soldiers into harm's way.
Yes, there have been disappointments -- Harper's broken promise not to tax income trusts, his disinterest in properly funding cities and his failure to significantly reduce medical wait times.
Plus, his inability to articulate a sensible, Canadian-made environmental policy outside of the job-killing Kyoto accord on climate change, which the Liberals recklessly committed us to and then did nothing to implement, having since admitted they knew Canada wasn't ready.
The bottom line is Canadians know Harper is a better leader than Dion -- they deliver that verdict almost every time they're asked to make a direct comparison by pollsters.
True, Harper failed to adapt his campaign to the sudden collapse of stock markets, the credit crunch and falling oil prices during this election.
That's worrisome because part of the prime minister's job is to rally and reassure the nation in times of crisis, not suggest a stock market crash means some good buying opportunities.
But Harper's stumble pales in comparison to Dion's chronically bad judgment on the economy and his inexplicable -- even he can't explain it -- "green shift" carbon tax.
What is easy to understand is that the last thing you should do when your economy is heading into choppy waters is impose a new, experimental tax on everything, with vague promises to keep it "revenue neutral" through other tax cuts.
Even the Liberals know Dion's "green shift" is bad policy. That's why they've stopped talking about it.
NDP Leader Jack Layton has run a good race, but his tax-and-spend policies are wrong for the country, just as a Dion-led minority Liberal government backed by the NDP would be a fiscal disaster.
Separatist Bloc Leader Gilles Duceppe is irrelevant to Canadians, while Elizabeth May has established the Greens as a political force, regardless of whether they finally win a seat.
But on the big question -- who should be our prime minister -- there's no question. It's Harper.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Final Campaign Update in Newmarket-Aurora: 2 days before election day!





Final Campaign Update in Newmarket-Aurora: 2 days before election day!!!


Well it has been a long 35 days. Nationally we were up, later we were down, today we are back up. It seems the unengaged electorate has been very volatile. Now after putting up all of those signs, knocking on all of those doors, dropping off all of that literature, making all of those phone calls, preparing for the debates, writing letters to the editor, handing out all of those flyers at the GO Station, attending Harper events, opening our offices, fundraising, preparing for debates and working on various events at the riding association level; the campaign is now basically over and 100% of the focus is now on getting out the vote.

The campaign in Newmarket-Aurora for the Conservatives was very strong. We identified a lot of supporters. He had a lot of sign requests and easily won the sign war. We were able to send out three promotional brochures. We had the support of national party as a targeted riding. We had great coverage from the mainstream media and decent coverage from the local media. Lois probably worked harder than any candidate in the country knocking on doors for two years. We had people calling, canvassing and volunteering their time with signs and in the office. We had a strong amount of poll captains and will have a scruiteneer at every polling station on Tuesday. Cabinet ministers have come and gone. We held our own in the debates and neutralized a Dion riding here. We had hoped to get the Prime Minister in Newmarket-Aurora, but were unable to find a suitable venue due to weddings a couple of Saturdays to go. Last night's rally in Mississauga was well attended and polling has us up in the 905 and in the riding.

Going into the holiday weekend, momentum is back with the Conservatives nationally. The focus is once again on Dion's leadership and his carbon tax proposal. This is good news for Conservatives as families sit down and discuss politics at dinner tables throughout the country. Positive economic news and a strong response to our modest and principled platform has also led to a Conservative rebound in the polls. In Newmarket-Aurora, we want the ballot box question to be "Does Newmarket want a seat at the government table". With Harper in the lead and expected to be Prime Minister 2 days before election day; we hope that will indeed factor into people's minds on election day.

We cannot let up because of the good polls. We cannot assume our vote is not needed. We cannot take the day off on election day. This fight returns Tuesday and the most important part of the campaign will take place - getting out the vote. Scruiteneers will be responsible for monitoring the polling stations and identifying who has voted. Callers will then be responsible to remind supporters who haven't voted to come out and vote. In the final hours the remainder of our identified supporters who have not voted will get a knock on their door. The national party targeted riding program, call centres and CIMs data base will all play a huge role in our E-day efforts. After the polls close and the votes are counted, volunteers are welcome to gather at Madsens to watch the results as they come in. The event will be a thank you event for team Lois and hopefully a victory party as well.

Tomorrow and Monday I will stop campaigning for Thanksgiving. I suspect all of the campaigns will do the same at least in terms of contacting voters. Tuesday it is in the hands of the people based on the dynamics of 308 battlegrounds across Canada. I hope all the voters and other campaigns enjoy their Thanksgiving holiday.

Based on how everything has gone over the course of the campaign, I will be quite surprised if Lois Brown isn't our next MP in a couple of days time. Vote Conservative...Vote Stephen Harper...Vote Lois Brown! A carbon tax is simply not worth the risk. Newmarket-Aurora needs a strong voice in Ottawa!

Hockey Mom Sarah Palin drops the puck at Flyers opener

Hockey Mom Sarah Palin drops the puck at Flyers opener

Classic welcome from the Philly crowd
-Darryl

Carbon Tax Conservative Ad

Carbon Tax Conservative Ad

Not worth the risk

A Time for Certainty Conservative Ad

A Time for Certainty Conservative Ad

Dion gets by with a little help from his friends

Dion gets by with a little help from his friends


A funny holiday video put together by Stephen Taylor.
-Darryl

My CBC National Segment on Newmarket-Aurora


My CBC National Segment on Newmarket-Aurora

I think the segment came across well for Lois Brown in our riding. If you missed my segment on the CBC National yesterday, you can check it out by visiting the link below:

Click here to see the video

Darryl Wolk - Conservative Party
October 10, 2008 (Runs 3:56)
On- the- ground and inside. A Conservative campaigner's point of view.

Toronto Star: This time, it's not about Belinda

Toronto Star: This time, it's not about Belinda

Good coverage from the Toronto Star today about our riding. Their polls show a Liberal lock on the 416 area code, but a Conservative lead in the 905. That is great news for a riding like Newmarket-Aurora that will swing both ways depending on the election.
-Darryl

This time, it's not about Belinda

Oct 11, 2008 04:30 AM

Staff Reporter

Tim Jones, successful municipal politician, is now Tim Jones, Liberal. For some Newmarket-Aurora voters, this is a challenge.

In Aurora, Jones might be more recognizable than any local official who has never dated Tie Domi. He served on the town's council for 28 years, 12 as mayor. In one hour at Newmarket's Upper Canada Mall on Saturday, a visitor encountered two Aurora residents who claimed to be his friend.

"Tim's a great guy," said one of them, Mark Elbaum, 58. "He did a great job when he was the mayor for umpteen-hundred years."

Elbaum said he worked with Jones at North York Parks and Recreation some 30 years ago. When Jones, 60, was Aurora mayor between 1994 and 2006, Elbaum ran into him on the town's streets. He has phoned Jones, who is "always around," for help with problems.

And he is voting for Jones's primary opponent, Conservative Lois Brown.

"Tim's with the Liberals," said Elbaum, who works for a manufacturing firm. "I can't give a Liberal a vote. I don't think people are ready to have Dion. I'd like to vote for (Jones), but I'm stuck. I hope he gets in – maybe he'll get in here and the Conservatives will win the election. Maybe that's the best of both ends."

Newmarket-Aurora voters are practised in the balancing act Elbaum struggles with: the weighing of party and prime ministerial preference against personal feelings for a well-known local candidate. The riding's last two federal elections have both been, to some extent, referendums on floor-crossing star candidate Belinda Stronach, who is returning to Aurora-based auto parts giant Magna International.

Jones is no celebrity. He was defeated by 410 votes in the 2006 mayoral election, in part because of complaints that the council had become dysfunctional. But his local prominence likely exceeds that of Brown, 53, a Newmarket business owner who lost to Stronach by 4,800 votes in 2006. Even if the Conservatives form the government, Jones said last Friday, he could win Newmarket-Aurora on the strength of his name.

Jones's hopes for the success of municipal-style personal politics are buoyed by the contrarian electoral history of the riding. Newmarket-Aurora, whose population grew 15 per cent between 2001 and 2006 as upscale subdivisions sprouted, has been something of an anti-bellwether since its creation in 2004.

