Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Happy New Year and all the best in 2009!



Happy New Year and all the best in 2009!

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Christmas Greetings from the Prime Minister

Christmas Greetings from the Prime Minister

On behalf of the Government of Canada, and from my family to yours, have a Merry Christmas and best wishes for the year to come.


Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!!!!!!!


Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!!!!!!!


Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Lois Brown: Canadian Auto-Aid Package Welcome News


Lois Brown MP, Newmarket-Aurora

LOIS BROWN: CANADIAN AUTO-AID PACKAGE WELCOME NEWS

FOR NEWMARKET-AURORA

DECEMEBER 21, 2008

(Newmarket-Aurora, ON) - Newmarket-Aurora MP Lois Brown says that the financial aid package for the Canadian Auto Industry announced December 20 by Prime Minister Harper and Premier McGuinty is welcome news for Newmarket and Aurora.

Highlighting the three-point plan is $4 billion in loans payable to General Motors of Canada Limited and Chrysler Canada Inc. by the Government of Canada and the Government of Ontario, extended through Export Development Canada (EDC). There will be conditions attached to the financing extended to the automakers and the federal and provincial governments will exercise oversight over the use of taxpayer money as part of its ongoing due diligence. The loans are expected to provide additional time for the auto manufacturers to reduce structural costs and ensure a viable auto industry in Canada.

Prime Minister Harper also announced two additional steps that the federal government will undertake to support the overall competitiveness of the auto industry. Automotive suppliers will have greater access to accounts receivable insurance through federal Export Development Corporation coverage to compensate for the reduced availability of credit. Additionally, the Government of Canada will create a new facility to support access to credit for consumers with particular attention paid to improving the accessibility of car loans and dealer financing.

“This made-in-Canada, three-point auto aid package is welcome news for Newmarket and Aurora,” said Lois Brown. We have taken a holistic approach, and these measures will assist suppliers and consumers including the numerous automotive retail and supply industries located here. I am especially pleased that Prime Minister Harper and our government incorporated the advice forwarded from the local auto dealership round table meeting I recently conducted. All three recommendations resulting from that meeting were addressed in this auto aid package with the inclusion of support to auto suppliers, consumers and by extension retailers, in addition to assistance for large auto manufacturers.”

Lois Brown had received three key suggestions from her recent auto dealership round table; stimulate consumer spending, assist in extending credit for automotive purchases, and support Canada’s large automotive manufacturers.

The Canadian auto aid package comes one day after an announced U.S. $17.4 billion auto aid package.

Lois Brown is the Member of Parliament for Newmarket-Aurora. She is a member of the House of Commons Standing Committees for Transport, Infrastructure and Communities, and Foreign Affairs and International Trade, and is the Vice-President of the Conservative Party Auto Caucus.

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For further information, please contact:

Jackie Cousins

Media Contact

416-543-7700

Monday, December 22, 2008

Mike Duffy appointed to the Senate


Mike Duffy appointed to the Senate

I really like the choice of Mike Duffy. I am a bit disappointed Don Cherry was not selected. I was also hoping for Mario Dumont, General Hillier, Mike Harris and Bernard Lord. It is also clear that no MPP from the PC Party of Ontario has been appointed leaving John Tory's seat status in limbo. Irving Gerstein deserved his appointment after all he has done for our party.
-Darryl


Prime Minister Harper acts to fill Senate vacancies
December 22, 2008

Each new Senator pledges to support Canada’s elected government, promote Canadian unity and advance Senate reform

Prime Minister Harper today announced that he will appoint 18 distinguished Canadians to serve in Canada’s Senate.

“Our government will continue to push for a more democratic, accountable and effective Senate,” said the Prime Minister. “If Senate vacancies are to be filled, however, they should be filled by the government that Canadians elected rather than by a coalition that no one voted for.”

The incoming Senators have all pledged to support eight-year term limits and other Senate reform legislation. Each incoming Senator has also declared his or her unwavering commitment to support Canadian unity and oppose the coalition.

Four of the incoming Senators will fill vacancies from the Province of Quebec. Incoming senators will fill three vacancies in British Columbia and Nova Scotia while two vacancies are being filled in Ontario and New Brunswick. One vacancy is being filled in each of Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, Saskatchewan and Yukon.

“While I look forward to welcoming elected Senators to the Upper Chamber in the future, these current vacancies must be filled in order for the Senate to transact legitimate government business,” said the Prime Minister. “If the opposition parties do not approve of these Senate appointments they should stop obstructing our attempts to introduce meaningful Senate reform. For our part, we will continue working with the provinces and reform-minded parliamentarians to build a more accountable and democratic Senate.”

LIST OF NEW SENATORS

Newfoundland and Labrador

Fabian Manning
has dedicated his career to serving Newfoundlanders and Labradorians at all three levels of government. A three term councilor in the town of St. Brides, Mr. Manning served as coordinator for the Cape Shore Area Development Association for three years. Mr. Manning would go on to win three elections to the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly as the representative for Placentia – St. Mary’s. Mr. Manning was subsequently elected as Member of Parliament in the federal constituency of Avalon in the 2006 Federal Election campaign. Mr. Manning would go on to chair both the Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans as well as the Conservative Government’s Atlantic caucus.

Nova Scotia

Fred Dickson, QC
is both one of Nova Scotia’s most respected lawyers and one of Canada’s top legal experts on offshore resource development. Mr. Dickson is counsel with the law firm of McInnes Cooper. Mr. Dickson has advised the federal and provincial government’s on numerous resource and infrastructure projects, including serving as an advisor to the Government of Nova Scotia during the singing of the 1982 and 1985 Canada / Nova Scotia Offshore Oil and Gas Agreements. Mr. Dickson remains active in these files as a Director of the Offshore / Onshore Technologies Association of Nova Scotia and Canadian Council for Public-Private Partnerships.

Stephen Greene has political and policy experience at both the federal and provincial levels. Mr. Greene served as Chief of Staff in the Leader’s Office of the Reform Party of Canada from 1993 and 1996 during which he helped manage the opposition response to the national unity and fiscal issues of the day. He went on to work as the Executive Director of the Insurance Brokers Association of Nova Scotia. For the past two years he has served as Principal Secretary and Deputy Chief of Staff to Nova Scotia Premier Rodney MacDonald with wide responsibilities to help the Premier administer an effective government for all Nova Scotians.

Michael L. MacDonald is a Nova Scotia businessman who since 1988 has been the owner and President of Fleur de Lis Motel Ltd. Mr. MacDonald had previously served terms as executive assistant to two federal cabinet ministers and the premier of Nova Scotia. A graduate of the University of King’s College and Dalhousie University, Mr. MacDonald has been an activist and volunteer with the federal and provincial Conservative parties since university, and is presently Vice-President of the Conservative Party of Canada and a two-term representative for Nova Scotia on the party’s national executive. A native of Louisbourg, Mr. MacDonald is a long-time resident of Dartmouth where he resides with his wife and two teenaged sons.

Prince Edward Island

Michael Duffy
is one of Canada's most well known and respected news personalities and the current host of CTV's daily program, Mike Duffy Live. Mr. Duffy joined CBC Radio News in 1974, switched to CBC TV’s “The National” in 1978, and joined CTV in 1988. He is a member of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame. Mr. Duffy is involved in a number of charitable activities both in Ottawa and in his home province, including the UPEI Building fund, and the current Holland College Foundation Fundraising campaign. He has been a visiting fellow at Duke University; and has been twice nominated for the “Best in the Business” award by the Washington Journalism Review. Mr. Duffy has received many other awards and citations, and honourary degrees from the University of PEI; from Niagara University in Niagara Falls, NY; and from Wilfrid Laurier University in Brantford.

New Brunswick

Percy Mockler
has been a long-time MLA in the New Brunswick legislature since he was first elected in 1982. During his time in the provincial legislature, Mr. Mockler served in a number of portfolio's including Minister of Wellness, Culture and Sport, Solicitor General and Minister of Human Resources Development and Housing. Mr. Mockler is a former advisory member for trade opportunities strategy with the federal Department of External Affairs. He has also been active in community affairs as treasurer of local fish and wildlife associations, a director of the caisse populaire, and as a member and chair of his local school board.

John D. Wallace was born in Rothesay, NB and had a distinguished law career in Saint John. Most recently, he served for 7 years as Partner/Counsel at the law firm of Stewart McKelvey. Previously he had been Corporate Counsel for Irving Oil Limited and a Partner at Palmer, O’Connell, Leger, Turnbull and Turnbull. Mr. Wallace continued his community service after retiring from law. He is a Member of the University of New Brunswick Board of Governors, the St. John Imperial Theatre Capital Campaign Cabinet and the New Brunswick Symphony Steering Committee. Mr. Wallace was the Telegraph-Journal Male Newsmaker of the Year in 2002 and became a recipient of the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Medal in 2003.

Quebec

Patrick Brazeau
is a member of the Algonquin Nation and a citizen of the Indian reserve of Kitigan Zibi, near Maniwaki, Quebec. A champion of the rights of Aboriginals, in 2006, he was chosen as the National Chief of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples. He used this forum to promote the economic and social development of Aboriginals, especially those who live off-reserve. Mr. Brazeau has a black belt in karate and was a member of the Naval Reserve on HMCS Carleton, in Ottawa.

Suzanne Fortin-Duplessis was born in Chicoutimi and studied at the École des Beaux-arts de Québec and at Laval University, where she obtained a bachelor’s degree in visual arts and a certificate in college education. She was a teacher at the regional school board Louis-Fréchette. In 1981, she became the first woman to be elected to the Municipal Council of the City of Sainte-Foy. She became active in federal politics and was elected as the MP for the riding of Louis-Hébert from 1984 to 1993. Ms. Fortin-Duplessis has always been involved in the community. During her career, she was a member of the board of the Alzheimer Society and the Fondation de l’Opéra de Québec, and she is a member of the Laval hospital and the Saint-Sacrement hospital foundations. More recently, she was a volunteer for the International Eucharistic Congress.

Leo Housakos was born in Montreal and studied at Cégep Vanier and at McGill University, where he obtained a bachelor’s degree in arts, with a major in political science and history. In 1993, he co-founded the Montreal Hellenic Chamber of Commerce and is currently a Director of Via Rail Canada.Throughout his business career he has held important management positions in several companies, including Quadvision Consultants and Terrau. Mr. Housakos is married and is the father of two children.

Michel Rivard studied in Quebec City and spent the most part of his professional life in public administration. He was President of the Corporation des maîtres entrepreneurs en réfrigération du Québec, then Mayor of Beauport from 1980 to 1984. Mr. Rivard was director of a number of organizations, and was President of the Executive Committee of the Communauté Urbaine de Québec. In 1994, he was elected at the Assemblée nationale as the MNA for Limoilou. He was Regional Delegate for the region of Quebec and parliamentary Assistant of the Minister responsible for the region of Quebec.

Ontario

Nicole Eaton
has devoted much of her life to serving her community in varying degrees through her participation and leadership in a number of charitable organizations, foundations and the arts. Presently she is Director and Vice-Chair of St. Michael's Hospital Foundation, Director and Vice-Chair the National Ballet of Canada and Chair of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. Previously, Ms Eaton has served in varying capacities on a number of other organizations, including the Royal Ontario Museum, the George R. Gardiner Museum, the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair and the Stratford Festival of Canada. Ms Eaton is also a columnist for the newspaper the National Post and is co-author of two publications.

Irving Gerstein, C.M., O. Ont is a businessman and corporate director. A Member of both the Order of Canada and the Order of Ontario, Mr. Gerstein has been involved in politics for over 40 years, including service as Chair of the Conservative Fund Canada. He is an Honourary Director of Mount Sinai Hospital (Toronto), having previously served as Chairman of the Board, Chairman Emeritus, and a director over a period of twenty-five years. He is a director of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and a former Chairman of the Young Presidents Organization. Mr. Gerstein graduated from the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, University of Pennsylvania, and attended The London School of Economics.

Saskatchewan

Pamela Wallin
, O.C., S.O.M is an award winning journalist whose career stretches back more than three decades. Ms. Wallin is most recognized from her time at CTV where she co-hosted Canada AM and later served as CTV’s Ottawa Bureau chief. Ms. Wallin would subsequently form her own production company Pamela Wallin Productions Inc. Ms. Wallin has remained active in public life as Chancellor of the University of Guelph and Senior Advisor on Canada-US relations to the President of the Americas Society and the Council of the Americas. In 2007, Prime Minister Harper appointed Ms. Wallin to the Independent Panel on Canada’s Future Role in Afghanistan. Ms. Wallin has agreed to step down as Senator and submit her name as a candidate when Saskatchewan holds its first legislated Senate election.

British Columbia

Nancy Greene Raine, O.C., OBC
was Canada’s female athlete of the last century by the Canadian Press and Broadcast News. She won gold and silver medals in alpine skiing at the 1968 Grenoble Olympics and overall World Cup titles in 1967 and 1968. Her total of 14 World Cup victories (including the Olympics) is still a Canadian record. During her nine-year career Nancy won a total of 17 Canadian Championship titles. Since retiring from active competition, she has worked to promote the sport and was instrumental in the early development of the Whistler-Blackcomb Resort. Since 1994 she has been Director of Skiing at Sun Peaks Resort and since 2005 she has been Chancellor of Thompson Rivers University. Ms. Green Raine is an Officer of the Order of Canada, a member of both Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame and Canada’s Walk of Fame.

Yonah Martin has deep roots in both Korean and Canadian heritage and has spent her life building bridges between different cultural communities in BC. Born in Seoul, South Korea, before immigrating to Canada 1972, Ms. Martin is the co-founder of the Corean Canadian Coactive (C3) society and has served on the Multicultural Advisory Council of BC, the Vancouver Korean Canadian Scholarship Foundation, the Kateslem After School Club and the Coquitlam Festival Planners Network. Ms. Martin has also been active in political life as a candidate in the constituency of New Westminster-Coquitlam. In 2004 Ms. Martin received ‘Spirit of Community’ award for her service in the Tri-Cities Area.

Richard Neufeld has spent close to two decades in public service to the people of British Columbia. First elected to represent the riding of Peace River North in 1991, Mr. Neufeld has been re-elected on three separate occasions. Since 2001 Mr. Neufeld has served as British Columbia’s Minister of Energy Mines and Petroleum Resources. Mr. Neufeld has also served as the on the council of Fort Nelson, including five years as mayor. Prior to his involvement in public life, Mr. Neufeld owned and operated his own business.

Yukon

Hector Daniel Lang
has made the Yukon his home for more than 50 years. Born in 1948 in Dawson Creek, BC, he moved with his family to Whitehorse where he completed high school, and later attended the University of Alaska at Fairbanks. First elected to the Yukon Legislative Assembly in 1974, Mr Lang served 5 consecutive terms, retiring from the legislature in 1992. Over the course of his 18 years in elected office he was responsible for numerous Ministerial portfolios and later served in the opposition. Since 1992, Mr. Lang has worked as a Sales Associate in the Yukon Real Estate industry. Active in community affairs, he is currently the Vice Chairman of the Board of Governors for Yukon College. He has four children and three grandchildren, who reside in Whitehorse. Mr Lang presently lives in Whitehorse with his partner Valerie Hodgson, a local artist.