In the 2004 federal election, Jones noted, Stronach won Newmarket-Aurora as a Conservative, though the Liberals won a minority government. In 2006, Stronach won as a Liberal, though the Conservatives won a minority. And in the 2007 provincial election, Frank Klees, for whom Brown worked from 1995 to 2001, won as a Progressive Conservative, though the Liberals won a majority.

"People tend to look at the person as opposed to the party when it comes to elections here," Jones said. "And I'm hoping that ... might work to my advantage."

Brown owns, with her husband, a firm that advises companies on workers' compensation issues. She, like Jones, said the most important issue for riding residents is the economy. But she argued voters are more interested in comparing Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion with Conservative Leader Stephen Harper than Jones with her.

"I can tell you I've been out knocking on doors for months, I have spoken to thousands of people in this riding, and I know that the issue of leadership has been primary for the people here," said Brown, a pianist studying for an economics degree at the University of Waterloo. "Until the issue of the economy started to become urgent leadership is the issue that people of Newmarket-Aurora are most concerned about."

Also in the riding, Mike Seaward is running for the NDP and Glenn Hubbers for the Green party.

NEWMARKET-AURORA PROFILE

• 2006 population: 121,925

• 2001–06 population change: 15.1 per cent

• Visible minority: 14.1 per cent

• Median household income: $85,235

• Riding boundaries: Bathurst St. (west), Hwy. 404 (east), Bloomington Rd. (south), Newmarket boundary (north)

• Federal electoral history: Won by Belinda Stronach in 2004 (as a Conservative), 2006 (as a Liberal)

But once again, voters must weigh party allegiance against a popular local candidate

Friday, October 10, 2008

Watch me on CBC National Tonight!!!!





Watch me on CBC National Tonight!!!!

Over the course of this campaign, I have been filming in Newmarket-Aurora. On Tuesday I submitted the last of the tapes and tonight the six hours that I sent will be edited down to about six minutes for the CBC National. The segment on the CBC National is for the segment "Your Vote". Basically they tracked 4 young volunteers from different parties and had them film the local campaign in each of their ridings. Denis Agar and Michelle Oliel have already had their segments representing the Greens and Liberals. Tonight I will be representing the Conservatives in the crucial swing riding of Newmarket-Aurora and Mehdi Mollahasani will also have a segment representing the NDP in Toronto. It will likely air in the second half of the CBC National tonight. It will also be online following the broadcast at: http://www.cbc.ca/national/blog/special_feature/archive/canada_votes/your_vote/

I hope it turns out OK and does a good job representing the party and candidate in our riding.

-Darryl

Below is the Introduction that aired a few weeks ago that sets up tonight's segment:

Full Peter Mansbridge Interview with Prime Minister Harper

Full Peter Mansbridge Interview with Prime Minister Harper

A very strong interview in my opinion
-Darryl



Part 2



Part 3

Full Dion interview on CBC National

Full Dion interview on CBC National

Is the carbon tax really the solution to the current economic challenges facing Canada?



Part 2



Part 3



Part 4

Globe and Mail, National Post and Economist all endorse Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party







It was great to see three papers (all with economic credibility) endorse Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party. The Ottawa Citizen, Calgary Herald, Montreal Gazette, Vancouver Sun, Winnipeg Free Press, Windsor Star, Kitchener Record and the Oakville Beaver also endorsed Harper and Conservative candidates. I am happy we earned the support of all of these great newspapers and magazine.
-Darryl


Harper is growing into the job

From Friday's Globe and Mail

October 9, 2008 at 9:00 PM EDT

Two anxieties, neither wholly irrational, have attached themselves to Stephen Harper in his years as a contender for and holder of the top political office in the land. The first is that he is a right-wing ideologue, badly out of sync with mainstream Canadian values and sentiments. The second is that he is possessed by a mean-spirited and controlling nature; that his emotional intelligence isn't up to his mental level.

These dual anxieties continue to fuel a passionate anti-Harper streak in Canadian politics. Certainly, he has been far too much a solo runner in the team game of politics. He doesn't trust easily and so isn't trusted much. He is prone to savage attacks on his opponents and detractors, such as his gratuitous characterizations of parliamentary critics as Taliban sympathizers or artists as rich gala-goers. He also shows an underdeveloped appreciation for the basic tenets of pluralism with his denigrations of the keepers of critical checks and balances in our political system, from officers of Parliament to members of the press.

But despite these personality traits, Mr. Harper has governed moderately and competently for nearly three years. He has not taken the country in dangerous new directions or significantly eroded the capacity of the government to act, when necessary, in the public interest. He has been side-swiped, at least on the emotional level, by an international economic crisis of epic proportions. But he has gotten the big things right.

An election rarely offers perfect choices. Voters are called upon to sort through a catalogue of inputs — issues, policies, past records, regional affiliations, personalities, etc. — in casting their ballots. On balance, Mr. Harper remains the best man for the job in the tough times now upon us. He deserves if not four more years, at least two more years. By all logic, he should be cruising to an easy majority. That he is not, and has proven incapable of holding north of 40 per cent in public support, will hopefully persuade him to be mindful of the penalty he pays for failing to address these two persisting anxieties.

That said, the anxious among us should also be mindful that the exercise of power is inherently moderating in a democracy. Elected officials need to balance competing interests and be able to justify their actions. Public opinion weighs constantly on a political leader; the knowledge is always there that his or her political strength is directly co-related with approval ratings.

In this campaign, Mr. Harper and his Conservative party are only seriously challenged for government by Stéphane Dion's Liberals. (For all the flourish of his introductory line — "I'm Jack Layton and I'm running for Prime Minister" — history and political culture suggest otherwise.) Mr. Dion is a decent man of great integrity and tremendous courage, most evident in his years as minister of intergovernmental affairs under Jean Chrétien. But a leader he is not.

If you want to meet the most inflexible head of a major political party, Mr. Dion takes it in a cakewalk. He's had a relatively strong week to be sure, but has never been much inclined to make the kind of mid-course corrections required in uncharted waters. He is a priest not a proselytizer, better at righteousness than salesmanship. The Green Shift has been an electoral disaster not because a carbon tax/income tax swap is a bad idea, but because his proposal is ill-timed, ill-considered (why mix an anti-poverty initiative into a tax on greenhouse gas emissions?) and ill-presented. You cannot be a leader without creating followers and Mr. Dion has failed to attract followers to his signature policy.

Some Liberals already have taken aim at Mr. Dion in the midst of the campaign, but they should engage in a more sophisticated diagnostic. The party-writ-large has failed to reinvent itself for the 21st century and public opinion research shows, perhaps as a result, that fewer and fewer Canadians identify themselves as "liberal." With the exception of the halcyon years of a badly divided political right, the Liberal Party of Canada has been shedding core supporters for decades, starting with Western and rural Canadians, then small business operators and Quebec nationalists and perhaps now extending even into the more entrepreneurial and socially conservative immigrant communities. It has not made adequate use of its time out.

Meanwhile, the supposedly obstinate Mr. Harper has been nothing if not open to adjusting as circumstances change. He was masterful in building a "big tent" centre-right alternative to the "natural governing" Liberals. His vision, determination and adroitness restored political competition to Canada, not an insignificant accomplishment.

Mr. Harper has done well on other fronts, too. He has spoken with refreshing candour and courage on foreign affairs, especially on the Middle East, and he was nimble in fulfilling his regrettable promise to hold a free vote on same-sex marriage while depriving the matter of any combustible material. He controlled his party's extreme social conservative rump, not vice versa.

He was shrewd and deft when the sensitive issue of recognizing Quebec as a nation was dropped in his lap by the machinations of Liberal Michael Ignatieff. He acted calmly and decisively to forge a cross-party consensus and made sure the status of nationhood went to the Québécois people, not to Quebec. As with Afghanistan, he played a bad hand very well — an example worth remembering as the economy poses unprecedented challenges.

Indeed, the most important characteristic Mr. Harper has shown over 33 months in office is a capacity to grow. There is no reason to think he won't continue along the same trajectory if re-elected — a good thing, too, since there is much more for him to learn.

Instead of carping about a dysfunctional Parliament, for which he holds much responsibility, Mr. Harper should throw out his previous playbook and try making the institution work. It would mean displaying the confidence to operate outside his comfort zone of near-absolute control, but it is a mission built for a true conservative. And, no, Senate reform is no substitute for getting the House of Commons operating well.