Breaking news...Senate choices to be revealed at noon today


Breaking news...Senate choices to be revealed at noon today

I can confirm that I have not been selected. Beyond that it will be interesting to see who Prime Minister Stephen Harper has chosen to fill the 18 vacant spots in the red chamber. A press conference is set for noon today.
-Darryl

Photos from Lois Brown open house in Newmarket






Photos from Lois Brown open house in Newmarket

A great event that took place on Saturday. Lois Brown officially opened her constituency office and held an open house to make the occasion. The event was attended by Newmarket mayor Tony Van Bynen, Aurora mayor Phyllis Morris and several members of Newmarket and Aurora council were also present. It is good to see that in Newmarket-Aurora, there is a good working relationship between the local councils, MPP (Frank Klees) and MP (Lois Brown). Congratulations to Lois and her staff for organizing such a positive event.
-Darryl

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Prime Minister Harper with Premier Dalton McGuinty announce Auto Bailout


Prime Minister Harper with Premier Dalton McGuinty announce Auto Bailout

Prime Minister Harper and Premier Dalton McGuinty announce four billion dollar auto bailout package
-Darryl

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Ontario Corporate Tax Rate should be cut to 10%


Ontario Corporate Tax Rate should be cut to 10%

It seems Dalton McGuinty and provincial Liberals have been getting a free ride on the economy. While the media focuses on Stephen Harper and the feds, few have noticed what has been going on at Queens Park. Ontario has among the highest corporate tax rates in Canada at 14% only lower than PEI and Nova Scotia currently at 16%. Jim Flaherty has been arguing that Ontario should cut the corporate tax rate to improve productivity, save jobs and encourage foreign investment. So far Ontario has not responded despite falling into have not status and being ranked dead last in projected economic growth among the provinces. We can no longer afford to keep tax rates at this unsustainable level. McGuinty should address this issue in the next provincial budget. Under a manufacturing crisis and a recession, Ontario cannot expect to compete in this globalized economy at a corporate tax rate of 14%.
-Darryl

Update: McGuinty rejects cutting corporate taxes. It looks like he did come to agreement with Harper on the increased seat count for Ontario, BC and Alberta. Will Newmarket-Aurora be split into two ridings? How many more ridings does this mean for the GTA and Toronto? In Ontario seats are distributed in the legislature in the same way they are represented federally.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Harper CTV and CBC Interviews

Harper CTV and CBC Interviews

I think Stephen Harper did well in both interviews.
-Darryl

CTV Part 1



Part 2



CBC Part 1



Part 2

Monday, December 15, 2008

Quick reflexes for Bush

Quick reflexes for Bush

I must say I am impressed with how quickly Bush ducked from the two flying shoes and give him credit for the way he joked about the situation after it occurred. Enjoy this video. Not something you see every day. In the Arab world, throwing shoes at someone is the equivalent to flipping them the bird or some other form of insult that shows a similar lack of respect to someone. Bush was on a surprise visit to Afghanistan and Iraq seen as his final farewell tour.
-Darryl



Update: Dana Perino was hit in the eye with a microphone during the chaos that was caused by the shoe thrower. Today she did a press conference talking about the incident and unfortunately sporting a black eye.

Statement from Newmarket-Aurora MP Lois Brown on Coalition and Events in Parliament




Lois Brown M.P., Newmarket-Aurora



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 2, 2008



Statement by Lois Brown, M.P. Newmarket-Aurora



(Newmarket-Aurora, ON) - Political maneuverings of the most serious consequence, by party leaders whose prime ministerial aspirations were firmly dismissed just weeks ago, have left many Canadians angry and confused. A take-over of government by the three federal opposition parties could plunge our country into a state of political and economic turmoil never seen before.

How did this happen? The October 14th federal election results saw a Conservative government earn a significantly stronger minority mandate. 143 Conservative MPs were elected, an increase of 15% from the 124 seats earned in 2006. The Liberal Party under Stéphane Dion received a historic low of 77 seats. The Bloc Québécois received 49 seats, and the NDP Party obtained 37 seats. Each party ran on platforms constitutionally guided by very different sets of principles.

However, instead of accepting their responsibilities as opposition critics, the Liberals, Bloc and NDP have created a pact designed to seize control of the government. This three-party coalition led by Stéphane Dion, Jack Layton and Gilles Duceppe intend to vote down the leadership of the Stephen Harper Conservatives and replace it with their own.

Why are these people risking the state of our already fragile economy and the possibility of plunging our country into unknown perils? In a letter dated December 1 addressed to “our fellow citizens,” all three Leaders contend that Mr. Harper “has no plan” to address the current economic crisis - language identical to the rhetoric heard during the recent campaign. The Liberals, Bloc and NDP simply refuse to accept the people’s verdict. Their campaign has continued, resulting in the formation of a bizarre, unstable coalition dependant on agreement of three diametrically opposed parties with little common ground. The real motivation in bringing down the Conservative government isn’t concern for the economy, but seizing an opportunity to gain control in a transparent, planned and unprecedented grab for power.

On October 14th citizens of Newmarket and Aurora elected a Conservative MP within a strong Conservative minority government to represent their interests in Ottawa. As your elected Member of Parliament, I am committed to acting in the best interests of our communities at all times. Most recently I have been working with the Minister of Industry and speaking with officials at Magna in an effort to mitigate the impact of the Exterion plant closings and to search for longer term solutions. There is dialogue with officials in both towns to determine which infrastructure projects the federal government can assist in fast-tracking.

What we do not need is a constitutional crisis and economic instability created from three political parties’ refusal to accept the democratically stated will of Canadians. The Liberal-NDP-Bloc strategy for our future is based on back-room deals and a written letter. The coalition’s entire plan relies on the support of the Bloc Québécois whose stated purpose for existence is to separate from Canada.

Since 2006 Prime Minister Stephen Harper has governed prudently and responsibly. Canada is forecast as having the best economic growth of all other OECD countries in the world. Our economy is undergoing challenges; however we remain in the best shape of all other G-7 countries. Our 2009 budget, to be tabled on January 27, will contain measures appropriate for these uncertain economic times. We are working at moving ahead on infrastructure projects and other productivity enhancing investments to create jobs and stimulate the economy. It is simply irresponsible for anyone to otherwise plunge Canada billions of dollars into debt without a well thought-out plan of return. To have an unstable coalition government take control without an election, during a time of global economic uncertainty, is a risk we cannot afford.

I urge everyone concerned with our country’s future to contact me. You can call me at 905-953-7515, send an email to BrownLo@parl.gc.ca or visit my constituency office at 16600 Bayview Ave., Suite 206, Newmarket, Ontario L3X 1Z9.

Lois Brown is the elected Member of Parliament for Newmarket-Aurora. She is a member of the House of Commons Standing Committees for Transport, Infrastructure and Communities, and Foreign Affairs and International Trade.



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Lois Brown M.P., Newmarket-Aurora



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 5, 2008

Friday, December 12, 2008

Harper meets with Ignatieff



Harper meets with Ignatieff

After a crazy couple of weeks in Ottawa, it looks like things are slowly starting to get back to normal. What a week it was though. After threatening to cut of taxpayer subsidies to political parties as part of the economic statement, opposition parties quickly assembled a coalition that was greeted with protests and terrible poll numbers. To avoid a likely defeat in the House of Commons, Stephen Harper asked the Governor General to prorogue the parliament until the budget due for January 27, 2009. In response to that, Liberals used the time to show Stephane Dion the door by voting Michael Ignatieff in as interim leader. Ultimately Mr. Ignatieff will remain leader as both LeBlanc and Rae dropped out of the race. In the final event of this crazy week, Stephen Harper plans to appoint 18 senators with names going around like General Hillier, Don Cherry, the current Governor General, Bernard Lord, Mario Dumont and a series of other names who are a bit more predictable. Ironically, the surprise Senate appointment could result in a seat for John Tory prior to his self imposed December 31 deadline.

Parliament may have grinded to a halt, but the world around us did not. In Afghanistan, Canadian troops unfortunately suffered their 100th casualty. The United States is putting pressure on Canada to once again extend the mission beyond 2011. Unfortunately terrorism struck India in a way that threatens the world’s largest democracy with Western citizens including Canadians being targeted. Today Jim Prentice is representing Canada at a international environment conference. At the same time the economy has only gotten worse. Last night in the Senate, the US auto bailout collapsed after the UAW refused to make any concessions. Today GM is saying they will shut down all plants in January. There are also rumours that they are getting advice on bankruptcy protection. Chrysler warns it is rapidly drying up its cash reserves. Magna has laid off workers as have many other companies worldwide and in Canada. Other automotive companies seem OK in the short term but are facing heavy pressure from the lack of consumer confidence and economic recession. A dealership in Chicago was offering "buy one get one free" promotions on cars. As we speak, it appears the Canadian government has put together their own bailout package that would be approved following US action.

As the Canadian government decides what to do about the auto bailout, other economic indicators are of equal concern. Housing prices are slumping. Interest rates have been slashed to a 50 year low but banks are not passing on those savings to consumers. Credit availability is still a concern. Personal credit card debt and a lack of savings are becoming a threat to retirement as many baby boomers approach that age. Pension plans are taking a hit in the stock markets. The Canadian dollar and oil prices have declined drastically from where they were at the beginning of the election campaign. As oil prices drop, some projects may get delayed in the oil sands and elsewhere in Canada. Unemployment is increasing, especially in the manufacturing sector. Foreclosures and bankruptcies are rising. No one is buying anything. The result is less tax revenue for both the government of Ontario and the government of Canada. This will lead to deficits with or without a stimulus package. While Canada is better off than most of our G7 counterparts, one cannot ignore the economic turmoil happening all around the world. No one is expecting that 2009 will be anything less than an extremely tough year for Canada and the entire global economy.

With all of these pressing concerns, our parliament is currently paralyzed and unstable. The Conservatives face potential defeat on the upcoming budget. Should this happen we are looking at a potential election or transition to a coalition government. Either way the government would be paralyzed for at least another six weeks meaning nothing would be done until April at the earliest to address the economy.

After a week of crazy events in Ottawa, it looks like some sanity is being restored. Jim Flaherty and Stephen Harper have been hard at work on the upcoming budget that will likely include sector by sector assistance, a stimulus package, tax relief for corporations and businesses, a reduction in spending and infrastructure investments. Today Michael Ignatieff met with Stephen Harper and I would imagine the budget was discussed including some potential Liberal demands to ensure it passes. Let's hope for the good of this nation that the meeting went well. After putting partisanship before the people, it is clear that something now has to be done for the state of our economy. For months we have not been able to pick up the business section of a newspaper without seeing catastrophic news. In Ontario things are worse due to the fact the province is now dead last in growth projections, a have not province and will bare the brunt of the impact that is currently affecting the manufacturing sector. It is important to get John Tory or a leader in the House that can hold Dalton McGuinty to account. Canadians of all political stripes seem to admire how President elect Barack Obama was able to get beyond left and right politics, partisanship and demonstrate a commitment to work across the aisle. Now Canadians and Ontarians have the same opportunity within their government.

Stephen Harper and Michael Ignatieff, the onus is now on both of you to get past partisan politics and work together to demonstrate to Canadians that they can once again have confidence in their government. The state of the economy and the threats to this nation are far too important to continue playing these silly games. For that reason, I hope the meeting that took place today went well for the benefit of all 308 MPs who were elected to work for their constituents as oppose to themselves. We cannot afford an election. We cannot afford a coalition. Therefore that only leaves the option of working together. Get it done!


Update: New poll shows 65% of Canadians support compromise over coalition. 56% prefer election over coalition. 46% - 26% support Conservatives over Liberals despite the change in leadership. The message is clear. It is time to work together.

-Darryl

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Harper should appoint Mario Dumont, Bernard Lord to Senate and Cabinet



Harper should appoint Mario Dumont, Bernard Lord to Senate and Cabinet

Instantly our Quebec credibility would be increased and there is not a politician in Quebec that I would rather have as part of our team. Bernard Lord would also be a huge asset for us in Atlantic Canada and in cabinet. Finally I hope that someone from the PC caucus is appointed so that the seat issue with John Tory can be resolved before the end of the year as promised.
-Darryl

Senator Bert Brown believes Layton owes us an apology


Layton owes us an apology

National Post Published: Thursday, December 11, 2008

All evidence indicates that NDP leader Jack Layton conceived a scheme to overturn Canada's last election results, possibly before the election was held or immediately after the votes were counted.

A leader whose party was rewarded with 9% of the seats in Parliament, a leader who pranced about saying he was running to be prime minister of Canada, swallowed so much of his own bath water that he began to believe he should be prime minister and went about concocting a plan to make it happen.

Mr. Layton's coalition of NDP, Liberals and Bloc Quebecois, while technically legal, stems from our historic links to British-style parliament. What Mr. Layton ignored was the long-standing tradition of parliamentary government allowing a minority government to be replaced by a coalition of smaller parties only when the "reasonableness" of such an act has been satisfied. Mr. Layton and his cohorts tried to create such reasonableness out of thin air and manufactured grievances against Stephen Harper's government.

Unwilling to wait or listen in their thirst for a coup d'etat, the coalition managed to destroy the world's impression of Canada as the most stable government in the world. The coalition managed to cause a five-cent drop in the Canadian dollar in one hour. The losses in our stock market are impossible to calculate.

Jack Layton's actions require a heartfelt act of contrition to all the people of Canada. Canadians are unlikely to forgive him until he does so.

Senator Bert Brown, Ottawa.

http://www.nationalpost.com/news/canada/politics/story.html?id=1059823

Belinda Stronach calls for "one member one vote" within the Liberal Party


Don't sit back, Liberals – it's time to democratize the party

From Thursday's Globe and Mail

This is a critical time for Canada, but also for the Liberal Party. A new leader is being chosen to assume office at a moment of political crisis and economic turmoil. But it is how that leader is being selected that could ultimately have the greatest bearing on the party's future.

Technically and effectively, the next permanent Liberal leader is being installed by a handful of insiders, who agreed to cut the contest short and decide among themselves who ought to head the party. Their decision prompted Michael Ignatieff's last remaining competitor, Bob Rae, to exit the race.

Regardless of the extraordinary circumstances that motivated this process, it cannot be allowed to happen again. Liberals must move quickly to embrace the concept of one member, one vote. They must defend the principles of democracy in their own affairs with the same passion and determination they have shown in the House of Commons.

My views are not about favouring one individual over the other. I know and respect both Mr. Ignatieff and Mr. Rae, and I am deeply confident that either man would make an effective and appealing leader. And with Mr. Rae's withdrawal, I accept that the question has been effectively decided.

Indeed, the party should rally behind its formidable new leader. But, at the same time, it must press ahead urgently with efforts to truly democratize itself.

If we Liberals are going to be honest with ourselves, we must acknowledge that our ability to engage Canadians - to attract them, to excite them, to inspire them to donate their time and money to our cause - has eroded over the past several years. We can't simply stand by and expect this trend to reverse itself. We need to act. And we can start by recognizing that allowing party insiders to choose a leader does nothing but bolster an exclusionary culture of backroom dealings - the last thing we need in an age of growing cynicism about the political process and its participants.

We have the technology to give every Liberal a say. Until now, we've lacked only the will.

Since I first got involved in politics, I have been a champion of the one-member, one-vote principle. I fought hard for it at the last Liberal convention. It's not only more democratic - it helps to strengthen parties. When you cast a ballot, you claim a stake in the process and gain an interest in the outcome. Look at the United States, where Barack Obama re-energized Democratic politics and civic engagement more generally.

Liberals who favour the old ways must ask themselves: Why would people become or remain active in a party that asks them to join but then denies them direct input in the most important decision the party will make? By giving each member a vote for leader, we can showcase a new openness, connect more deeply with existing members and attract more new members.

The mass democratization of the Liberal Party is a key element to its rebirth. We must take steps now to revitalize our base and increase our membership by demonstrating respect for our grassroots. We must allow all members to vote for all future leaders. And we must improve how we reach out to and solicit support from these loyalists.

Stephen Harper has withdrawn his plan to eliminate the taxpayer-funded subsidy that provides federal political parties with much of their operational financing. But this isn't a time for Liberals to sit back, relieved. It's a time to take action - to recognize that the reason we were left so vulnerable to this partisan attack was exactly because we need to do much more to attract, motivate and keep members.

We have been presented with an opportunity to bring our party into the 21st century. I urge Mr. Ignatieff to use the May convention to join with Mr. Rae and vow to lead the charge toward one member, one vote for all future leadership races.

It's time to reinvigorate the party by empowering members at the very instant when interest in politics is intense. It's time to give future leaders the credibility and momentum that can only come from the full force of Liberal members themselves.

Belinda Stronach is former member of Parliament for the Ontario riding of Newmarket-Aurora.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081210.wcostronach11/BNStory/politics/home

Harper to appoint 18 Senators


Harper to appoint 18 Senators

Update: Will this result in John Tory getting a seat? Senator Munro? Senator Runciman ?

I hope he considers me for an appointment. I understand the threat of the coalition appointing these vacancies but in general I am not sure how I feel about this move. Maybe Harper's appointment of 18 Senators will cause the other parties and all of the provinces to get onside with the idea of reforming the senate. The senate should be elected or abolished in my opinion.

News report initially comes from the Toronto Star and can be found here.
-Darryl

Harper on Trees for Troops and Christmas lights across Canada

Harper on Trees for Troops and Christmas lights across Canada

PM participates in Trees for Troops



PM at the lighting of the Christmas lights across Canada

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Time for partisan games is over...let's get to work on the economy



Time for partisan games is over...let's get to work on the economy

Congratulations to Michael Ignatieff for becoming the new leader of the Liberal Party. Following today's caucus vote, Stephen Harper and Michael Ignatieff should meet at the earliest possible opportunity. We have worked well with Michael in the past. It is time to put together a budget that addresses some of the economic challenges Canada faces. All 308 MPs have a duty to come back to the House of Commons with a more cooperative attitude to prove to Canadians that they are capable of addressing the issues that all of them were elected to address. January 27 is not that far away. The time for partisan games, coalitions and politics is over. We must now address the economy that is impacting real people from coast to coast. I look forward to Stephen Harper and Michael Ignatieff working together and getting something done for the good of this country. I believe that for the time being, we can work with this new leader of the Liberal Party.
-Darryl

***

"I think the big national parties should be working together to fix the economy, and we're more than willing to do that, and I hope the next Liberal leader, the first thing he'll do is be willing to sit down with me to have that discussion."
-Prime Minister Stephen Harper

***

Ignatieff steps in, Harper reaches out

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/12/09/harper-interview.html

Full CBC Interview with Harper

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Harper should meet with Palin


Harper should meet with Palin

I think improving relations between Alaska and Canada would only be a good thing. Very positive comments from Sarah Palin today. I think there are a lot of common issues that her state and our country and provinces can work on together. It seems Sarah Palin is a big fan of Canada. I also agree obviously with her message to Obama as well.
-Darryl

Darryl on Rogers York Region tonight at 8pm



Darryl on Rogers York Region tonight at 8pm


Tonight I will join Michael Parsa (Conservative), Mike Seaward (NDP) and Kyle Peterson (Liberal) on Focal Point with John Taylor. The show is on Rogers Cable 10 at 8pm. Likely topics will include:

*The proposed coalition and the events of last week
*The situation with Bob Rae and Michael Ignatieff as new leader of the Liberal Party
*Stephen Harper
*The economy and January 27 budget
*How this all impacts York Region

I am looking forward to doing the show tonight and it looks like there is a strong panel lined up tonight representing all sides.
-Darryl

Breaking News: Bob Rae drops out of Liberal leadership race



Breaking News: Bob Rae drops out of Liberal leadership race

Michael Ignatieff will now officially be the leader of the Liberal party by caucus vote. It is highly likely that this will be ratified in May with something closer to a leadership review. This of course puts the coalition in question.
-Darryl

***

Rae abandons leadership bid; Ignatieff next Liberal chief

OTTAWA — Michael Ignatief will be the next leader of the federal Liberal party.

The Canadian Press has learned rival candidate Bob Rae told confidantes during a teleconference call today that he is withdrawing from the race. It now rests with the party executive to find a way to install Ignatieff that meets with the approval of the majority of Liberal party members.

The Toronto-area MP will become the third Liberal leader in five years - possibly as soon as Wednesday's caucus meeting.

Ignatieff has been cool to the idea of replacing the Conservative minority government with a Liberal-NDP coalition.

Current party leader Stephane Dion announced Monday he will step aside as soon as a replacement is chosen.

Monday, December 08, 2008

Darryl is congratulating Charest on his majority, hopes Dumont runs as a federal Conservative in the next election.



Darryl is congratulating Charest on his majority, hopes Dumont runs as a federal Conservative in the next election.

Full story here.

Charest needs 63 of 125 seats to win a majority. By 11 p.m. ET, the Liberals were on track to edge past that number:

  • Liberals: 66
  • Parti Quebecois: 51
  • ADQ: 7
  • Quebec Solidaire: 1

Quebec has chosen stability over the PQ despite what has been going on in Ottawa right now. Does this mean Gilles Duceppe will run provincially for the PQ and how will that impact the coalition? Finally the ADQ has lost official party status and Mario Dumont has resigned as leader. Will he consider a run for the Federal Conservatives? I think most would agree he would be a great candidate for us in Quebec.
-Darryl

Dion resigns officially


Dion resigns officially

What a difference a day can make in politics. Monday it looked like Dion would become Prime Minister and 77 Liberal MPs all signed a letter to the Governor General saying they were united by the coalition under Dion's leadership. Today after trying to force Harper out of his job as leader, he finds himself turfed instead.

"I will take the decisions, were I to be given the honour to lead the party, on the 26th, when I've seen the budget."
-Michael Ignatieff

Hopefully the new Liberal leader will allow us to work together for Canadians on the budget. It is no secret that Iggy refused to accept a cabinet post in this coalition government and has been lukewarm on the prospect from the beginning.
-Darryl

***

For Release: Immediate
Statement by the Honourable Stéphane Dion

After the election on October 14 I announced I would stay on as Leader of the Liberal Party until my party could select my successor. One of my goals was to ensure an effective opposition to Stephen Harper’s government.

I believe that decision was the right one and I am proud of having forced Stephen Harper to back away from his attempt to force upon Canadians his most ideological and harmful plans in these tough economic times.

The alliance between the Liberal Party and the NDP to replace the Harper government, with the support of the Bloc Québécois, is a solid basis to give Canada a government that reflects both the aspirations of the majority of Canadians and the support of the majority of Members of Parliament. Such a government would be more stable than a minority Conservative government incapable of cooperating with opposition parties.

As the Governor General has granted a prorogation, it is a logical time for us Liberals to assess how we can best prepare our party to carry this fight forward.

There is a sense in the party, and certainly in the caucus, that given these new circumstances the new leader needs to be in place before the House resumes. I agree. I recommend this course to my party and caucus. As always, I want to do what is best for my country and my party, especially when Canadians’ jobs and pensions are at risk.

So I have decided to step aside as Leader of the Liberal Party effective as soon as my successor is duly chosen.

I will offer my unconditional and enthusiastic support to my successor in the same way I have always supported the leaders of our great party. I will work under the next leader’s direction with all my energy in order to give Canada a better government.

I wish to close by making it absolutely clear that my earlier departure does not change the facts of the situation that the Prime Minister has created in the last two weeks.

The Prime Minister and his government refused to lay out a plan to stimulate the economy. The Prime Minister has lost the confidence of the House of Commons. The Prime Minister shut down Parliament to save his job while thousands of Canadians are losing theirs. The Prime Minister has poisoned the well of trust and respect that is necessary for a minority government to work in Parliament - especially in a time of crisis.

Mr. Harper took an economic crisis and added a parliamentary crisis that he then tried to transform into a national unity crisis: this is no way for a Prime Minister of Canada to act.

It is my hope that the decision I have announced today will enhance the capacity of Parliament to function effectively for the sake of Canadians in this economic crisis.

Stéphane Dion, PC, MP

How can anyone take Bob Rae seriously


How can anyone take Bob Rae seriously


"To take away your chance to choose the person who leads you… it just doesn’t seem right"
-Bob Rae

Update: One more post from Mr. Rae...

"All weekend, I'd been hearing rumors about this, but today I was really surprised to read press reports about various MPs moving for an immediate vote to elect our Leader next Wednesday, in the Commons caucus.

I thought I'd seen a lot of politics over 30 years of public service, but this one really came from left field.

The idea of taking away the vote from tens of thousands of grassroots activists in every part of Canada, and reducing the franchise to just 76 men and women seems so out-of-step with the modern world. It makes you shake your head."

***

I'm One of the 67,924 That Want a Say in the Liberal Leadership


http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=55698732400&ref=nf


A Message From Bob:

As you know, our Leader Mr. Dion is stepping down, and Mr. Leblanc is exiting the leadership race. I want to thank both of them for their contributions, past present and future.



In light of the opportunity to defeat the Harper government and replace it with a new government of national economic unity, it is clearly now time to bring the leadership selection process to an earlier resolution. We need our new permanent leader in place by the time the House returns to debate the Conservative budget on January 26th, 2009.



This obviously means we need a different selection process from the one that was put in place to lead us to a Convention in May. Press reports have some suggesting that the entire leadership process should be replaced with a single, secret vote to be held in a closed meeting of the 76 MPs, next week. I think this is the wrong thing for our Party.



The party Executive is working on a viable, timely, cost-effective and constitutional means of enabling a one-member-one-vote democratic leadership selection. This can be in place swiftly, and you can make your voice heard in the selection of your Leader. I believe that ordinary Liberal volunteers must have a direct say in choosing the new Leader. That’s the only way to go.



You are the volunteers who make this Party a living force in the life of our country. Without you, there is no Liberal Party. You give your time, your talent, your financial support, and ask for nothing in return except the chance to contribute. To take away your chance to choose the person who leads you… it just doesn’t seem right.



As well, there are real questions about representation that we need to keep in mind. A simple vote of the Commons caucus would leave significant portions of our country’s diversity silent in the selection of our Leader. Because our caucus is concentrated in major urban centres, almost no rural ridings would be represented. Literally two Liberals between North Bay, Ontario and Vancouver, BC would have a vote in the MPs-only process. Most of francophone Quebec outside of Montreal would go unheard from. Defeated candidates would be disenfranchised. So would the party executive that you have put in place. So would our youth, women and aboriginals – who are under-represented in the Commons caucus. So would our long-serving Senators, who have given so much for our Party. That doesn’t seem right either.



Finally, there’s the question of what this kind of vote would mean for our party’s ability to grow. We have a chance to welcome Canadians into our political family. We need more of them to join us – especially in the places where our support has been declining. I favour a 308 riding strategy, not a 76-person vote. I have spoken out for using our race as a chance to grow this party; a closed caucus vote would take it in the opposite direction.



Let’s urge everyone in a position to influence this to put a stop to this hasty, ill-considered idea before it goes any further. I urge you to contact your nearest Liberal Member of Parliament, and any of the following, to let them know how you feel about this attempt to take away your vote:



Party President Doug Ferguson: doug@liberal.ca



Commons Caucus Chair Anthony Rota: Rotaa@parl.gc.ca

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Breaking News: Michael Ignatieff to become leader of the Liberal Party by caucus vote on Wednesday


Breaking News: Michael Ignatieff to become leader of the Liberal Party by caucus vote on Wednesday

According to a CTV 's Craig Oliver an announcement will be coming tomorrow that LeBlanc will drop out of the race and throw his support behind Ignatieff. A vote will take place in caucus on Wednesday to put Michael Ignatieff in as leader. Stephane Dion is done. Michael Ignatieff will become parliamentary leader of the Liberal Party and pressure will be placed on Bob Rae to step down as a "team player". Michael Ignatieff seemed to back away from the coalition while leaving it on the table at the same time. He did say he was open to seeing what was in the budget and would make a decision on January 27 on what to do. It will be interesting to see if there is any backlash from the grassroots about not having a say in the process. Another system of voting by phone or online was also proposed. It looks like Ignatieff will be installed leader based on a vote in caucus rubberstamped by the executive.
-Darryl

***

CTV Question Period Today

Dominic LeBlanc out of Liberal leadership race according to CTV.


Breaking News: Dominic LeBlanc out of Liberal leadership race according to CTV.

It looks like Dominic LeBlanc is out of the leadership race and assuming John Manley or someone else doesn't jump it; we are now down to Bob Rae and Michael Ignatieff. One of these two is most likely to be leading the Liberal Party when the House of Commons resumes on January 26. Bob Rae supports a coalition and overthrowing Harper no matter what Conservatives propose in the budget. Michael Ignatieff is open to supporting the budget while using the coalition as a threat or alternative in the event the government is defeated. Dion is expected to resign on Wednesday or Thursday following a caucus meeting. It is unclear if a caucus vote or some form of one member one vote system will determine the contest. Based on these events, I suspect Michael Ignatieff will be the next Liberal leader and leader of the official opposition when parliament resumes.
-Darryl

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Anti-coalition rallies take place around the country

Video: Anti-coalition rallies take place around the country

Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa rallies all on video. All videos thanks to all those who posted originally on YouTube.
-Darryl

Vancouver:



Calgary:



Saskatoon



Toronto:





Ottawa:





In Quebec at Stephane Dion's riding office

Newmarket-Aurora MP Lois Brown named Vice-Chairperson of the Conservative auto caucus,



Newmarket-Aurora MP Lois Brown named Vice-Chairperson of the Conservative auto caucus

Congratulations to Ms. Brown on this appointment as vice-chairperson of the Conservative auto caucus. The automotive sector is a key industry here in Newmarket-Aurora.
-Darryl

Leafs win the Stanley Cup!