Mr. Harper should also use his political skills to wring real meaning out of last spring's apology to aboriginals. The rampant social pathologies afflicting native Canadians — from suicide to alcoholism to poor educational outcomes — remain the greatest stain on Canada's history and reputation. Coaxing First nations peoples into a full partnership with other Canadians and full participation in the Canadian economy and society would be the stuff of a prime minister intent on real achievement.

We also urge Mr. Harper to revisit his wholly inadequate climate-change plan. Canada and the world need to develop alternatives to fossil fuels. Counterintuitively, Mr. Harper may be the best-positioned Canadian politician to lead on this important issue, should he ever condescend to take it seriously. Given the impregnability of his Alberta base, he could strike a modern Nixon-to-China on climate change.

His attitude toward China, which thankfully looks to be in transition, has been rooted in old-fashioned, missionary-driven zeal. Human rights matter and should be part of the discussion. But managing relations with China, as with the United States, calls for balance and the pursuit of national interest, not personal ideology. Mr. Harper needs to recalibrate his approach to this proud and flawed world power.

Finally, the economy. Mr. Harper has to temper his distrust of the national government as a force in domestic policy with an understanding that Canadians always look to Ottawa in times of trouble. His instincts to play as small a role as possible, other than for electoral gain, are perhaps not as wrong-headed as those who would have the state play too big a role, given the excesses of past interventions. But we have entered an unprecedented period of market breakdown and Canadians need their government to be attentive and responsive. Mr. Harper possesses the competence and flexibility to pull this off, notwithstanding his awkwardness over the past week, including the rollout of a policy to shore up lending reserves.

Whatever you think of him, the Stephen Harper of today is not the Stephen Harper of 2004 or earlier. The "firewall" temperament has largely subsided, despite the odd recurrence on matters such as artists who choose free expression over popularity. He is in better control of his emotions. He is smart enough and adaptable enough to recognize that his tendencies toward pettiness and hyper-partisanship hold him and his party back.

By and large, Canadians still don't really trust Mr. Harper and so he has not yet earned their comfort with a majority government. If he prevails next Tuesday, it will be as a default choice, not a popular choice. Voters generally respect him — and, right now, competence trumps the unknown — but if he ever hopes to complete the construction of a governing party of the right and be remembered as more than a middling, minority prime minister, Mr. Harper will have to show as much capacity to grow over the next four years as he has over the past four.



***



Canada's general election
The fear factor

Oct 9th 2008
From The Economist print edition
Why Stephen Harper does not deserve to be dumped

IT IS not easy to be a successful Conservative in Canada. Perhaps it is the effect of living next to the United States. Perhaps it is because the country was founded on the collectivist principles of “peace, order and good government” rather than the individualist “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” of its neighbour. Perhaps it is because the things that Canadians most value about their country are its publicly run health service, its European-style welfare state and its tolerance. All are associated with the Liberals, who have been the natural party of government in Canada for the past century. To cap it all, conservative ideas of deregulation and unfettered free-market capitalism have been brought into disrepute by the financial turmoil south of the border.

So perhaps it is not surprising that the hopes of Stephen Harper, Canada’s Conservative prime minister, of endowing his minority government with a parliamentary majority at a general election on October 14th may end up being dashed. At first his decision to call the election looked shrewd, as the Conservatives raced to a lead of 15 percentage points in the opinion polls. Then the Wall Street panic got going. Canadians began to worry that Mr Harper was not doing enough to protect them. His poll lead has been cut by almost half. Unless he bucks the trend he could even lose power.

That would be unwarranted. It was a surprise when Mr Harper won the last election in January 2006, ending a dozen years of Liberal rule. Few pundits imagined that he would survive longer than a year. That he has governed for 32 months is a tribute to the political skills of an underestimated man. He does not offer a soaring vision of radical change. Canadians have not warmed to him: he comes over as a bloodless control freak. But he is hardworking, and a skilled parliamentary tactician. He governs a rather successful country that needs incremental improvement, not a revolution.

Mr Harper promised Canadians some modest measures. Some of these were sensible. Others, such as the cut in the sales tax, were not. But he got most of them done. He patched up Canada’s relations with the United States, which had deteriorated. His decision to keep Canadian troops fighting in Afghanistan was unpopular, but he was careful to ensure that it was backed by leading Liberals. He has increased defence spending, which shows realism in a country that lays claim to a large chunk of the disputed Arctic.

Mr Harper’s political home is in the west, in oil-rich Alberta where they like their politicians in the carnivorous mould of Sarah Palin. In office he has tried to woo eastern Canada, dropping his previous opposition to abortion and gay marriage, and recognising French-speaking Quebec as a “nation within a united Canada”. But his inner oilman has won out when it comes to the environment, an important issue in a country that is both a heavy carbon-emitter and especially vulnerable to climate change. Stéphane Dion, the Liberal leader, bravely proposes a carbon tax, which he claims would be revenue-neutral. Simply to rubbish this as a “crazy” idea that would “screw everybody”, as Mr Harper has done, shows a disappointing lack of leadership, and is grounds enough to deny the Conservatives a majority. In fact another minority Conservative government would not be a bad result for Canada: neither of the main party leaders has done enough to persuade Canadians that they deserve untrammelled power.
The first credit-crunch election

If the voters go further and eject Mr Harper, that, sadly, will not be because they have been convinced by the cerebral Mr Dion’s worthy carbon tax. It will be because the opposition—a gang of four, comprising the socialist New Democrats, the separatist Bloc Québécois and the rising Green Party as well as the Liberals—has succeeded in panicking the voters on the economy (see article). And yet, in a sinking world, Canada is something of a cork. Its well-regulated banks are solid. Growth has slowed but not stopped. The big worry is the fear that an American recession will drag Canada down with it.

Mr Harper says, rightly enough, that his government has taken prudent measures to help Canada weather a storm it cannot duck: he has offered tax cuts and selective aid to help vulnerable manufacturing towns. But it is his seeming non-reaction to what is so far a non-crisis that looks likely to deny him the majority he was seeking, and could even let in the opposition. In what is the first credit-crunch election in a big Western country, Mr Harper’s ejection would set a dispiriting precedent that panic plays better politically than prudence.

***


Editorial: A Conservative majority serves Canada's needs

National Post Published: Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaks during a campaign rally in Hamilton, Ont., Oct. 7, 2008.Chris Wattie/ReutersPrime Minister Stephen Harper speaks during a campaign rally in Hamilton, Ont., Oct. 7, 2008.

Last month, Stephane Dion called the upcoming federal election "among the most important in the history of our country." He may be right. Next week's vote will determine whether Canada's tax system is overhauled through the imposition of a massive levy on carbon-based fuels; the nature of our continuing presence in Afghanistan; and how our government will respond to the historic meltdown unfolding in financial markets. Faced with these high stakes, we believe, Canada would be best served if Stephen Harper's Conservative government were to receive a second mandate, this time in majority form.

Last month, Stephane Dion called the upcoming federal election "among the most important in the history of our country." He may be right. Next week's vote will determine whether Canada's tax system is overhauled through the imposition of a massive levy on carbon-based fuels; the nature of our continuing presence in Afghanistan; and how our government will respond to the historic meltdown unfolding in financial markets. Faced with these high stakes, we believe, Canada would be best served if Stephen Harper's Conservative government were to receive a second mandate, this time in majority form.

We have no illusions that Mr. Harper's government has been perfect. Its decision to tax income trusts, in particular, stands as a bald-faced betrayal of its earlier promise on the issue. Moreover, Mr. Harper did not make any serious attempt to clean up some of the more appalling residue left behind by previous governments -- the gun registry, the gag law, Section 13 of the Human Rights Act. We also have been disillusioned by the Conservatives' continual spending increases, Mr. Harper's flouting of his own fixed election date, and the petty, partisan spirit that often has pervaded Parliament under the Tories' watch.

But given the huge range of other activities undertaken in the course of leading Canada, it must be said that Mr. Harper has governed the country well overall. He has stuck by Canada's mission in Afghanistan, provided sound stewardship for the economy (notwithstanding the inevitable buffeting we are now taking thanks to Wall Street's meltdown), managed the Quebec file well, returned Canada-U. S. relations to their normal level of amity, lowered taxes, and implemented a number of welcome tweaks to our criminal justice system.