Funny email that is going around
-Darryl

***

Canada was stunned today when it was announced that the Stanley Cup will be awarded to the Toronto Maple Leafs, possibly as early as December 15th.

The cup will be stripped from from 2008 playoff champions, the Detroit Red Wings, and be awarded to the Leafs, who didn't even make the playoffs.

How is this possible, Canadians ask?

Well, the Leafs have formed a coalition with the Eastern Conference semifinalists, the Montreal Canadians, and Conference quarter finalists the Ottawa Senators, now outnumbering the Red Wings.

According to current Leaf coach Ron Wilson "the Red Wings have lost the confidence of the league and should hand the cup over immediately to our coalition".

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman is cutting short a series of training sessions with Sean Avery on the subject of public relations to devote more time to this unprecedented hockey crisis, a crisis that could force a second playoff series, or see a coalition of other American teams take the cup.

Note: Not sure who to give credit to.

Photos from Toronto anti-coalition rally at Queens Park
































Photos from Toronto anti-coalition rally at Queens Park

Unfortunately the battery on my camera died, so credit goes to various friends on Facebook for these pictures I stole. It seems so far the media isn't covering our rally.

Overall a well attended rally. Several great speakers including new Canadians, veterans, John Tory, Frank Klees, Tim Hudak, Peter Kent, Rick Dykstra, and lots of young people. The crowd was fired up and angry over the proposed oppositon coup. The highlight was some of the creativity on the signs as well as the large amount of people who told me they actually voted Liberal but would never do so again. Overall it was a well attended rally, especially given that we didn't have any union drives to get our people out unlike those at Nathan Phillips Square. I am sure that Liberals will lose seats in Toronto following the next election. After this mistake, there is no longer such a thing as a safe Liberal seat in Canada.

Update: Toronto up until the last election was the last remaining stronghold for the Liberal Party. Still we drew a great crowd that was fired up and ready to fight for democracy. From pictures of the pro-coalition rally in the same picture I have seen in the media, it is clear that even in Toronto the government is winning the day. I think Toronto was successful, but I can't imagine the energy level at the rally in Calgary today. Check out the blog Right from Alberta for pictures of the Calgary event!
-Darryl

***

Video of Peter Kent talking about the coalition and Liberals who have approached the Conservative Party and thanked him for proroguing parliament

If coalition defeats government on budget, Stephen Harper should take 143 resignation letters to the Governor General


If coalition defeats government on budget, Stephen Harper should take 143 resignation letters to the Governor General

If the budget is defeated, there is a 50/50 chance the Governor General might allow this coup to take place. An easy way to avoid that would be to take that decision away from her. If Harper is defeated by the opposition coup, he should take his resignation along with every single Conservative MP's resignation to the Governor General to force an election. This would give her two choices:

1, Faced with a guaranteed 143 by-elections all taking place simultaneously, the Governor General would almost surely call an election and make it 308 MPs running for re-election.

2, Allow the coalition to form a government with a separatist party in a half vacant house with no opposition party while 143 by-elections take place with a campaign against the unelected government.

I think the choice for the Governor General would become an obvious one taking us into an election campaign with Conservative support at 51%. I hope it is an idea that our caucus, Prime Minister and the opposition parties consider before voting on the budget. Initial credit to Steve Janke who first proposed this idea in the event a coalition coup takes power. Frankly on principle there is no way we could recognize an unelected government supported by separatists with Dion or an interim leader as Prime Minister. Why should only Liberals get to chose your next Prime Minister.
-Darryl

John Manley might win the next Liberal leadership race


John Manley might win the next Liberal leadership race

John Manley has always shown himself to be someone who can reach across the isle and work in the interest of Canadians on crucial issues. All three Liberal leadership candidates have collateral damage at this point for showing their unity behind Dion and the coalition idea. Manley is saying what most Liberals are thinking based on what I can tell from friends in the party. This is exactly what needed to be said to Liberals and I am not saying that in a partisan way. Congratulations to Mr. Manley for having the courage to stop this trainwreck and saying what needed to be said. This is a leader Liberals should unite behind. He understands what really needs to be a priority for Canadians and also the party. It will be interesting to see if they simply dismiss him or consider his advice.
-Darryl

Update: If you visit Warren Kinsella's blog or if you look at articles like this one: it is clear Manley has opened the door for Michael Ignatieff to break from Dion and this coalition. Bob Rae made his move. Ignatieff now has a chance to make his as well. If he pulls out of the coalition idea it is pretty well over and that becomes the main leadership issue. If I was Iggy I would follow in the example of Rae. Go over Dion's head, pull out of the coalition and make a strong statement against it. That will be a winning position on that issue soon. Offer to work with Harper, rebuild the party and attempt to do what Manley is recommending. At this point Ignatieff cannot duck any longer and must be clear about where he stands. I think that is coming within days. In the past Ignatieff has also shown that he is able to work with Harper.

Friday, December 05, 2008

Three crucial speeches from Stephen Harper

Three crucial speeches from Stephen Harper

When you watch these three speeches, it is amazing how a week can change things in politics. These three speeches are important at this time from Stephen Harper. They outline what was happening when the country was on the right track. This coup has created political instability, economic uncertainty, a unity crisis and done nothing to address the needs of Canadians. This coalition has taken us on the wrong track in Canada, and it is time to get back on the right track.

The first video is from the Winnipeg Conservative Convention. At this speech he highlights the hard work of volunteers who made the election victory possible. He outlines his vision and reaches out to opposition parties. The second video is the election night victory speech that gave him the mandate to become Prime Minister. He reaches out to Opposition parties. In the third video he outlines what is going on now and what he has done on the economy. He solicits ideas from the opposition parties.

The opposition have been plotting a coup to defeat Harper by joining with the separatists while the Conservative Party was attempting to work for Canadians who elected them on the issues people care about. Opposition speeches following the Governor General's announcement didn't seem like leaders who were interested in working on the economy. It seemed to me they want power at all costs despite your vote. They have no intention of working with the elected Prime Minister to make this parliament work. Several including Bob Rae have said Harper should be brought down regardless of what he does. "There is no turning back".

The results of the last election should be upheld and stability should be maintained for Canadians. Opposition should put Canada before their own political ambitions and political games. Thanks to Stephane Dion, the case has been made for a Conservative majority.
-Darryl

Winnipeg Conservative Convention Speech:

What Harper stands for. A great speech that also highlights the last campaign and where the country was going before this power grab by the coalition. Credit to Stephen Taylor for filming this.



Election Night Coverage and Harper Victory Speech October 14, 2008

How you become the Prime Minister of Canada unless you are Stephane Dion. Note 4:15 on the tape. 5:07 is also interesting. At 7:14 Harper speeks.
-Darryl



Address to the Nation:

Why this Rally for Canada is happening. Note this is how you produce a video and make sure it arrives on time.
-Darryl

Dec 5: Queens Park Noon-2pm: Rally for Canada! Be there if you support democracy!



Dec 5: Queens Park Noon-2pm: Rally for Canada! Be there if you support democracy!

It is crucial that as many people as possible attend this rally in your home city. This is about unity, our economy and democracy. Let us send a strong message to Stephane Dion (or whoever is going to lead in the interim or permanently for the Liberal Party) , Jack Layton and Gilles Duceppe that they should not be allowed to overturn your vote. If you oppose this coalition made up of parties who lost the last election backed by separatists, please take the time to stand up for what is right at a protest closest to where you live in Canada. This coalition thinks they represent the majority of Canadians...let's show them they are wrong! The polls show a majority of Canadians do not want this political instability. We need to say no way!

Noon-2pm at Queens Park tomorrow. I look forward to seeing you there. Politicians should be putting Canada's economy first - not their own self serving partisan interests during these uncertain economic times.
-Darryl

***

Dear Friends;

Many of you have been contacting me to express your outrage at the anti-democratic actions the Opposition is moving forward with. I share your views that these actions, at this time of economic crisis, show nothing more than an inherent sense of entitlement, partisan selfishness and a naked grab for power.

Less than 2 months ago Canadians gave our Conservative government a strengthened mandate in which we made it clear that we will continue to address the global economic crisis. Now, a Socialist-Separatist-drive in coalition is attempting to overturn the results of the last election. They are attempting to impose a radical new Government without the people’s consent, led by Stephane Dion, who Canadians resoundingly rejected as their choice for Prime Minister. This is an attack on Canada and an attack on Canadian democracy.


Internationally under a Socialist-Separatist coalition, I fear Canada will return to solving foreign affairs issues by offering lip service and tokenism. During a global economic crisis, Canada needs leadership. The principled leadership demonstrated over the past three years by this government and this Prime Minister is not likely to be emulated by the current band of political opportunists.

Under Stephen Harper’s leadership, our government was ahead of the curve in anticipating the global economic slowdown. We are injecting billions in stimulus through tax cuts, investments in roads, bridges and infrastructure, and we have made decisive moves to protect the banking system.

While we have been working on the economy, the opposition has been working on a backroom deal to overturn the results of the last election without seeking the consent of voters.

They want to take power, not earn it.

Liberal Party leader Stephane Dion was unequivocal during the recent election that the NDP is “economically-damaging”, and their policies would have horrific consequences for Canadians. He campaigned explicitly against a coalition.

The Liberal Party and its leader, Stephane Dion were rejected by voters less than 2 months ago. After receiving its lowest share of the popular vote since Confederation, the Liberal Party does not have a mandate to lead a government. They don’t have a mandate for a coalition with the NDP. Their Socialist-Separatist-driven coalition is a betrayal of democracy and a betrayal of Canadians.

This is clearly unacceptable for a modern democracy.

Canada’s government should be decided by Canadians.

Not backroom deals.

It should be your choice.

Not theirs.

It’s time to Stand up for Canada!

Please join me on Saturday December 6 from noon-2pm at Queen’s Park in Toronto as democracy-loving Canadians from coast-to-coast gather to support democracy, not political games in this time of crisis.

Sincerely,

The Honourable Peter Kent, P.C., M.P.
Thornhill

P.S. I encourage you to make your voice heard. Please find the contact information for the Opposition leaders below.

Stephane Dion
Liberal Party Leader
dions@parl.gc.ca
(613) 996-5789

Jack Layton
NDP Leader
laytonj@parl.gc.ca
(613) 995-7224

Gilles Duceppe
Bloq Quebecois Leader
duceppeg@parl.gc.ca
(613) 992-6779



***



***



What they said in the last election





What makes the opposition think Harper would be gone if he lost a confidence vote?


What makes the opposition think Harper would be gone if he lost a confidence vote?

Over the past week, I have never seen a more engaged electorate on any political issue. To be honest I expected many partisan reactions on both sides to be predicable which they were. What has really amazed me is how many "non-political" friends of mine on Facebook, through email, calls etc. have contacted me about this issue. Some have never been engaged in politics before but are angry about what has happened with this coup. Others do not like Stephen Harper for whatever reason and want him to resign now (most never voted for him in the last election either by the way). Support for the government on this issue has been easily 75-25 in support of the Conservatives from what I can tell. The poll numbers and rallies tomorrow will speak for themselves.

What I don't understand is that if you head over to Liblogs, if you pick up the Globe and Mail and see Bob Rae taking over the pro-coalition campaign and when you hear coalition supporters continue to promote overthrowing the government, I really give my head a shake and say what is going on here? Maybe it is only Liberal leadership politics at this point. Maybe it is Layton and Duceppe not seeing the writing on the wall. Maybe it is the final push before this whole thing all collapses next week along with Dion's resignation. For those still hell bent on taking out Stephen Harper, give these issues some thought please:

1, The verdict is clear. Canadians do not want a coalition government. Going forward and defeating the government as part of a coup with separatists is not going to be popular with Canadians. How can this campaign be continued without doing even more damage to the Liberal and NDP brands? How can it be continued without causing more unity damage? How can this be done without splitting the Liberal caucus? How can parties work together when Bob Rae is campaigning across the country trying to rally support around toppling Stephen Harper before he has a chance to present a budget with a stimulus that Liberals claim Canadians can't wait for?

2. Even if by some miracle the coalition stays together, picks a new leader/spokesperson and is successful brining all the votes in the House of Commons to vote down the budget; how do the opposition parties know that the Governor General will simply not call an election rather than allow a coalition to govern. Have all three parties forgotten they cannot afford to fight an election right now nor are the polls favourable? I mean the Governor General can see the same polls, rallies, speeches and newspapers that we all do. Most Canadians prefer another election over a coalition government. Right now I would think she would lean towards an election for a variety of reasons that include lack of public support, instability, unity and the toxic atmosphere in the House of Commons. Either way after two hours, I bet the Prime Minister knows for certain one way or the other and will act accordingly.

3. Even if the GG allowed the coalition to govern, why would we turf Stephen Harper as our leader? He and the party are currently polling at 44-51% depending on what poll you believe. Conservatives look certain to form a majority government in the next election at this point in time. Harper has won two elections and has a mandate. He proved he was a uniter when he brought together the Alliance and PC Party. He was elected leader of our party and has not been defeated in an election. Even if Conservatives wanted Jim Prentice, Peter MacKay or whoever else; what mechanism do we have to force Harper to step down if he doesn't do it on his own?

Sore loser opposition supporters should really take a step back and ask themselves what they are thinking and hope to accomplish. Is taking power for a few months only to have Harper eventually come back with a majority government worth it? Do you really want to destroy the unity of this country, the NDP and Liberal brands, get hammered in the next election and hurt the economy simply for a personal vendetta? Can someone explain to me why all of the media and coalition suppoters think Harper would be gone if he lost a confidence vote and the coalition governed for a few weeks? Why would he not stay on as opposition leader given that it would be short lived and polls show he could win a majority today? How can Liberals say it is about the economy when he will deliver a budget that will address most of their concerns? How can Liberals say it is not possible to work with Harper when Bob Rae is campaiging across Canada telling Canadians that Harper needs to go no matter what he does for the economy?

For the good of this country, for the good of the Liberal Party, for the good of our democracy; I hope Michael Ignatieff gets off the fence and begins showing some leadership. If Rae wants to travel the country promoting the coalition, Iggy should travel and campaign against it, instead focused on rebuilding the Liberal party and working with the government for the good of Canadians. Someone has to end this insanity so that politicians can get on with working on the issues Canadians care about.
-Darryl

John Tory, Frank Klees and Ontario PC solid against federal coalition coup


John Tory, Frank Klees and Ontario PC solid against federal coalition coup

There have been a lot of questions about how united Conservatives are behind Stephen Harper. I can tell you that in the face of this coup, the entire federal caucus, provincial PC caucus, volunteers and voters are standing firm against this opposition power grab. Conservative support is at an all time high, and internally the party has never been more united. I appreciate the support offered from Frank Klees and John Tory.
-Darryl


***

John Tory Scrum – Situation in Ottawa

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Question: What do you make of the going in Ottawa?

Tory: All I make of it is that the people want one thing. They want to see their elected representatives of all parties working together to fix the economy. That’s the only preoccupation the people Canada have. And so I think they will be all in favour of anything that will get people back to work fixing the economy, I don’t think most people understand constitutional niceties, I don’t think they care much about them. I think they want to see their elected representatives of all parties 24/7 fixing the economy. And anything that gets us there immediately, I think that people will be all in favour of it and so am I.

Question: even if it is a coalition?

Tory: Well no. Look I think the coalition, frankly if that’s what comes to pass, it’s going to achieve precisely the opposite. The coalition is going to achieve a period perhaps lengthy of instability, just starting with how we even get to these coalition people being asked to form a government if they are and I’m speculating on what may or may not happen. I think somehow the best thing that could happen is as I’ve said before we could almost rewind the tape and sort of say look can we get back to what people sent the parliamentarians there to do which was to fix the economy. I said the other day I’m a Conservative. I voted Conservative. People elected a government with 144 seats, just shy of a majority government, so clearly they spoke as to the kind of government they wanted and the kind of approach they wanted. I just think we should be getting on with finding a way to have these people work together to fix the economy and they should put their focus on that and nothing else. Not on politics and not on themselves.

Question asked in French, responded in English. Re: Bloc Quebecois

Tory: The Bloc Quebecois do not have the interests of a strong Canada as part of their mandate. In face their mandate is quite the opposite. Therefore if you’re looking to build a strong economy for Canada and Ontario as your top priority right now, which is certainly mine, then they don’t fit that bill. They are not people who are going to advance that agenda. My agenda, the agenda of our Party of Ontario is advancing, strengthening, rebuilding the Ontario economy and the Canadian economy. Job one, priority one, the only priority right now, and they don’t are not people who share that agenda.



***

KLEES: Coalition Coup a Threat to Local Economy

(Queen’s Park) Newmarket-Aurora MPP Frank Klees called on the three federal opposition leaders to reconsider their plans to bring down the recently elected federal government and wants the Premier to join the call for stability.

"At a time when plants are closing and job losses are mounting, the last thing we need is more uncertainty," said Klees. "The actions of Messers Dion, Layton and Duceppe are wrong-headed and self-serving and threaten to plunge our already fragile auto manufacturing sector into crisis."

In a letter to the Prime Minister and the three opposition party leaders, Klees stressed the need for immediate action by the federal government to prevent the loss of thousands of manufacturing jobs. He pointed to the 850 jobs that will be lost as a result of the recently announced Magna plant closings in York Region and the threat of thousands of additional job losses if a meaningful action plan for the industry is delayed.

"My intention is not to defend the actions of the federal government that gave rise to the strong opposition mounted by the three opposition parties," said Klees. "In retrospect, neither the timing nor some of the content was well advised. And in response, the opposition parties made their point forcefully and effectively. That’s the role of opposition parties in our parliamentary system of government.”

But that's where it should have ended, according to Klees. After securing the government's retreat on the controversial proposals such as taking away the right to strike by the public sector, eliminating funding to political parties and agreeing to move the date of the federal budget to accelerate the timing of an economic action plan, the opposition parties should have claimed victory and moved on to work with the government to ensure the implementation of an economic recovery strategy rather than resort to what is playing out to be an historical coup d’etat.”

"Rather than being satisfied that they had effectively performed their opposition role, the triumvirate of Dion, Layton and Duceppe formed an unholy alliance to overthrow the government," said Klees. "In so doing, they are willing to destabilize our government, risk a loss of international confidence in our economy and sacrifice thousands of jobs by even further delaying the implementation of a meaningful federal economic action plan that would assist our auto sector."

"This is a time when every member of every parliament in the country should be working together to build confidence in our governments, our economy and our manufacturing industries. The last thing we need is to be thrown into another election or to be led by a coalition of three political parties, one of which has no loyalty to Canada, have no mandate to govern, have contradictory policies, and have self-appointed the man who would be the Prime Minister should this so-called Coalition have its way. This is not the Canada I know, and we all have a responsibility to stop this abuse of power and protect the integrity of our parliamentary system of government."

-30-

References:

Frank Klees, MPP

Harper's remarks after visiting the Governor General

Harper's remarks after visiting the Governor General

Dec 4 - The Canadian Parliament has been suspended until Jan 26 09. Prime Minister Harper speaks regarding what will transpire during this extended Holiday Break.

Alberta NDP MP Linda Duncan should represent her constituents or resign her seat immediately



Alberta NDP MP Linda Duncan should represent her constituents or resign her seat immediately

6% of Alberta supports this coalition government. 90% of Alberta fears it. A huge super majority prefer another election to this coup. Clearly Linda Duncan is not acting in the best interests of her constituents or her province. I think if she does not express clearly that she will vote against this coalition coup in the next 24 hours, she should immediately resign her seat and call a by-election. I suspect right now she is simply keeping the seat warm until Rahim Jaffer takes it back whenever the next election takes place.

If you want Linda Duncan to represent her constituents or resign, please contact her below:

Linda Duncan, MP Edmonton-Strathcona
House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6

Email: Duncan.L@parl.gc.ca

Phone: 780-495-8404

Rahim Jaffer may have taken his seat for granted and has learned his lesson. Having said that, it should now be clear for Albertans that if you vote for the opposition, you might get a government hostile to Alberta's interests. I wonder how that seat would vote if a by-election was called?
-Darryl

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Question of the Day: What does this mean for the Liberal leadership candidates?




Question of the Day: What does this mean for the Liberal leadership candidates?

MPs will now go back to their ridings and will not return until January 26. It is not going to be pleasant for any of them regardless of partisan affiliation to come home and face the electorate after this past week.

What is clear though is that this was a major defeat for the Liberals and NDP. Stephen Harper's personal numbers have taken a short term hit, but the Conservative Party has skyrocketed in the polls because of this coalition with the Bloc Quebecois. The next election ballot box issue will be Conservative majority or a possible coalition government that could include the Bloc Quebecois. Unfortunately this power grab has added a unity crisis along with the financial challenges that need to be addressed. Parliament is not sitting. The Liberal caucus is divided and demoralized.

A majority government is now Stephen Harper's to lose. Having said that we need to have learned our lesson as well. Stephen Harper must separate being Prime Minister from leader of the Conservative Party at times. Now is not the time for partisanship or elections. Now is the time to get to work on the economy, resolutions that were passed in Winnipeg and present ourselves as a government for all Canadians until the campaign actually happens. The current rallies and advertising campaigns should go forward as long as the coalition threat is formally on the table. Stephen Harper said he would try and build bridges and was open to working with the opposition parties on the budget. Liberals should take that opportunity to save some face as Mr. Dion opened up the door to today.

There were times when it looked like Stephen Harper was in serious trouble earlier this week. Now it is Mr. Dion who will most likely be replaced as leader before January 2009. The coalition clearly rejected as undemocratic and bad for Canada is still on the table but the idea will be scrapped in short order. Heavy damage has been done to the Liberal brand. All three leadership candidates now have to wear this because they went along with this coalition. The challenge of the next Liberal leader to become Prime Minister is only that much greater. For Liberals this was probably the biggest mistake they will make in a generation.

So what does this all mean for the leadership candidates? All are basically collateral damage from this brand collapse and this foiled coup. Is it too late for them to come against this all now? Is an outsider at this point needed to enter the race? What is next for the Liberal leadership and how does this all impact the timing of the next election? Should the Liberals and NDP merge formally similar to what happen with the Canadian Alliance and PC Party?
-Darryl

New poll: Conservative support now at 44%...Coalition support 28%


New poll: Conservative support now at 44%...Coalition support 28%

As the coalition begins to collapse, it should be noted that public support of it is barely higher than the Liberals vote percentage in the last election and is much lower than the Conservative support in the last election according to a new poll. I don't think anyone should be surprised that this circus has put Conservatives into majority territory. Having said that, we should extend an olive branch and work with the opposition parties on the budget until that majority comes for real. Dion is the gift that just keeps on giving.

Update: Other polls here here here here and here. Based on all these numbers, any coalition supporter who thinks Dion has a mandate to be Prime Minister is kidding themselves. I have seen nothing close to 62% support for this idea.

Update 2: I like this one best. 46% support now for the Conservatives (easy majority) and a solid with NDP and Liberal numbers crashing. I don't think we have been anywhere near 46% support in the history of our party. 72% are scared of the political situation in Ottawa. 60% think Conservatives best option on the economy. 70% agree with the decision of the Governor General. What a disaster this experiment has been for the Liberals. Now is a pretty good time for Liberals and the NDP to accept the election results and get to work on a common budget with the Prime Minister.
-Darryl

***

Support for Tories up amid House crisis, CBC-EKOS poll suggests


The Conservatives appear to have won the initial public relations war surrounding the current impasse on Parliament Hill, during one of the most chaotic weeks in Canadian political history, a new EKOS poll conducted for the CBC suggests.

Respondents in the two-day automated telephone survey conducted Tuesday and Wednesday were asked: "If an election were held tomorrow, which party would you vote for?"

According to the poll, Stephen Harper's Conservatives received 44 per cent of respondents' support, up from the 37.6 per cent support the Tories received in the federal election that returned them to Ottawa with another minority government just seven weeks ago.

The results suggest support for Stéphane Dion's Liberals is down two percentage points from the election with 24 per cent of respondents' support, while the New Democrats are down almost four percentage points at 14.5 per cent support.

Meanwhile, the NDP received 14.5 per cent of respondents' support, while the Bloc was at nine per cent and the Greens at eight per cent.

"It does appear that in this period right out of the gates the Conservatives have done a much better job of getting their message out to Canadians who are making up their minds about who to blame for this current mess," Frank Graves, president of EKOS Research, told CBC News on Thursday.

But the poll results also suggest that as angry as some Canadians are about political inaction in Ottawa, Gov-Gen. Michaëlle Jean may have gauged public opinion correctly when she approved the prime minister's request to prorogue Parliament on Thursday.

16 per cent want another election: poll

Some 37 per cent of respondents in the survey said they wanted MPs to take a month off to see whether the Conservative minority government can get the confidence of Parliament when it comes back into session.

Twenty-eight per cent said they wanted the proposed Liberal-NDP coalition with the support of the Bloc Québécois to replace the government in the next few weeks, while 16 per cent of respondents said they wanted another election within the next few weeks.

The survey was largely conducted ahead of the speeches Harper and the three opposition leaders gave on Wednesday night, EKOS said.

It also asked whether respondents had confidence in the Governor General's ability to make decisions about the political impasse. Forty-eight per cent of respondents said they were confident in Jean's ability, while 16 per cent replied they were moderately confident.

But 36 per cent said they were not very confident. The answers broke along party lines, Graves said.

"Conservatives were much more likely to express low levels of confidence, particularly those out west, whereas Liberals and NDP express much greater levels of confidence," he said.

The survey was conducted using interactive voice recognition (IVR) technology, which allows respondents to enter their preferences by punching the keypad on their phone, rather than telling them to an operator.

In total, a random sample of 2,536 Canadians aged 18 and over responded to the survey. A sample of this size provides a margin of error of plus or minus 1.9 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

All the data were statistically weighted to ensure the sample composition reflects that of the actual population of Canada according to census data.

Jim Karygiannis should join the blue team



Jim Karygiannis should join the blue team

Conservative Secretary of State responsible for Toronto? Jim seems to side with us on a lot of issues. He is constantly overlooked in the Liberal Party for cabinet and critic positions. Jim has a large following in his own riding and has lots of experience on the hill. We did OK in the Scarborough area in the last election and I think he could hold the seat in the 416 for us if he was willing to join our caucus. I am not sure if that would ever happen, but you cannot help but have respect for this man for at least telling it like it is.
-Darryl

***

Liberal MP Jim Karygiannis wasted no time in calling Mr. Dion to be replaced before the House returns in January. "Who are we kidding? I think it's over," he said, heading into a closed door caucus meeting.

"To become Prime Minister at all costs? Where do we take the Liberal brand? ... The brand got hit. The brand is good. The CEO of the company screwed up."

The Scarborough MP emerged from caucus saying the party supports remaining in the coalition, but Mr. Dion must be replaced. "The party still wants the coalition to keep together. My constituents want Mr. Dion to go."

He said it's time to move the party's leadership race up - a conventon is slated for May - or find some way of making sure it has "a leader who can lead us" if there is an election in February or March.

Mr. Dion's botched video address was a clincher, he said: "We bombed."


***

Next Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff gave him his cover:

Toronto MP Michael Ignatieff, the front-runner in the race to take over the Liberal leadership from Dion, criticized Karygiannis harshly.

"Every single [Liberal] is aware of the seriousness of this, every single one of us is trying to rise to the expectations which Canadians have of us, and Mr. Karygiannis' characterizations of these discussions today is unworthy of the caucus to which he belongs."

Harper reaches out to opposition parties, focus now on economy


Harper reaches out to opposition parties, focus now on economy

Stephen Harper has asked the Governor General for some time which she granted, and promises to use the time to focus on the economy with an invitation for the opposition parties to work with him. The choice is now up to opposition leaders. They can come to the table with some constructive ideas and all parties can work on a budget during this economic crisis or they can push forward with a power grab that will be exposed for what it is if they refuse to get on with the work they were elected to do. We do not need partisan games. We need ideas that will allow us to put together a stimulus package and appropriate budget for Canadians in need. It is time for MPs to put their individual political interests aside for the good of this country.
-Darryl

Harper speaks after meeting with the GG:

"It's the opportunity to work in the next six weeks on these measures, and I invite all the opposition parties, especially those that have a responsibility to the whole of Canada, to work with us, to inform us of their detailed position and we will be there to listen,"

"The government is more than willing to have that kind of dialogue with the other parties. I want to hear their suggestions."

"Obviously we have to do some trust-building here on both sides."