Most importantly of all, Mr. Harper has avoided the temptation to impose any large-scale Trudeauvian social-engineering schemes on the country, of the type the Liberals seem to cook up every few years. Yesterday's Tory platform, largely a rehash of previous announcements, is admirably stingy. It contains no multi-billion-dollar pharmacare program, no federally micromanaged daycare, no new National Energy Program. And for that, Canadians should be thankful.

This brings us to the main reason why we cannot endorse the Liberals. Putting aside Stephane Dion's reflexive leftward tilt on everything from foreign affairs to social issues, his "Green Shift" carbon-tax scheme is, by itself, enough to persuade us that he is the wrong man to be running this country. As our banking and financial-services sectors become strained by the worldwide credit crunch, this country is increasingly dependant on our oil and gas sector to sustain us through rough waters. Yet these are exactly the industries Mr. Dion wants to soak.

We also are not impressed by Mr. Dion's plan-- and general attitude -- in regard to Canada's economic challenges. In recent days, he truly has sounded like a hysteric, trying to convince Canadians that our relatively sound economy is on the brink of a cataclysmic depression. There is no evidence of this: Indeed, the latest economic numbers on jobs and growth are excellent. And as a stack of reports from our major banks attest, the fundamentals of our real estate market bear no comparison to America's sub-prime mess. Indeed, the only thing that could tip this country into full-blown depression is wide-scale investor panic of the type Mr. Dion seems intent on fomenting.

Nor are we impressed with Mr. Dion's grandly announced economic plan -- which is not a plan at all, but rather a pledge to consult with the country's leading economists, and do as they say. Consultation of this nature is something that Mr. Harper's government -- like all governments --does on a regular basis. The former professor's take on this issue seems to betray a basic ignorance of how government works, not to mention a disturbing penchant for outsourcing his own leadership.

In this regard, we are reminded of Mr. Dion's handling of former Winnipeg-area Liberal candidate Lesley Hughes, who advocated the bizarre and hateful notion that the U. S. and Israeli governments were in on the 9/11 attacks. Rather than act on principle and sack her at once, Mr. Dion initially announced that he had referred the issue to an ethnic lobby group -- the Canadian Jewish Congress --and would do as they instructed. It was a small but stunning abdication of true leadership, and a microcosm for why most Canadians, including members of this editorial board, don't believe he has the right stuff to lead a country.

As for the three other parties, fairly obvious deficiencies prevent us from endorsing them:

-The Bloc Quebecois seeks to break up the country -- and is immediately disqualified on that basis.

-The Greens have an energetic leader in Elizabeth May. But she has already endorsed Mr. Dion for prime minister. Given that much of her party's platform is similar, if not identical, to Mr. Dion's, her Green party essentially resembles nothing more than an off-label Liberal subsidiary.

-The NDP have made a strong push in this campaign. And when this editorial board recently sat down with Jack Layton, we saw why: The NDP leader is a charismatic, articulate spokesman for Canadian unions and affiliated leftists. But his prescription for Canada -- an increased tax load on corporations -- is precisely wrong. We are also disturbed by his party's' tolerance for a Quebec candidate with links to Islamists, and a B. C. candidate with Lesley Hughes-like ideas about the 9/11 attacks.

Like all elections, this one presents Canadians with a choice between imperfect options. But on balance, the Conservatives are clearly the best choice for this country. We urge our readers to vote accordingly on Oct. 14.

***

Sun editorial: Stephen Harper is our choice for the rough road ahead

The economic squeeze we're feeling puts the emphasis on needing a government that can best manage the economy

The editors, Vancouver Sun

Published: Friday, October 10, 2008

The Liberal leadership convention in 2006 was a turning point for the party as well as the country. It was everything a convention should be, with stirring speeches, tough backroom negotiations and a dramatic, come-from-behind finish. Delegates came away with hope that their dark days of scandal, disgrace and decline were behind them.

As we noted at the time, Stephane Dion, with his stumbling English delivery and ideological approach to politics, was not an obvious choice to lead a national political party.

But at a time when old-style politics were under attack, he offered the prospect of a fresh start, an opportunity to win back the confidence of Canadians after the Adscam corruption scandal that haunted Paul Martin during his brief term as prime minister and shook the party to its core.

It hasn't worked out. Under Dion's leadership, the Liberals have failed to capitalize on that opportunity. They entered this campaign a pale shadow of the iconic organization that ruled Canada for most of the past century, with empty pockets and weak popular support that started to ebb further as soon as Canadians started paying attention to the campaign.

In an election, a party with a leader who is more of a liability than an asset faces an uphill battle, but a strong team approach can succeed.

In this campaign, however, Dion faced a Conservative party that proved able under Prime Minister Stephen Harper to accomplish what Liberals could not: It remade itself.

From the combination of a rough-edged western reform movement and the ruins of the old Progressive Conservative party left behind by former prime minister Brian Mulroney in 1992, the Conservatives built a political organization that Canadians across the country were willing to support. They earned enough votes in 2006 to form a minority government.

Just as crucial to where they are today, they inspired their supporters to keep their dollars flowing in after the vote.

The financial strength of the Conservatives allowed them to start their campaign against the Liberal leader within days of the Liberal convention by painting Dion as a weak and ineffectual leader. It is an image he has been unable to shake.

This campaign was also shaped by the Liberals' inability to recover from another legacy of former prime minister Jean Chretien, the reformed campaign financing rules that cut the party off from the large corporate donations on which it has long depended.

The failure of Dion to re-energize the party in the almost three years he has had the job set up a campaign in which platforms have mattered less than the leaders. This despite the serious economic crisis unfolding south of the border that has overshadowed much of the campaign and the mounting evidence that Canadians won't emerge unscathed.

While the Liberals and NDP have tried to use the economic uncertainty to their advantage, it's clear to most Canadians that our government can't be blamed for the downdrafts we are starting to feel here.

That understanding defines the economic issue as "who can best manage the economy in uncertain times," rather than "who is responsible for the mess we're in."

Harper promises a steady-as-she-goes approach that is more akin to Liberal governments of the past than it is to a true conservative agenda. The Conservative election platform provides an additional $400 million in loans over the next four years to help the struggling manufacturing sector in Ontario and Quebec. Beyond that, a two-cent-a-litre cut in taxes on diesel and aviation fuel over four years totalling $600 million a year will also help the struggling truckers.

Meanwhile, Dion's platform is designed to drive the economy in a new direction. The Green Shift is at heart similar to British Columbia Premier Gordon Campbell's carbon tax. They are both designed to be somewhat disruptive to the economy while over time discouraging the use of fossil fuels.

But with concern over jobs, incomes and retirement savings outweighing the fear of climate change, we see little appetite for risky exploration of uncertain economic territory. That makes the Green Shift the wrong plan for the times, regardless of any theoretical merit.

The other issue that has had a remarkable amount of traction in this campaign is Harper's hang-'em-high crime agenda. The Conservatives have been able to tap into a deep well of fear and anger across the country, proving again that the emotional appeal of getting tough on criminals pays off even though there is little evidence that the measures they propose will make anyone safer.

Unfortunately for Harper, his crime agenda hasn't resonated in Quebec, as is evidenced by the slippage in recent polls. Harper's regrettable tendency to play on voters' fears has to be weighed against what he has achieved as prime minister - holding together the longest-lived minority government in Canadian history and pushing through a significant agenda of change.

On the economic side, he has followed through with promised tax reductions. He has kept his commitment to strengthen our armed forces. By getting the accountability act through Parliament, he has ensured that Ottawa will be more responsive to taxpayers.

As promised, he increased funding for health care to reduce waiting times for surgeries and diagnostics. And - of crucial importance - he has resisted pressure from within his party to follow a more socially conservative path.

Significantly for British Columbians, he led a government that has taken the perennial issue of western alienation off the table in this campaign. Westerners are clearly in.

All parties are constrained in their platforms by their promise to deliver balanced budgets. With an underperforming economy likely to deliver diminished revenues, there is little room to manoeuvre for any party that gets to form the government.

That economic squeeze puts the emphasis on economic management in the short to medium term.

The Liberals posted a spectacular record in balancing the budget, cutting taxes and reducing the national debt for more than a decade under Martin and Chretien, a record that has allowed Harper to honestly maintain during a time of crisis in the U.S. that the fundamentals of our economy remain strong.

As for the New Democrats and the Greens, they should be considered only in their traditional role as a source of ideas and loyal opposition, not as prospective managers of the economy, in good times or bad, despite NDP leader Jack Layton's lofty ambition to be prime minister and Green leader Elizabeth May's solid performance in the debates.

As the campaign comes to a close, we have a choice between a Liberal who has been unable to capitalize on his opportunity to lead and a Conservative who had a rocky start as leader but has shown he can grow in office.

As Harper correctly put it this week: "Prudent leadership does not set economic strategy for the nightly news or rewrite plans for the morning papers. On the contrary . . . the strengths of a plan are advanced preparation and consistent execution."

The PM has certainly demonstrated this by executing tax cuts six months ago and by coming up with an economic plan that could potentially help us avoid some big pot holes.

So on the ballot box question that's on everybody's mind - the slowing economy - we trust Harper to navigate the rough road ahead.

A majority government for the Conservatives led by Stephen Harper is our choice.


***

Vote Conservative for their record

Calgary Herald

Published: Saturday, October 11, 2008

To say Canada's federal election campaign has been overtaken by the near train-wreck that the international financial system has become would be an understatement.

And while Canada's federal government can do little to command the economic tsunami to cease, the question of who is best equipped to limit the ensuing damage to Canada, or who would exacerbate the effects of the financial crash, is critically relevant for Tuesday's election.

During this election campaign, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been lambasted by his opponents for being "out of touch" with the world's economic situation because he repeatedly says "Canada is not the U.S." and that economic fundamentals, including the Canadian banking system, are sound.

Experts, however, agree with Harper. On Thursday, the World Economic Forum released a report saying Canada has the soundest banking system in the world, closely followed by Sweden, Luxembourg and Australia, and on the same day the International Monetary Fund said Canada will lead the G-7 in economic growth next year and avoid a recession. Nevertheless, Harper's don't worry, be happy tune hasn't done him any favours in the polls and he should have shown greater empathy toward those Canadians losing sleep or their jobs as a result of the economic downturn.

Before detailing the reasons we believe Harper and the Conservative party deserve to govern on the question of Canada's economic future, however, it is useful to first examine the Conservative government's record.

It would be troubling if Canadians chose their next government based on a five-week election campaign of smears and sound bites rather than focusing on the Conservatives' nearly three years of effective and competent governing.

The minority government led by Harper has made a significant mark in the area of foreign policy. Since coming to power in 2006, the prime minister has been consistent and coherent in his defence of human rights around the world. Several examples are noteworthy.

After the terrorist group Hamas was elected in Palestinian elections, Harper led the world in refusing to send direct aid to the radical Islamists intent on the destruction of Israel. Further, when Israel was attacked by Lebanese-based Hezbollah terrorists in 2006, and this after thousands of rockets from Gaza and hundreds of suicide bomb attacks since 2000, many in the Canadian establishment, media and in the state-funded broadcaster expected the prime minister to respond to Israel's invasion of Lebanon as Jean Chretien or Paul Martin would have responded: lay blame on both sides no matter the history of the terror Israel endured.

Instead, in July 2006, Harper said Canada was not "going to give in to the temptation of some to single out Israel, which was the victim of the initial attack."

The prime minister stayed the course in Afghanistan instead of abandoning Afghan women and children to a resurgent Taliban, which would have been the end result of what the other parties urged. But as has been symptomatic of a Conservative campaign left to constantly dodge minefields of unforeseen circumstances, a government report released Thursday showed the cost for the Afghan mission has skyrocketed.

Similarly, Harper has been resolute in his criticism of China, which surprised some (and disappointed others) who bizarrely thought a pro-market prime minister standing up for human rights was somehow contradictory. That Harper would draw a proper line was also evident when he, unlike previous prime ministers, met the Dalai Lama -- publicly and in his office. As well, Harper's tenacity in defence of Canadian values and sovereignty has also been evident in his willingness to spend money on the Canadian military and on asserting Canada's claim in the Arctic.

Beyond international matters, the Harper Conservatives have also been mostly prudent stewards of the public purse. While less spending would have been better, the reality is that Liberal claims they would have spent less since 2006 are highly suspect. After all, the Liberals vociferously opposed a minor $45-million cut to the arts; it stretches credibility to then claim that party would restrain spending.

On economic and tax policy, the Harper government has properly begun cutting corporate taxes, which will help free up capital to survive tough times, cut the GST to five per cent from seven, allowed income-splitting for low- and middle-income seniors, and this past week moved to abolish $350 million in tariffs on manufacturing equipment.

Also, in less than three years, the Tories have paid $26.2 billion towards Canada's debt -- which results in about $2 billion in debt-interest savings annually, or $65 million per month. Such tax moves are evidence of a prudent return of public money to the actual public who pay taxes. To some, such actions are evidence of an ideological government.

Hardly. The Harper government has busily delivered tax dollars to Quebec's aerospace industry, Ontario's automotive sector and to "regional development" agencies on the Prairies and in Atlantic Canada. We oppose such corporate welfare, but if partisan opponents think those expenditures are evidence of a Dickensian world, it begs the question of how much more money the Liberals or NDP are prepared to spend in power.

The Harper government has not been perfect, though it has been mostly scandal-free -- Maxime Bernier's approach to official documents and his choice in girlfriends notwithstanding. Compare that minor tempest to the multibillion-dollar gun registry, Shawinigate or the Adscam shenanigans under the Liberals.

Harper broke his promise on income trusts and on fixed election dates, though in hindsight, preserving corporate tax revenues through ending trusts' exemptions now looks prudent for government finances.

It is to that issue that we now return. The New Democrats under Jack Layton would spend Canada back into deficits, and introduce measures that reek of 1930s-style American protectionism, which helped plunge the world into the Great Depression.

The Liberals would be an improvement on the NDP, but Stephane Dion's "Green Shift" carbon tax program, even if revenue neutral (which it won't be for most people), would pummel Canada's resource sector, undoubtedly the most robust of industries in Canada. Also, Dion's action plan on the economy -- consult with economists and convene with premiers -- would do nothing to improve Canada in the midst of an economic crisis. Dion's dithering might well make things worse.

Canadians need a prime minister who will act with clarity, thoughtfulness and foresight. In the past week, Prime Minister Harper has been accused of lacking all three as the effects of the U.S. subprime crisis became clear.

The critics could not be more wrong. It was the Harper government that moved earlier this year to stop the Canada Housing and Mortgage Corp. from offering zero per cent down, 40-year mortgages. The Conservatives saw what was coming and moved to block problematic U.S. practices from being replicated en masse in Canada.

Thus, the choice is simple. The Calgary Herald endorses Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservatives. They deserve to be re-elected based on their record, competence, and on the prime minister's steady hand as Canada heads into uncharted, choppy economic waters.

***

Federal vote

Assessing the local options

Windsor Star

Published: Saturday, October 11, 2008

Prime Minister Stephen Harper may be, as we argued Friday, the sturdiest and most capable of the party leaders, but that doesn't necessarily mean voters, particularly in this traditional Tory wasteland, should back Conservative candidates.

In a peculiarity common to the Westminster system of democracy, Canadians vote for their prime ministers only indirectly. Canadians can only vote directly for candidates in their riding and commonly find that the best local choice might not belong to the same party as their favoured prime ministerial candidate.

This creates a dilemma of sorts, with voters having to weigh the need for effective local representation against their desires that a particular party win the election and assume power. This dilemma is even more confounding for Harper supporters in Windsor and Essex County, where votes for Tory candidates have long been lost in a deluge of support for NDP and Liberal candidates.

Proponents like the CAW of so-called "strategic voting" would have you forget the duality of Canada's electoral system by focusing only on the party rather than its candidates in individual ridings. By encouraging you to vote on the basis of which party you want, or, rather, don't want, in power, they are effectively writing off the importance of local representation.

But the fractured nature of Canada's political landscape, which is expected to yield another minority government, should serve to heighten rather than diminish the significance of constituency representation. This election is shaping up to be so close that one candidate in a key swing riding -- maybe even yours -- could wind up deciding the parliamentary balance of power.