Gov. Gen Michaelle Jean grants Harper's request to prorogue parliament


Gov. Gen Michaelle Jean grants Harper's request to prorogue parliament

Very good decision. This will be a major test for the coalition. Can Dion keep it together between now and January 27? I think Ottawa needed some time for cooler heads to prevail. I am looking forward to a new throne speech and a budget from elected Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
-Darryl

Dion likely doesn't have the Liberal votes to bring down this coalition





Dion likely doesn't have the Liberal votes to bring down this coalition

It is time to start targeting individual MPs as part of this campaign. I think there is a strong chance that many Liberals interested in saving the Liberal Party might find themselves stuck in traffic on the day of the vote or mysteriously ill when the bells ring. Is a portion of the Liberal caucus prepared to break from Dion???? Keep in mind the grassroots has not endorsed this merger through any kind of democratic process. MPs were not consulted until after the negotiations were complete. If there are any principled Liberals and NDP out there, we would love to have you. Frank Valeritote, Judy Sgro, Jim Karygiannis, Linda Duncan, Ralph Goodale, Martin Couchon, Keith Martin, Charlie Angus, Andre Arthur, Irwin Cotler, Michael Ignatieff, Anita Neville, Ruby Dhalla, Ken Dryden, Denis Coderre, Justin Trudeau, Jean-Claude D'Amours, Brian Murphy, Geoff Regan, Scott Andrews, Bill Casey, Malcolm Allen, Niki Ashton, Peter Julian, Judy Wasylycia-Leis, Pat Martin, John Cannis, Albina Guarnieri, and Joe Volpe might be worth targeting. 12-15 would stop this coalition and stop the Liberals from making the biggest mistake in their history. The first leadership candidate to break with this has a very good chance to win the Liberal leadership by the time May rolls around.
-Darryl

Update: From Today's Globe:

Liberal MP Jim Karygiannis wasted no time in calling Mr. Dion to be replaced before the House returns in January. "Who are we kidding? I think it's over," he said, heading into a closed door caucus meeting.

"To become Prime Minister at all costs? Where do we take the Liberal brand? ... The brand got hit. The brand is good. The CEO of the company screwed up."

Emotions run high during Question Period

Emotions run high during Question Period

The last few sessions have been the most exciting in decades. Today however, Harper will prorogue the parliament until January.
-Darryl

Is Stephane Dion and the coalition ready to govern Canada?

Is Stephane Dion and the coalition ready to govern Canada?

It is hard to disagree with what Bob Fife is saying here.
-Darryl


Harper's televised address; Dion proves he is ready to be PM

Harper's televised address; Dion proves he is ready to be PM

Here is a great way to build confidence that you are ready to take over as Prime Minister in front of a national televised audience. I do not know how anyone can take that idea of a coalition seriously during these times. Below is an address from Stephen Harper about the current political crisis.
-Darryl


Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Liberal MP "predicted" fall of government


Liberal MP "predicted" fall of government

First the NDP tape and now this. Is this coalition a result of the economic statement or was this planned well in advance? I wouldn't mind a crystal ball like Mr. Lee seems to have.
-Darryl

***

Liberal MP predicted fall of government
Conservative calls coalition plans 'illegitimate'
December 02, 2008 4:17 PM




Derek Lee somehow called it.

The day after the federal Liberals suffered their second straight election loss in October, the Scarborough-Rouge River MP made a prediction.

"I personally think we'd be lucky to get to Christmas without a collapse of the government," Lee said, on a day when most media speculation was about when Liberal leader Stephane Dion might resign.

The 20-year veteran MP went further, saying "a day of reckoning" was coming soon in the House of Commons. The Liberals could head a new government if the three opposition parties agreed; that may be unprecedented, but not impossible, he said.

Seven weeks later, the unprecedented agreement is signed.

If the Liberal-New Democrat coalition is allowed, Scarborough's six Liberal MPs may form part of a government after all.

Lee said there was a "palpable" feeling in the House of Commons last week: Prime Minister Stephen Harper, through arrogance and failing to offer an economic stimulus plan, had "blown it" and crystallized the entire opposition against him.

The three-party agreement the Liberals and NDP signed with the Bloq Quebecois - who will support the coalition but won't be part of it - should be greeted "with a lot of anger," said George Khouri, Conservative candidate this fall in Pickering-Scarborough East.

"These guys are trying to force a coup d'etat because of what they could not win at the ballot box," said Khouri, arguing the federal Tories have been "incredible stewards of the economy" and were rewarded with more seats and votes.

"People will take to the streets" rather than let the separatist Bloq from Quebec hold the balance of power in Canada, Khouri predicted.

To work, the opposition plan requires the government to be defeated in a House confidence vote, then for Governor General Michaelle Jean to allow a coalition government instead of calling an election

Pauline Browes, a former Conservative MP for Scarborough and cabinet minister, called the coalition an "outrageous" power grab many Canadians already view as "politically illegitimate."

"I've talked to a lot of people in the last 48 hours. They're just astounded and I'm astounded that this would happen," she said Tuesday.

Lee tried to dismiss fears about the coalition depending on the Bloc.

"They are MPs, elected just like me," he said, saying the coalition will be "government from the centre and not the right."

Coalitions have worked in other countries, said Natalie Hundt, the New Democratic candidate in Scarborough Centre.

This week, Hundt said she hopes the coalition arrangement promising her party six seats in a federal cabinet for the first time lets the NDP pursue its goals for Canadians. "Six seats is better than none," Hundt said.

http://www.insidetoronto.ca/article/60344

No signatures on the Globe and Mail Document


No signatures on the Globe and Mail Document

I was reading this story in the Globe and Mail and find it strange that none of the leaders Stockwell Day, Joe Clark or Gilles Duceppe have signed the agreement. Stockwell Day was very clear that he did not agree to this and in fact never saw the agreement. The lawyer says MPs never discussed the idea.

I also do not think the coalition can claim legitimacy for this coalition based on what might have been suggested in the year 2000 or in a letter to the Governor General in 2004. Those coalitions did not occur. On Tuesday (assuming the vote takes place on Monday), there is a real reality that a coalition government will be formed that is unelected and dependent of support from the separatist party. A formal coalition is different than soliciting support on an issue by issue basis. If Stephane Dion and Jack Layton want to bring a separatist party into the Canadian parliament they should justify that action on its merits alone. Digging up documents from the past is not what is going to give this government democratic legitimacy.
-Darryl

First poll I have seen on the coalition...37% support for it...not 64% as claimed


First poll I have seen on the coalition...37% support for it...not 64% as claimed

Based on this poll, I cannot see a mandate for Dion. 64% oppose him despite the fact Conservatives gained 37% support in the last election. Only 37% support the coalition well short of the 64% "super majority" propaganda we are seeing from opposition partisans. A clear majority are concerned about the Bloc in the coalition. 37% would prefer another election - the same number as supported the Tories in the last election. I cannot see how Stephane Dion could serve and take questions in the House of Commons as the Prime Minister based on his personal lack of support across all parties and weak support for this coalition in general. More analysis here.
-Darryl

POLL: CANADIANS SPLIT ON COALITION

35% think Tories deserve to stay in power; 40% don't

37% want a coalition to take over if Tories fail

32% prefer to have another election

25% are 'comfortable' with Dion as PM; 64% are not

57% are 'worried' about Bloc role in government

75% back economic stimulus ASAP

Source: Angus Reid Strategies and the Toronto Star

Prime Ministers in Recent History and their Vote Percentages

Chretien - 1993 41.3%
Chretien - 1997 38.5%
Chretien - 2000 40.8%
Martin - 2003 36.7%
Harper - 2008 39%

Dion – 2009? 26%


Opposition parties will have a very difficult time arguing Dion has the confidence of Canadians given that he has never been elected, his support level would be the lowest for a Canadian Prime Minister in its history and poll numbers (from the Toronto Star) indicate anything but wide spread support for this coalition idea.


Blast from the Past: Newmarket-Aurora in 2005


Blast from the Past: Newmarket-Aurora in 2005

After crossing the floor and joining Paul Martin's government, this was one of the reasons Belinda Stronach gave to justify her actions to the people of Newmarket-Aurora and Canadians.

"Also, by forcing an election before the Conservative party has grown and established itself in Quebec, the hold over Quebec of the Bloc Quebecois can only grow into the vacuum. The result will be to stack the deck in favour of separatism, and the possibility of a Conservative government beholden to the separatists."

And to all those who keep waiving around the 2004 letter to the GG, consider what Liberals campaigned on in 2006 through a television ad:

"Gilles Duceppe and Stephen Harper worked together to bring down the government. Lots of late night secret meetings. Apparently, they're quite a team. Which is great. Because if Harper wins this election? He'll have to work very, very closely with Duceppe. Unfortunately, their unity won't do much for Canada's unity."

It is too bad there are not more Liberals who feel the same way right now. Those MPs who want to break with Dion's leadership and this alliance have more than enough cover to secure re-election in their ridings on this issue.
-Darryl

Keith Martin we would love to have you back in the Conservative fold


Keith Martin we would love to have you back in the Conservative fold

It is good to hear at least one Liberal making sense. I would be happy to see some sort of economic advisory committee that could work with Stephen Harper in order to stop this undemocratic coalition that threatens the unity of this country. If only there are 10-15 more principled opposition in the House we could avoid this threat and madness. If any Western opposition MP is serious about being re-elected, they will get off this crazy train before it turns into a complete wreck. Keith Martin is a former Alliance member who agrees with us on several issues.

Update: Rumours throughout Ottawa of MPs from multiple parties crossing the floor or sitting as independents. At least one leadership candidate is having second thoughts about this. More to come...
-Darryl

Duceppe in his own words on this coalition

Duceppe in his own words on this coalition

It is amazing how many Liberals are dismissing this as a minor issue. It is a shame that Dion is throwing away his entire legacy of fighting for unity and bringing in the clarity act to govern for a few months with this guy as his coalition partner. Shame.
-Darryl

How Harper wins this and stays in Power:


How Harper wins this and stays in Power:



It was looking bad for awhile, but yesterday the Prime Minister’s performance in Question Period saved his job. He still has lots of fight left in him, and I think following comments from the PQ and Bloc; it is actually the coalition now on the defensive. If I was advising Harper here is what I would do.


  1. Ask the Governor General today to prorogue the parliament. This request has never been turned down since confederation. Harper demonstrated he had the confidence of the House through the Throne Speech.
  2. Go on national television with a state of the nation address. Portray the situation as a national emergency for both the economy and unity. Portray the opposition actions as a coup and inconsistent with the results of the previous election. Say you do not want an election but the opposition might cause one by defeating the government before a budget has been proposed. Outline plans for the economy and a stimulus package and apologize for including partisan measures in the economic statement and remind Canadians that they have no been removed by admitting his mistake.
  3. Use the time until January 27 to craft a budget that appeals to the base of the Bloc and NDP. Lots of support for the auto and forestry sector. Money for Quebec. Goodies for everyone. At the same time go after any Liberal or opposition MPs who are uncomfortable with this alliance especially from the West and offer them positions on an economic advisory committee or outright membership in the Conservative Party possibly with cabinet posts or major projects to their riding. Try and cause division so the coalition collapses. Run a five million dollar ad campaign between now and January 27 linking the Liberal Party to the separatists and questioning the mandate of Dion. I would also have ads questioning if the NDP can be trusted on the economy in this unprecedented economic climate. I would bring back the talking points about entitlements, sponsorship scandal and Liberals being willing to risk national unity to grab power. I would position the Conservative Party as the only federalist option that can keep both the West and Quebec united in confederation. Every BQ or PQ statement on separation would become a television ad ending with a picture of Dion and asking if this is the government you trust to run Canada.
  4. Deliver a budget that would be extremely hard for the opposition parties to vote down. With a little luck the coalition might be finished with the alliance seen as the biggest blunder in Liberal history. If they bring down the government, there is a better chance that GG will call an election after a few months since the last election as opposed to a few weeks after the last election.
  5. If there is an election campaign, Harper and Conservatives can be confident we have a winning ballot box question, the finances and the motivated volunteers to hammer the entire opposition who I would portray as a single party that wants to govern as a separatist coalition.

Scott Reid is going to look like an idiot very soon. He went after Harper with all he had and the opposition parties made a huge strategic blunder and took his advise. All credibility has now been lost to their individual brands over this. A few short days ago it looked like the Conservatives would have power stolen from them and Dion would become Prime Minister. I personally think Harper’s job is now safe rather this coalition forms or not. Historically, this is going to be seen as the biggest mistake the Liberal Party has made in the history of their party. I predict the next election will be the last time you see 5 parties in Canadian democracy. As soon as the next election is called, Conservatives will win a majority while the left will be forced to unite formally under one banner to survive. Dion damaged his party with the carbon tax and a coalition with the Greens. He has now dealt it the final blow by demonstrating to Canadians that Liberals are so unprincipled that they will risk the unity of the country for a cheap few months in power. If I was a Liberal I would remove Dion at all costs to avoid any further damage – although at this point it is well past too late. If I wanted to be Liberal leader, I would position myself immediately against this coalition because I guarantee in a couple of months that person is going to look like a genius. Liberals rolled the dice and have lost. As Conservatives, we should stand firmly behind our leader rather this undemocratic coalition takes power or not. We should not do the opposition’s dirty work by removing a leader who was elected by party members, brought together a united right and was twice elected by Canadians. In the most recent election he received an increased mandate. They want to take him out because they fear him. After Question Period yesterday, I am convinced that there is no way Dion will be able to hold his own against an opposition slaughter that would take place if he actually stole the Prime Ministers office. Liberals who still stand for something should stop this from becoming a trainwreck at all costs.


Update: Harper to address the nation tonight at 7pm Eastern Time.


-Darryl

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

What do the Separatists have to say about this coalition




What do the Separatists have to say about this coalition

Liberal and NDP supporters it is not to late to change your mind and avoid making the biggest mistake you will ever see in a generation. This is your warning. The future of your party is at stake, the future of your country is at stake. This coalition is dangerous and wrong for Canada, wrong for the economy and wrong for democracy. Partisanship or principle, this is what defines individuals in politics. Mr. Dion, I think you have now miscalculated. The time is now for Dion to resign immediately, not elected Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
-Darryl

***

"The fact that the Bloc got Stephane Dion to sign a political accord in which it is explicitly written that he undertakes to act in partnership with Canadians and the Quebecois should bring a smile to the face of many sovereigntists,"

BQ Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau a key player in the 1995 referendum campaign

“I think every gain we’re making here is good for Quebec, and what’s good for Quebec is good for a sovereign Quebec.”

“Layton and Dion won’t change; they’re federalists and I’m a sovereigntist,”

BQ Leader Gilles Duceppe who would be the second largest partner in this proposed coalition government

***

'We can see clearly that this country doesn't work.'

"The only solution is to get out of there, and choose our sovereignty,"

"If the Bloc Quebecois can get things for Quebec while Jean Charest is on his knees. . ."

"It's Quebec that will come out the winner,"

PQ Leader Pauline Marois who supports this proposed coalition government

***

View of out West

"put Canada first and stop the nonsense."
-Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach who does not support this coalition agreement

"I do not want my Canada beholden in a formal way to a veto from separatists. I don't want that. I don't want it for my province. I don't want it for my country,"
-Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall who does not support this coalition agreement

***

Conservatives united to stop this coup. Harper defends himself in Question Period

“The deal that the leader of the Liberal party [Stéphane Dion] has made with the separatists is a betrayal of the voters of this country, a betrayal of the best interests of our economy, a betrayal of the best interests of our country and we will fight it with every means we have,”

"Not a single member of this House, not even a member of the Bloc, received a mandate to have a government in which the separatists would be part of the coalition,"

"Mr. Speaker, if the leader of the Opposition thinks he has support for this, he should have the confidence to take this to the people of Canada, who will reject it."