Voting for federal NDP candidates, for example, has long been an exercise in futility because the left-wing party hasn't managed to grab hold of the keys to Stornoway, let alone 24 Sussex Drive. Brian Masse, the NDP MP for Windsor West, and Joe Comartin, the NDP MP for Windsor-Tecumseh, have vigorously represented the interests of their constituents.

Could they have accomplished more for them, though, had they been cabinet ministers or backbench MPs of the governing party? It is a fair question given the tendency of governments to blanket friendly ridings with funding. Many people accused the Harper government of playing politics with its recent announcement of funding for Ford's Essex Engine plant, but all parties play the game the same way.

Would that same funding have been forthcoming if Harper didn't need Essex MP Jeff Watson to hang onto his seat against Liberal challenger Susan Whelan and NDP candidate Taras Natyshak? Again, a fair question revolving around the issue of party affiliation local voters need to consider before Tuesday's vote.

Having a government MP can certainly pay dividends, but that doesn't necessarily mean voters should try and back a winner. The reality -- and this is one of the intrinsic weaknesses of strategic voting -- is that no one can say for certain who will win the election. Strategic voting can very easily backfire. The possibility of a coalition government this time around also raises the possibility, however remote, of NDP cabinet ministers or, an even unlikelier scenario, a Green or independent cabinet minister.

There are too many variables and unknowns for voters to focus on any calculus other than the issues they care about. They should vote for the candidate in their riding they feel can best defend their interests and fight for the interests of this community. If they don't like the leader of that candidate's party, they'll have to think long and hard before casting their ballot.

***

The Right Choice

When Canadians go to the polls on Tuesday to vote for a new federal government, it is unlikely that a majority of them will choose to re-elect Stephen Harper's Conservatives.

The reasons for that reluctance may be various and several, but the nature of Canadian politics means that it might not make much difference, that Mr. Harper could still be returned as the prime minister of another minority government or even of a majority, although the latter seems to be increasingly improbable if this week's polls are any indication.

One reason that Canadians are cool to the Conservatives is Mr. Harper himself. As a politician, he is not particularly likable. He is aloof and distant and his sense of humour rarely connects with that of ordinary people. He seems to lack empathy, his humanity breaking through only rarely and barely.

In a more perfect world, whether we like or dislike people personally would not affect our assessment of how they do their jobs, but as every election proves, our political world is far from perfect. A more serious concern than Mr. Harper's personality, however, is his obsession with secrecy.

Most Conservative cabinet ministers and MPs are forbidden, for example, to speak spontaneously in public about public policy or government business. This may be nothing more sinister than an effort to ensure that they are all reading from the same page, but it also serves to raise suspicions that there is something more to it than that. In the past, some Conservatives have embarrassed Mr. Harper and the party with comments endorsing a right-wing social agenda that is anathema to most Canadians. The party says there is no such agenda today, but secrecy is usually taken to mean there is something to hide. If Mr. Harper wants the trust of the voters, he needs to present to them finally a government that they believe they can trust.

There are other reasons why people may choose not to vote Conservative, some trivial (small cuts to arts funding), some worthy of serious debate (the cost and course of the controversial Afghan war). The most serious issue confronting the Conservatives, however, is the one that Mr. Harper appears to have hoped to avoid facing when he called an early election -- the current economic crisis.

The opposition parties have been making political hay with the economic troubles and the fears of a recession that have gripped the world. Canada is in a better position to weather this crisis than any of the other industrialized nations, but the Liberals and New Democrats argue that the Harper government has no clear understanding of its magnitude, no empathy for its victims and no clear sense of direction in how to deal with it. Polls this week record declining Tory popularity and a corresponding surge for Stéphane Dion's Liberals and Jack Layton's NDP, so those arguments may be finding resonance among voters.

The position of the major parties on the economic crisis is revealing of their nature under their current leaders. Mr. Layton embraces a socialism so anachronistic that it was abandoned decades ago by the European social democrats that Mr. Layton holds up as an example. The NDP blames big banks and big business and would tax and spend the country into an industrial backwater.

Under Mr. Dion, the Liberals have been largely ineffective in Opposition and their election platform reflects that, consisting, as it does, of a promise to hold next month the kind of meetings with economic experts that the government is conducting now, to raise taxes through a punitive new carbon tax and to increase spending on social programs.

Under the shrill cacophony of the opposition's cries for action, Mr. Harper's Conservatives have remained calm. Look at the last two years, the prime minister says, correctly claiming that he has offered generally competent government. In the face of this crisis, he promises more of the same. On Thursday, two major international financial institutions, the International Monetary Fund and the World Economic Forum, agreed with him, saying that Canada was on the right course to weather the storm. Mr. Harper's economic policy is clear and practical and worth supporting on Tuesday. To turn the old saying on its head, this time, hard times should be Tory times. As The Economist said Thursday, if Canadians reject the Conservatives, it would "set a dispiriting precedent that panic plays better politically than prudence."

There is another reason, political rather than economic, to vote Conservative on Tuesday. As it exists, the Canadian political system is either too monolithic -- two-thirds of the country places itself on the centre-left, but divisions on the left prevent it from having a voice proportional to its size; or not fragmented enough -- the centre-right is occupied only by the Conservatives. Canadians need more than that, either a two-party system or a true multi-party system that enables a variety of coalitions.

As this election has shown, the Liberals and the NDP will not come together willingly, even to defeat the Conservatives. A Conservative victory next week, however, would almost certainly mean the departure of Mr. Dion, forcing the Liberal party to intensely examine itself, and the probable departure of Mr. Layton, giving the NDP the opportunity to drag itself into the 21st century. More importantly, it would underline the need for a coalition of the left and a realignment of the centre, offering Canadians a clear choice in future elections. A vote for the Conservatives, in a sense, counts in two important ways for Canadians, today and tomorrow.

***

Conservatives are our best bet in troubled times

The Gazette

Published: 17 hours ago

Canada has had a Conservative government for more than two and a half years now, and its record is, on balance, not bad. But making a choice in this election is more complex than it was in 2006, when the Liberals were a scandal-haunted shambles.

Federalists owe Liberal leader Stéphane Dion continued respect for his work on the Clarity Act and related puncturings of the sovereignist balloon. Although we have serious reservations about his Green Shift plan, he has worked with determination and dignity in this campaign even when his party seemed doomed. He has earned the late-campaign gains that polls suggest he has made.

On balance, however, we believe that considering the Conservative record and the goals, policies, and personnel of the other parties, it is the Conservatives who deserve to be re-elected on Tuesday. Amid all the unfair and misleading advertising of this campaign, one Conservative message is truer now than when the writ was dropped: Constancy and prudence with the country's finances are even more important when we're in the economic doldrums.

There is much to criticize in the record of Stephen Harper's government. But on the big issues - the economy, Canada's place in the world, and striking the right balance between Ottawa and the provinces, including Quebec - it has done well.

Obviously, however, the Conservatives have few prospects of winning ridings on or near Montreal Island. Accordingly we hope that Montrealers - and people across Quebec - will vote for the federalist candidate most likely to deprive the Bloc Québécois of members of Parliament.

Just a month ago many Canadians, and not least Quebec federalists, believed happily that this election would drive a stake through the heart of the Bloc. A new era seemed to be at hand.

The Conservatives in power were masterful in demonstrating openness to Quebec, in large ways and small. But two campaign platform planks popular in Rest-of-Canada - tougher youth criminal justice rules and cuts to some arts programs - poisoned the Quebec spring for the Conservatives. These inept moves have resulted in a Bloc resurgence. That party could even have the balance of power in Parliament at a time when the economy is at serious risk - plainly a recipe for damaging mischief.

Gilles Duceppe's wife Yolande Brunelle was quoted recently as explaining the real raison d'être of the Bloc: "Quebec, in voting for the Bloc, prevents Canada from having a majority government. The message? Here's a country that would be managed better without Quebec."

The real message of this cheerless revelation of motive is that this is a country that could be managed better without the Bloc. The actual "best interest of Quebec" would be full, able representation in the federal cabinet, and in the shadow cabinets of both opposition parties.

Jack Layton and his Quebec lieutenant Tom Mulcair have campaigned powerfully. But a number of NDP policies, from the abrupt abandonment of the Afghanistan mission to a sharp increase in corporate taxes, make little sense to us. The Greens, meanwhile, have in Elizabeth May a leader who is passionate and articulate - in English, anyway - but are clearly not ready for prime time.