"My friends, such an illegitimate government would be a catastrophe, for our democracy, our unity and our economy, especially at a time of global instability,"

“Mr. Speaker the highest principle of Canadian democracy is that if you want to be Prime Minister, you get your mandate from the Canadian people, not from Quebec separatists.”

"From MacDonald and Laurier, to Diefenbaker and Trudeau, Liberals and Conservatives have often disagreed, but Mr. Speaker there is one thing we should never disagree on, and the Leader of the Liberal Party is betraying the best interests and the best traditions of his own party if he thinks he can make a deal with Quebec separatists."

"Mr. Speaker in an internal letter today the BQ leader says the coalition the will take control of control of the administration of the federal state. We will have the creation of a mechanism of permanent consultation empowering the BQ on every matter of importance notably concerning the adoption of the budget. This Prime Minister, this government, this party has never and will never sign a document like that."

"Mr. Speaker, today the leader of the Parti Quebecois says this arrangement shows the need for sovereignty. The Bloc members applauded when I quoted her. If the Liberal Party believes in the country he will walk away from this document and admit is the worst mistake the Liberal Party has made in its history."
-Elected Prime Minister Stephen Harper

***

Full debate from Question Period today. Imagine if the questions Dion will face as PM if we actually have to sit in opposition after winning an election a few short weeks ago.
-Darryl

New Conservative ad about Dion and his separatist coalition

New Conservative ad about Dion and his separatist coalition

I already know how partisans from all sides will act. It will be interesting to see how average Canadians react to this who are not up to speed on the inside baseball and daily political games in Ottawa. So far polls on CTV's website and also Global TV are showing heavy early opposition. QP was interesting today if anyone watches CPAC. Best line from Harper, "If you want to be prime minister, you get your mandate from the Canadian people, not from the separatists."
-Darryl



Canadians were lied to by Dion during the election campaign a few weeks ago:

Meet the Three stooges

Meet the Three stooges

The Bloc has already had it's influence. From the document signed by all three leaders...

"A majority of Canadians and Quebecers voted for our parties on October 14, 2008. Our Members of Parliament make up 55 percent of the House of Commons."

They haven't even sat in government yet and already Canada and Quebec are separate. Thanks for looking out for Canadians Mr. Dion.
-Darryl

Rally for Canada...save our democracy


Rally for Canada...save our democracy

Anyone who cares about the unity of this country, our economy or our democracy should be marching in one of these cities this weekend. For details visit the link below:
-Darryl

www.rallyforcanada.ca

Editorials not kind to the coalition, Western premiers not happy




Editorials not kind to the coalition, Western premiers not happy


While Warren Kinsella has pointed out that several columnists are calling on Stephen Harper to resign, virtually all except the usual suspects (Toronto’s Liberal Star) are calling this idea of a coalition a terrible idea and undemocratic. Again, I think the Governor General has no choice but to call an election. Canada should not be allowed to be governed by a rejected party headed by a lame duck rejected leader that is relying on the socialists for advice on the economy and a party that does not support Canada as part of the coalition. Harper may have made a major mistake that caused all this, but Dion who damaged the Liberal brand badly in the past campaign has now killed any shred of principle, integrity or pride left for grassroots Liberals with this move. The party is now firmly on the left and has proven willing to sell out Canada for a couple of months in power. Canadians deserve a chance to vote in a new government with consideration of these new revelations from yesterday. Disenfranchised “blue” Liberals can apply for Conservative membership here.

-Darryl


***


Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall

"If any coalition requires formal support from separatists, it's wrong,"

“I do not think what the country needs right now is an unelected government that’s dependent formally on separatists who will have a list of requests that they will have made already for more investment, for some treatment from the federal government ... that’s not in the interests of Canada, that’s not in the interests of Saskatchewan.

“I am still hopeful that heads can come out of their kilts and that the right decisions can be made for the country,”

Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach

"put Canada first and stop the nonsense."

Canada right now needs "sane, prudent leadership dealing with the bigger elephant in the room, which is the global economic crisis,"


***

Led by a loser, bound by the Bloc

It's a personal putsch, not a rational rebellion

Don Martin, National Post Published: Tuesday, December 02, 2008

OTTAWAThe biggest Liberal loser in the party's electoral history, a self-admitted campaign failure who advocated carbon taxes as sound economy policy and lacks significant Western Canada representation, seems set to become prime minister next week.

Forgive them. They know not what they've done.

Giddy opposition party leaders have decreed nothing will stop them from toppling this government next Monday to create the first governing coalition in almost 100 years, a 30-month, three-headed, Liberal-led monster bonded to New Democrats and Quebec separatists by four pages of policy duct tape.

The government's defeat can now only be avoided if Stephen Harper prematurely pulls the plug on the barely started session of Parliament this week. That seems a desperate and shameless tactic that would merely delay the inevitable until early next year and give the fledgling coalition time to solidify.

This means an electorate that cast a third of its votes for the Conservatives will have their representation replaced by a hodge-podge of lowest-common-denominator policies produced almost overnight by parties leaning left and toward leaving.

An election no longer seems to be an option. The coalition, despite lacking any modern precedent, has done an admirable job of building the case for securing the Governor-General's blessing to try to govern until June, 2011, subject to change without notice.

That will put the keys to 24 Sussex Drive in the hands of Stephane Dion, an Official Opposition leader who has already announced his resignation and set May 2, 2009, as the date to crown his replacement.

The three MPs bidding to replace him will be senior ministers in the new Cabinet. Michael Ignatieff, Bob Rae and Dominic LeBlanc will divide their time between governing a country at perilous risk from recession while campaigning hard to win the prime minister's job.

This move is clearly payback for years of facing a Stephen Harper who lay awake at night scheming on ways to eliminate or embarrass the Liberal party without fearing his own vulnerable state as a minority government leader.

That ensures there will be a fury in the land, particularly in the West and specifically in Alberta. Even if New Democrat rookie Linda Duncan of Edmonton becomes the province's token Cabinet minister, replacing the five Alberta Conservatives in power now, the frustration of seeing electorally legitimized power seized by Toronto-based Liberals partnered with separatist forces in Quebec will be revolt-worthy in the West.

While the discipline of power may keep the coalition together, more or less flying in loose formation for perhaps a year or even longer, this is not a system of sustainable government as much as it is a power grab minus a compelling reason to exist.

It circumvents the public's Oct. 14 election verdict for no good reason, given the government has capitulated on every grievance its opponents spotted in the fiscal update. This makes it a personal putsch, not a rational rebellion.

It puts Canada on an uncertain track under leadership that will change again within months. In the meantime, Stephen Harper may well join Stephane Dion as a former prime minister, the price for boneheadedly browbeating his opponents in dangerous times.

The deficit, already accepted as necessary to fight job losses and auto-sector failure, is bound to be larger than expected as the coalition unleashes hefty infrastructure relief, industrial bailouts and unspecified housing construction and retrofitting. No projected price tag was attached to the plan yesterday.

Under coalition control, the government's size likely will bloat to deal with social issues, environmental policy will be hardened against the energy sector, the large number of Senate vacancies will be restacked with mostly Liberal partisans and Quebec appeasement moves will be even more rampant than currently exist.

It must be acknowledged the coalition's organization is more advanced than anyone could have expected, given that the precipitating move, the botched fiscal update, was less than 100 hours old when the accord was signed yesterday afternoon.

There comes a time where an aura descends on political leaders. Stephen Harper always projected confident, unflappable leadership. That changed yesterday when his sagging shoulders and lack-lustre performance gave him the look of a lost cause trying to come to mental grips with his six-week squandering of the largest minority mandate in Canadian history.

It's still an awful hard squint to see Mr. Dion as a prime minister power-sharing with Jack Layton, but it seems likely to become a reality.

Stephane Dion is about to get the ultimate do-over to answer this question:Who actually won the last election?

***

National Post editorial board: The Liberal party's gift to Quebec's separatists

http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2008/12/02/national-post-editorial-board-the-liberal-party-s-gift-to-quebec-s-separatists.aspx

“What appalls us most about a left-of-centre coalition seizing power in Ottawa is the tacit admission by the coalition partners — the Liberals and New Democrats — that they would pander to the Bloc Québécois to keep themselves in power. Since the Bloc’s stated purpose is the breakup of Canada, any deal that brings it even one inch closer to that goal is an outrageous betrayal of the country.”

“The Bloc’s stature in Quebec can only grow as a result. They will be able to campaign in future elections on all the great advantages and subsidies they have brought to the province. Meanwhile, the special attention raining down on Quebec could exacerbate tensions in the rest of the country. As Michael Bliss notes elsewhere, we are dealing with a political powder keg.

The coalition could be the greatest gift the separatists have ever received. That alone is reason enough to stop it before it begins.”

David Frum: Only the losers will survive Ottawa's game of competitive suicide

http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2008/12/01/david-frum-only-the-losers-will-survive-ottawa-s-game-of-competitive-suicide.aspx

Imagine Canada 6 months on. There’s a Liberal prime minister. He will head an unstable coalition of Liberals and socialists aligned with separatists. To appease the socialists, he will have to raise taxes. To appease the separatists, he will have to direct disproportionate money and attention to the province of Quebec.

He will have zero democratic legitimacy. He will never be able to use the words, “That’s the job the Canadian people elected me to do.” His government will contain almost no representatives from the west. Everyone will understand that the only issue uniting this government was its members’ eagerness for public money for their own party funds.

“Sooner or later, this government will collapse. Probably sooner. When it does, and faces the people, it will have to bear responsibility for unemployment and budget deficits. It will look desperate and selfish and cynical verging on crooked. It’s hard to imagine any result other than a crushing once-in-a-generation defeat: another 1958 or 1984.”

George Jonas: Coalition may be legal, but also undesireable

http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2008/12/02/george-jonas-coalition-may-be-legal-but-also-undesireable.aspx

Needless to say, the mere fact that something is legal doesn’t make it either right or desirable. If the endorsement of the Conservatives in the 2008 elections was far from unequivocal, the rejection of the Liberals in general, and their leader, Stéphane Dion, in particular, certainly was. Whatever Canadians wanted six weeks ago when they went to the polls, what they clearly did not want was a Liberal prime minister, especially Stéphane Dion. If this is what they end up getting, constitutional as it may be, it will be a mockery of democracy.

The accord that Jack built

http://www.nationalpost.com/opinion/columnists/story.html?id=2f59c9c7-fac7-47fd-a761-1be09bc20e04

“A small point, perhaps, but a pretty good indicator of where this accord is taking the government of Canada. Under this agreement, Jack Layton and Gilles Duceppe, leader of the Bloc Quebecois, would have their fingers on the policy triggers of the government of Canada. Anyone who thinks they do not intend to squeeze or threaten to pull that trigger now, sending the Liberals scurrying, doesn't appreciate the hardball wing-nuttiness of Mr. Layton and Mr. Duceppe.”

Take my country ... please

The best Christmas gift the Conservatives could get is to lose

“The Liberals will heretofore be known as the party willing to jump in bed with separatists to get their grubby hands on power. Don't you think that will be an interesting talking point to bring into the next election? This will cement the Tories' status as the federalist alternative in Quebec, and the guardian of national integrity in the rest of the country.”

http://www.nationalpost.com/opinion/columnists/story.html?id=f099adf3-c265-4300-b65e-dd0a1a6f10d9

Harper, Dion put politics before national interest

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081201.weCoalition02/BNStory/politics/home

“It is debatable which is a more dangerous prospect: to place members of a left-wing, labour-beholden party that has never tasted the discipline of power in charge of major economic portfolios, or to hand a gun to a separatist party with the singular goal of advancing the interests of Quebec, and not of Canada. Either scenario would be intriguing for political scientists, and might make for good spectator sport. But a time of economic uncertainty, in which Canadians' jobs, homes and life savings are all in peril, is no time for political games or experiments.”

“It is also necessary to consider the message that Mr. Dion's sudden ascent to the office of prime minister could send to much of the country. Contrary to silly Conservative claims of a coup d'état, coalition-making is entirely within the boundaries of parliamentary democracy. There is no constitutional impropriety here. But there certainly would be a political one. Owing in large part to his now defunct “Green Shift,” Mr. Dion has proved highly unpopular in Western Canada – particularly in resource-laden Alberta and Saskatchewan. What would voters in those provinces make of his elevation to the prime ministership less than two months after they overwhelmingly rejected him? Expect the Conservatives to pour fuel on the resulting regional resentment.”

Monstrous result of an ill-conceived political coupling

http://www.calgaryherald.com/opinion/monstrous+result+conceived+political+coupling/1020723/story.html

“Nevertheless, a government reliant upon the support of a party conceived for no other purpose than to facilitate Quebec's exit from Confederation has the legitimacy of a police force maintaining public order with the assistance of a biker gang under contract. For this reason alone, the Governor General should reject the coalition proposal.”

It's the economy, stupid. Cooler heads must prevail in Ottawa for everyone's sake

http://www.vancouversun.com/opinion/economy+stupid+cooler+heads+must+prevail+ottawa+everyone+sake/1010010/story.html

“The Liberal party, which sees itself as the "natural governing party of Canada," needs to give its collective head a shake and back off from its arrogant attempt to grasp power from the duly elected Conservative government.”

Coalition calamity

http://www.theprovince.com/opinion/coalition+calamity/1019607/story.html

“What is going on in Ottawa is disgusting. If the Liberal Party of Canada and the New Democratic Party get their way, our country will be run by a coalition government that not one Canadian supported in an election.”

Premier speaks for angry nation

http://www.leaderpost.com/opinion/premier+speaks+angry+nation/1020193/story.html

“Wall then added that what Canada absolutely doesn't need right now is "an unelected government that depends on separatists for support." In fact, his most pointed words were aimed at a Liberal-NDP coalition deal that could only function if it were propped up by the Bloc Quebecois.

"If any coalition requires formal support from separatists, it's wrong," Wall said, in response to the lunacy of a NDP and Liberal coalition requiring the Bloc's support and the sanctimony of the Conservatives, who are conveniently forgetting that Harper was every bit as eager to get in bed with separatists and form a coalition to bring down Paul Martin's minority Liberal government.”

Governor General can just say 'No'

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/westview/35357989.html

“Fortunately, there is a third way, and one that has a good deal of constitutional precedent. The Governor General could simply refuse to accept Harper's resignation, just as prime ministers and premiers in the past have often refused to accept letters of resignation from cabinet ministers. The Governor General could say that accepting Harper's resignation is not in the best interests of the country because it would set in motion a choice between two unacceptable alternatives.

In effect, the Governor General would send Harper back to negotiate an economic package that could secure majority support in the House. She would implicitly instruct the opposition parties to make this Parliament work. She would exercise the discretionary power that the Constitution has wisely placed in her hands. She would just say no.”