Accordingly, we believe the responsible vote in many Montreal-area ridings is for whichever federalist candidate is best positioned to defeat the Bloc. In some ridings, of course, the Bloc is no threat, but in others, odd splits of the vote could lead to unforeseen results unless federalist voters are careful.

In the Montreal area, a number of incumbents, and a few challengers, have been or would be first-rate MPs and plainly deserve places in the next Parliament. They include Dion himself in Saint-Laurent-Cartierville, Conservative Michael Fortier in Vaudreuil-Soulanges; New Democrat Tom Mulcair in Outremont; and some other Liberals, notably Irwin Cotler in Mount-Royal and Marc Garneau in Westmount-Ville-Marie. And we admit to being deeply curious about how Justin Trudeau would comport himself in Parliament. We hope he is elected in Papineau.

Inevitably, every election is described by somebody as "the most important in our lifetime." In truth they're all important; this one too will set a path for the country in our troubled times. We invite every voter to think carefully and choose prudently.

More on Dion's Economy Gaffe

More on Dion's Economy Gaffe


Bad day for Dion. The Greens demonstrate that they are nothing more than a wing of the Liberal Party as two candidates cross the floor and endorse the Liberals (following May) as Harper predicted. Then an interview with the CTV demonstrates that Dion's economic attacks on Harper were empty and that perhaps he does not understand the economy. The Premier in Nova Scotia than states that Dion's carbon tax would cost his province 600 million dollars. Michael Ignatieff and Bob Rae than break with the leader and say the Green Shaft would be shelved in a global recession only to have Dion insist that he would implement the tax regardless of economic conditions. You got some explaining to do Stephane. Personally, I think it is obvious that this guy just isn't worth the risk.
-Darryl



Over confident Dion stumbles on economy

Over confident Dion stumbles on economy

His interview with the CBC last night wasn't much better either. I think the tide is slowly starting to turn back to the Conservatives again. Clearly Dion has no economic plan and is simply playing politics with the international financial crisis despite positive reports today. He is trying to run from his carbon tax, a proposal that is a real threat to our economy. I think the momentum is back with the Prime Minister. Time to close the deal.
-Darryl

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Campaign Update: Debates in Newmarket-Aurora



Debates in Newmarket-Aurora

Local coverage here

We have now completed all five debates in the Newmarket-Aurora riding. Sacred Heart and Cardinal Carter hosted two high school debates on Friday and Tuesday morning. The Aurora Chamber of Commerce had a debate on Monday. Rogers taped and aired a debate moderated by John Taylor. Last night the Newmarket Chamber of Commerce had the final debate.

I think Lois Brown did an excellent job at the two Chamber debates in Aurora and Newmarket. Because she had to defend Harper's time in government, she came across as the incumbant. I did not see the high school debates because I have to work for a living. The Rogers debate was dominated by Dorian Baxter with Lois and Tim on the sidelines for the most part. Personally, I don't think the debates will have much impact on the outcome of this election. There were no major gaffes by Tim Jones or Lois Brown and I didn't see any real knock out blows. The two major candidates played it safe and stayed on party message. Mike Seaward, Glenn Hubbers, Ray Luff, and Dorian Baxter were wild cards in the debates. In Aurora there were no questions from the floor. In Newmarket there ended up being about half an hour of questions from the time. Issues discussed included: economy, manufacturing jobs, poverty, Afghanistan, Iraq, abortion, Carbon Tax, environmental plans, hand gun ban, Young offenders Act, municipalities and infrastructure, peaker power plant, taxes, spending, family court, child credit, democratic reform and leadership. In Newmarket, each candidate was allowed to ask another two questions. Lois asked Tim about the Liberal deal with the Green Party and also a question about his record as Mayor of Aurora. Tim asked Lois about Flaherty's "Ontario would be the last place to invest in" comment. Mike Seaward wasn't always on NDP message (why no mention of Dion abstaining or promoting Jack Layton's leadership) but ultimately represented himself well on the left. Glenn Hubbers has campaigned twice now for the Greens and represents his party in a strong way. Ray Luff did a good job of promoting the CHP and Dorian Baxter provided the comedy with an occasional good point here and there and an outrageous statement at other times. Tim said straight up that this is a two horse race in Newmarket-Aurora. Both candidates survived, and now the efforts will move to getting the vote out. I expect turnout to be lower than 2006 and 2004, but could be surprised.

Inside the debates, it is well known that the crowd is rarely undecided. Partisans from all sides fill the room, plant questions, distribute flyers and cheer wildly for their candidate. Signs flood the location. The candidates have spent hours preparing in advance trying to get their key points and media sound bytes into the debate at the right time. I got a good laugh when the Newmarket moderator opened up the floor to questions and the first two people lined up first at each of the two microphones were the Presidents of the Liberal and Conservative riding associations. Fighting four elections since 2004 and a municipal one in the same period; everyone gets to know the key people behind each of the campaigns. The real audience of course is the media covering the event. I did talk to one undecided voter and it was refreshing. Sometimes in campaign mode it is easy to get caught up in a partisan bubble and lose touch with the real swing voters. The crowd in Aurora (pictured above) was packed but the venue was small. Newmarket was about 75% full at Newmarket Theatre, but dropped signifcantly before the question portion after the class from St. Andrews left the building.

Because the debates fall very late in the campaign, media coverage will be brief. Rogers will air the previously taped debates periodically until E-day. The Auroran most likely will not have another issue until after the election or election day at the earliest. The Era Banner had an article on the Sacred Heart debate today and potentially will have another story about the Newmarket debates on the weekend or Tuesday. CBC Radio was also there last night as was SNAP!

Tomorrow Stephen Harper will be in the GTA for a major rally. According to the local debates, Tim Jones said Stephane Dion is coming into this riding before the election. After Saturday the campaigning is basically over, Thanksgiving dinners will take place and then it comes down to getting out the vote on election day. Shortly, this election will be in the hands of the people. For now this swing riding is in the hands of the national campaigns and the momentum going into election day just prior to the holiday weekend. Locally we have two more days of campaigning to go and one big day for translating all of that hard work into votes. We now have 5 days to go!
-Darryl

Toronto Star - Newmarket-Aurora preview

Toronto Star - Newmarket-Aurora preview

I enjoy the coverage this riding is getting from the national media. Newmarket-Aurora has been covered by Global, CTV, Globe and Mail, National Post, Toronto Star, Toronto Sun, CBC, City TV, CPAC and the Hill Times to name a few. It seems we still have some profile, despite the fact Belinda is not running this time. Below is some coverage from the Toronto Star. Strangely there has not been much coverage in our two local papers the Auroran or Era Banner. Rogers has done a great job covering the campaigns in York Region from a local perspective. This riding is a crucial GTA/905 riding that must be picked up if the Conservatives are expecting gains in this election. We will be working hard right until the end (minus Thanksgiving of course) and I expect we will pull off a close win on Tuesday.

-Darryl

****

Newmarket-Aurora

Click here to read
candidate profiles for this riding.

More riding previews on our Election page.

(2006: Liberal Belinda Stronach won by 4,800 votes)

Oct 09, 2008 04:30 AM


Staff reporter

For the first time in the short history of the Newmarket-Aurora riding, auto parts heiress Belinda Stronach is not a candidate.

The riding has only been in existence for two federal elections, and Stronach won them both – in 2004 for the federal Conservatives and in 2006 for the Liberals. Her departure sets up what's expected to be a tight race between former Aurora mayor Tim Jones of the Liberals and businesswoman Lois Brown of the Conservatives.

Some commentators have suggested the upscale, educated riding will be a bellwether for the fortunes of either the Conservatives or the Liberals nationally.

And no one is predicting a decisive win by either party, both of which are running well-known candidates.

Issues and not star power are expected to make the difference with the absence of Stronach, who rankled many here by crossing the floor from the Conservatives to prop up the Liberals.

"If it wasn't for Belinda Stronach, I think the Conservatives would have won last time," says Henry Jacek, a professor of political science at McMaster University in Hamilton.

"I would say it's very vulnerable right now," he says.

Even with Stronach, the Liberals only beat Brown by 4,800-votes in 2006.

The margin was slimmer still in 2004, when Stronach edged the Liberals by just 689 votes.

Brown said she's comfortable that the leadership of Stephen Harper and the Tories' economic record will strike a chord here, with policies such as reducing the goods and services tax and providing breaks for first-time homebuyers.

"I think in this election we'll see Newmarket-Aurora return to its Conservative base," says Brown.

Jones was boosted by Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion's promise to spend $70 billion over 10 years to bolster municipal infrastructure in areas such as transit, sewage treatment and hospitals to help the rapidly expanding region.

"People should really know their municipality to be able to represent their municipality," says Jones, who has spent 28 years in local municipal politics.

Glenn Hubbers of the Green party says he would like to help energize people to make positive changes in their community.

"If they add their voices together, they can be effective at making real change," Hubbers says.

The addition of Green party leader Elizabeth May to the federal leaders' debate was a victory for voters seeking change, he adds.

New Democrat Mike Seaward, who has run provincially four times, sees the affluent riding getting nervous about the future.

Plant closures and a shakiness in the stock market are hard to ignore, even in a richer than average riding.

"I think the economy's quickly becoming the No. 1 issue," Seaward says.

OTHER CANDIDATES

Dorian Baxter, Progressive Conservative party

Ray Luff, Christian Heritage party

http://www.thestar.com/FederalElection/article/513588

CBC National Filming Complete


CBC Filming Complete

Six hours of tape has now been submitted to the CBC and they will edit it down to 6-8 minutes. The focus will be getting out the vote in Newmarket-Aurora. For now the air date is projected to be Friday October 10 during the CBC National "Your Vote" segment. It will also be posted on the CBC National website. I will keep you posted once the date becomes official. Below is the intro that aired earlier in the campaign.
-Darryl

Not Worth the Risk Conservative Ad

NOT WORTH THE RISK AD:

Liberal Hypocrisy on Plagiarism Exposed

Liberal Hypocrisy on Plagiarism Exposed

Obama vs. McCain Town Hall Debate Full

Obama vs. McCain Town Hall Debate Full

I think the US race is basically over. Obama will be the next president.
-Darryl

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Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Turn to Rogers TV on Tuesday, October 14th starting at 9pm for live federal election coverage



Turn to Rogers TV on Tuesday, October 14th starting at 9pm for live federal election coverage

At some point during the election night coverage, I will be making an appearance on the program. I recommend the people of York Region watch the Rogers coverage on October 14 to get a local perspective on the federal election as well as analysis from a community perspective. Rogers has done a great job covering the election thus far. During the provincial election night coverage, the Conversation Cafe format was an excellent format and the coverage was very professional. I was glad to participate and look forward to taking part again in this election.
-Darryl

***

Information about the Broadcast:
Turn to Rogers TV on Tuesday, October 14th starting at 9pm for live federal election coverage with results, reports and insight on how the outcome of the election will affect York Region. Turn to Rogers TV on Tuesday, October 14th starting at 9pm for live federal election coverage with results, reports and insight on how the outcome of the election will affect York Region.

Hosts:

Fil Martino

Fil Martino is the Anchor and Producer for First Local and is a committed member of the Rogers TV team.

As a reporter for First Local Fil travelled to Africa and India with Christian Blind Mission International officials to document their work. She also produced many special news serials including: The Last Days of the Dump - Chronicling the life of the Keele Valley Landfill Site; CBMI Changing Lives and Into India: Vimala's Story; Life After SARS - A look at what life is like for EMS workers in York Region after SARS; and Answering the Call - Featuring the region's fire departments and how they are working to keep York Region safe.

Fil has received media awards for her coverage of crime stories and police programs in the region from both The OPP and York Regional Police. Fil enjoys volunteering her time to help out local charities including CBM in Whitchurch-Stouffville and The Canadian Cancer Society. Fil also enjoys reading and writing and has travelled throughout Canada, the U.S., Europe, Africa, India and Australia.

Fil graduated from The University of Toronto with a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature and from Seneca College with a Radio and Television Arts Diploma. She completed co-op placements at The Dini Petty Show and CKVR before beginning a placement at The Regional News on Classicom Cable in 1992.

John Taylor

John Taylor is currently host of Focal Point, Rogers TV’s issues based program. You may recognize John as he has appeared as a guest on several Rogers TV shows in the past.

John was elected to Municipal Office in 2006 when he became Regional Councillor for the Town of Newmarket, representing the Town on both Town of Newmarket Council and York Region Council. He is a member of numerous Regional and Municipal committees and is York Region’s appointee to the Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority and Canadian National Exhibition Boards of Directors. He is the Town’s appointee to the Newmarket Chamber of Commerce.

John was born and raised in Newmarket. He has always had a passion for his community. He is President of the Heart and Stroke Foundation York Region North; is a member of Habitat for Humanity’s Site Selection Committee; and the Fundraising Committee for Voices of Joy.

John has bachelor degrees in English and Education, a Masters degree in Canadian Studies and a Ph.D. in Education. He has been a high school teacher and has taught Educational Policy at U.B.C. and his work on First Nations education in Canada has been published. He has worked as an independent investment consultant and is a partner in a logistics and transportation company that employs more than 25 people. He has more than 20 years of political experience – he has worked as special assistant to the Minister of Community and Social Services and has worked on numerous election campaigns at the municipal, provincial, and federal levels. He was a provincial candidate for the riding of York North in 2003.

John is an avid reader and collects Canadian literature. Although he has traveled extensively, he enjoys the simplicity of walking and spending time at the cottage. John is married to Michelle and together they have a baby daughter, Addison.

Nocarbontaxes.com

Nocarbontaxes.com

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation encourages you to join their fight at NoCarbonTaxes.com


Conservatives release platform






A plan for the economy vs proposals for financial disaster
October 07, 2008

Prime Minister Stephen Harper understands the global financial crisis. His plan for the way forward has been clear and consistent: balanced budgets, lower taxes, investments to create jobs and keeping inflation low.

This is in stark contrast to Stéphane Dion and Jack Layton, who have only just realized that the economy is an issue.

Dion wants to impose a massive carbon tax that will drive up the cost of everything and hurt families.

Layton will increase taxes on businesses and drive jobs out of Canada.

The Liberals and the NDP are both a vote for financial disaster. They have no plan. Both parties would gamble with Canadians’ hard-earned money for short term electoral gain.

For the past year and a half, the Harper Government has been implementing a real plan to protect our economy. The Harper Government is working for all Canadians who have a job to keep, a mortgage to pay and a retirement to save for.

A Conservative government will not be raising taxes. We will not impose a carbon tax. We will not cancel planned tax reductions for business. We will keep our spending within our means. It is that simple.

The alternative is not a plan. It is just the consequence of complete panic, and this government will not panic at a time of uncertainty.

Backgrounder

Economic certainty for the future

A strong foundation: Positioned to act for the future

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Dion's spending promises video

Dion's spending promises video

Should be a major concern under these challenging economic times.
-Darryl

Monday, October 06, 2008

Local Debates in Newmarket-Aurora



Local Debates in Newmarket-Aurora

For those interested in the local debates between Lois Brown (Conservative), Tim Jones (Liberal), Mike Seaward (NDP), Glenn Hubbers (Green), Ray Luff (CHP) and Dorian Baxter (Progressive Canadian Party)
-Darryl


1.) Tonight - Aurora Chamber - Theatre Aurora, 150 Henderson Drive - candidates to be there about 6:15 pm - meet and greet people as they come in from 6:30 pm until 7pm when the event begins - debate ends at 9 pm - 9 pm to 9:30 pm meet and greet voters as they leave event.


2.) Tuesday October 7 - debate from 8:20 am until 9:50 am at Sacred Heart High School in Newmarket - 1 Crusader Way [Students Only]


3.) Tuesday October 7 - Rogers tv - candidates to arrive at 3:30 pm, taping from 4 pm to 5 pm. John Taylor will be the moderator.

The televised local debates will air at the times below on Rogers York Region Channel 10:

Newmarket/Aurora

7pm Tuesday, October 7

10am Wednesday, October 8

3pm Wednesday, October 8

2pm Thursday, October 9

5pm Sunday, October 1


4.) Wednesday October 8 - Newmarket Chamber of Commerce debate at the Newmarket Theatre (505 Pickering Cr.) - 4 pm random draw for display table - 6 pm doors open to the public - 6:55 pm candidates meet in the Green Room - 7 pm debate begins until 9 pm