Michaëlle Jean cannot be complicit in deal with Bloc

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/westview/35358239.html

“I do not believe that the Governor General can possibly allow herself to be complicit in such events. If the Conservatives are brought down by a separatist party, Jean would have to accede to the prime minister's request to test the will of Canadians. To refuse to do this would be an abuse of vice-regal power, an abuse that would raise fundamental questions about Jean's loyalty to the Constitution and to Canada. I doubt there is a precedent for such a situation in the history of parliaments.”

Say no way to this power grab

http://www.winnipegsun.com/Comment/Editorial/2008/12/02/7602296-sun.html

“Seven weeks ago, Canadians rejected Stephane Dion as the leader of this nation. Now our politicians want to cast aside the will of the people.

So badly do the Liberals and NDP want to seize the reins of power, they're even willing to work with the separatist Bloc Quebecois.

This must not be allowed to happen.”

Stop selling us out to separatists

http://www.torontosun.com/comment/editorial/2008/12/01/7587161-sun.html

“Our very sovereignty is at stake.

For the first time, a party dedicated to the political destruction of Canada, operating contrary to the wishes of the majority of Canadians outside and inside Quebec, holds the balance of power between competing federalist forces in a minority Parliament. That alone could reignite western separatism and tear Canada apart.

It's un-Canadian and we must demand all these scheming federalist politicians stop selling us out to the Bloc.

They have no right to play Russian roulette with Canada.”

A power play that insults democracy

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/opinion/power+play+that+insults+democracy/1020241/story.html

“Canadian taxpayers, you are entitled to a primal scream. Three of the least credible men in Canadian politics are about to seize control of our government in a virtual coup that is perfectly legal, and perfectly wrong.

Imagine, a government run by the soon-to-be-deposed leader of the Liberals, fresh from a decisive rejection by Canadian voters. What stunning disrespect for democracy Stéphane Dion is displaying. For help, he is turning to the leader of the party that has the fewest seats in the House. Even then, they don't have the numbers to form a government, so they are reaching out to a separatist who doesn't give a damn about anything except Quebec.

It's amazing what three men can accomplish once they choose to abandon all principle. Even though Stéphane Dion, Jack Layton and Gilles Duceppe have dramatically different views on how the country should be run, or even if it should be a country, they have overcome all of that for the shot at power that none of these losers would have had in a sane world. Everyone wins, except Canadians.”

Forget coalition, let the people decide

http://www.montrealgazette.com/opinion/forget+coalition+people+decide/1019409/story.html

“The idea that two parties totalling 114 MPs can supplant a governing party with 144 seems surreal precisely because it is alien to the Canadian tradition; not illegal, but not quite the Canadian way, either. Our constitution, much of it unwritten, includes an element of tradition and practice, and nothing like this has ever happened before federally. Our only other coalition, during the First World War, arose slowly over an issue of substance, conscription, not overnight because parties feared losing their subsidies.

And the country paid a price; Quebec's alienation from Robert Borden's Unionist government rubbed salt in an old, and still-enduring, division in this country. In that context it's worth noting that in the current crisis some commentators are already speaking of damaging feelings of alienation in strongly Conservative western Canada.

So the precedent should not whet anyone's appetite for coalition. The proper way to choose a government for Canada is at the ballot box, not by cabal and closed-door deal. Yes we're all tired of elections, and yes Harper brought this on himself. But all the same, if the Liberals and New Democrats are determined to punish Harper, then Governor-General Michaëlle Jean should issue a writ for a new election. Let the people decide.”

A false pretext

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081201.wcohartt02/BNStory/politics/home

“Neither Mr. Rae nor Michael Ignatieff should be pleased to see Stéphane Dion anointed as prime minister mere weeks after his humiliation at the polls. What if he decides he likes the job and postpones the planned leadership convention? What policy price would the leadership candidates have to pay by associating themselves with the NDP and the Bloc? What would Trudeau loyalists do when asked to cozy up with those who would destroy Canada? What about those Liberals who are centre-right supporters of our market system, now thrust into liaison with the NDP?

This would be a parody of democracy. To do it on the false pretext that stimulus can't wait when the real motive is far more self-interested, would be asking Her Excellency to participate in a mockery of our system of government.”


Should Gilles Duceppe answer questions in the House of Commons as part of the Government?


Should Gilles Duceppe answer questions in the House of Commons as part of the Government? Should the Bloc get cabinet posts as the second largest coalition partner?

The Governor General must decide if the NDP and Liberals have a coalition that can demonstrate the confidence of the House of Commons, provide stable leadership and move forward on a common agenda during this economic crisis. In order to do that she will have to factor in the role of the Bloc Quebecois. Are they part of the government and a formal member of the coalition or are they an opposition party? To avoid an election the Bloc Quebecois must be part of the coalition to make it larger than the 143 member Conservative caucus and to control a majority of seats in the House of Commons. Therefore in order to approve this coalition, she must accept that the separatists will be part of the Canadian government. Otherwise the NDP-Liberal coalition does not have the confidence of the House. As a result separatist MPs would have to sit with the government and I think it is only fair that as leader of a governing coalition partner, Gilles Duceppe should be fair game to opposition questions in the House of Commons regardless of if he is in charge of a Ministry or not. His input will be crucial to government decisions and he should be subject to accountability in the House. In a traditional coalition government, as leader of the second largest party in the coalition, Duceppe would be entitled to the Deputy Prime Minister or Finance post. For political reasons he will not get those portfolios, but he should not be able to hide from opposition questions and Liberals and NDP partners should not be allowed to hide him either. Liberals are fighting for democracy right? So a question for this coalition...will Gilles Duceppe be subject to questions in the House of Commons from Canada's only opposition party in the legislature or will they pretend to be opposition MPs and prop up the government only with votes in this scenario? The answer to that question could play a role in how the Governor General decides.

Another question is what kind of legitimacy would this government have without the second largest coalition partner having cabinet representation? According to a poll: 62% of Quebeckers think the Bloc should demand cabinet posts as a condition for their support of the NDP-Liberals. Given the Bloc's 50 seats compared to the NDP's 37, I think this is only fair. Liberals are trying to have it both ways with the Bloc. They require their support but want to pretend there is no association. That is fantasy. A viable coalition must have government participation from all parties involved. The Governor General must have clear confidence that this united coalition can last, get things done and provide stable leadership during a time of economic crisis.

So far I don't see much indication that this alliance has been well thought out. It is a clear coup and power grab as no platform has been presented to the electorate who's votes they have overturned, no terms and conditions of this alliance have been made public and there is serious doubt that it can survive the next few days, let alone the term of the agreement. The memberships of all of these individual parties have not even have the chance to vote on this merger of the left to give it some internal legitimacy. The coalition was never presented as a possibility during the election campaign, in fact all of these leaders campaigned against such an idea. Already we have seen market instability because of the political situation today. The stakes are high for ordinary Canadians who voted six weeks ago. The more thought that goes into how this coalition would play out, the more ridiculous it seems. Based on what is known today; I don't see how the Governor General could do anything other than call an election and end this circus.
-Darryl

Monday, December 01, 2008

Possible Conservative responses to a coalition:


Possible Conservative responses to a coalition:

Right now the million dollar question that is not known is how the public will react to a coalition government led by separatists. Liberal, NDP and possibly BQ partisans love it. Conservative partisans hate it. What is unknown is where the average Joe voter stands. I suspect Harper’s approval ratings have taken a hit, Canadians do not want an election and Canadians are likely angry about a coalition that includes Quebec separatists outside of Quebec. In the event this coalition goes down next Monday, following the budget or at a later time; here are some potential Conservative options to counter it.

1, Frequently put forward non-confidence motions. Liberal leadership candidates will want to travel. Ministers will have to travel on business. People will get sick or not be in the House for a variety of reasons. Putting forward frequent confidence votes through private members bills, opposition days or committee amendments could force the government to keep all members in Ottawa in order to maintain the confidence of the House. If we are lucky, an election would take place when the coalition least expects it.

2, Put forward divisive motions. “Canada recognizes Quebec as part of Canada”, “Canada supports the current mission in Afghanistan until 2011”, “A motion to restore 50 billion in tax cuts to corporations to create jobs in the economy”, use divisions in the Liberal leadership race to create confidence motions forcing unity and targeting the bases of each party could all put pressure on this coalition to stay together or lock the opposition parties into positions they would not want to defend in an election campaign.

3, Offer no support on any legislation regardless of its merits put forward by the coalition government. Consider voting with the coalition as legitimizing the government and refuse to take that step. This means without the support of all three coalition partners nothing would get passed. The NDP-Liberals are going to try and present a solution where the BQ agrees to prop up this coalition on confidence matters for a year. That agreement might not be good enough for the GG leading her to call an election. Constantly opposing and refusing to abstain would limit the government to only passing legislation the separatists and socialists agree on. Liberals would be forced to give into extortion or go into an election and defend this coalition with limited arguments in their ability to attack their coalition partners. They should not count on us to be cooperative or reduce the poisoned atmosphere in the House because of these actions.

4, Run a heavy media and public relations campaign. Link Liberals to separatists. Question if Jack Layton is trustworthy to handle the economy. Attack the legitimacy of Dion and whoever the next PM is. Highlight the fact that voters rejected Dion and this government. Portray the Liberals as willing to do anything from power including overturning an election by working with socialists and separatists. The lower the coalition approval ratings the better for us.

5. Work with the Western Premiers. They will get screwed by this arrangement in terms of government representation. Portray this whole situation as Western Canada’s voice in government being robbed by separatists and Toronto MPs. Hopefully at least one Premier would not recognize the new government. This arrangement gives us the potential to wipe out all opposition MPs West of Manitoba.

6. Use committee seats to block, stall or change legislation.

7. Throw everything into by-elections. Target MPs passed up for cabinet posts or in vulnerable ridings to cross the floor. Attempt to take back government by recruiting enough members to form a majority coalition. Many Paul Martin Liberals will be uncomfortable with NDP economics. Others will be offended by working with the BQ as legitimate federalists. A few more might be concerned about their own ridings or falling poll numbers if the coalition goes South. It will not be fun running government during this economic crisis. Whoever leads will take a hit in popular support due to the battered economy. If Conservative numbers go through the roof and the Liberal vote collapses, some politicians might be interested in saving themselves over their party. Right leaning Liberals no longer have a home in the Liberal party. The hardcore bases in all three parties will be upset and will want their demands met by this coalition.

8. Throw courtesy out the window. Question the coalition PM’s legitimacy when attending overseas conferences representing Canada. Ask for meetings with foreign leaders as “Canada’s elected government”. If poll numbers show an inevitable Conservative majority, this becomes easier. In America there is a tradition that you do not criticize the President when overseas. I am not sure if that tradition is upheld in Canada but I would not extend it to this coalition. Constantly portray the government as temporary and unstable.

9. Every question in question period should focus on the theme of a lack of mandate or a lack of legitimacy that this new government has. The new government should be portrayed as a coup and compared to countries where such a thing is common.

10. Pin everything negative about the economy on the coalition. “The coalition took us back into deficit”. “Unemployment has increased since the coalition took power”. “Housing market is declining because of polities put forth by this government”. “Jobs are leaving Canada because of this government”. “National unity is threatened because of this government”. “The dollar is being impacted negatively because of this coalition”. A recession/depression would make it hard for any government to get re-elected. If any economic downturns can be tied to Liberals being extorted by Quebec and socialists; Canadians will be eager to replace it. Liberals had no problem cheering on a recession and pinninig negative headlines to Harper. We should do the same and return the favour.

It is clear that a new coalition would lead to chaos and an even more bitter parliament should it occur. My biggest concern about a coalition is that it would be difficult to defeat. As approval ratings tank, Liberals would have little choice but to give into the demands of the socialists and separatists whose support they would require to maintain power or more importantly avoid an election. If the choice was between the Bloc in cabinet or fighting an election they cannot afford or win; I have absolutely no confidence that Duceppe would not find his way in cabinet.

The next big question is what some Liberals and media have been talking about as well as some Conservative privately. Would Harper be able to stay on as opposition leader and would he even want to? If not would replace him? How? Mysterious websites and emails have popped up for Prentice, Baird, MacKay and Day, but at this point it is unclear if they are disgruntled Conservatives or opposition supporters trying to cause internal questions about Harper’s leadership. Based on Scott Reid’s comments, it is obvious that Liberals want to remove Harper at all costs because he is a threat to Liberal survival. If Harper were to stay on it would lend more legitimacy to the strategy of bringing down the coalition. If someone else took power, it might give us a boost in support but would require time in opposition to select a new leader democratically meaning that this dangerous coalition would run the government for at least six months.

I also expect some left wingers will take issue about pushing strategies that will prevent this parliament from working. I am comfortable with that because I believe the Prime Minister should be elected and that separatists should not be a part of government. If the opposition is so convinced that Harper and Conservatives are bad for the economy and country; they should take that argument to the people and not the Governor General. I also think the GG would be making a huge mistake allowing this coalition to govern without a formal agreement signed by the Bloc Quebecois demonstrating that a Liberal-NDP alliance does in fact have the votes to run government not simply survive confidence votes for a year. How would Canadians benefit from a government that could not pass any legislation unless deemed matters of confidence? Why is the opposition afraid to take this coalition to the electorate?

Is this parliamentary coalition legal? Of course it is under our system. Did Harper cause most of this mess and is much of it his fault? Obviously that cannot be disputed. Having said that, this coup was planned well before the economic statement and Harper's blunder or partisan attitude is not justification to overthrow the election results and install a leader who does not have the confidence of his own party or Canadians. Arguments combining all three opposition percentages of the vote is not democratic. All three leaders campaigned against a coalition, had Canadians known a coalition with the Bloc was on the table a majority would have almost certainly been won by Conservatives and there is no evidence that anyone who voted Liberal, NDP, Green, or Bloc would not have voted Conservative as a second choice or voted for the opposition hoping a coalition would occur. This is a power grab made possible by a huge miscalculation by Stephen Harper, Jim Flaherty and whoever advised this.

Now what is done is done. We will lose a non-confidence vote and this dangerous alliance will take power. All we can do is try and take the issue to the people as soon as possible and trigger an election. While we made a mistake that got us in this mess, I think the Liberal Party has made an even bigger mistake with this action. A majority is ours, problem is how do we take our arguments to the people and cause an election? Coalition members have a right to take government I suppose. They do not have the right to expect our respect, cooperation or support.

-Darryl

It is official...coalition a done deal


It is official...coalition a done deal

Letter below signed by all three opposition leaders with seats in the House of Commons. The coalition agreement is now official and it is a matter of time before we are defeated and a coup takes place in the House of Commons. Stephane Dion will soon be Prime Minister rather Canadians voted for him or not. God help our country. The economy is now in the hands of Stephane Dion and his coalition of socialists and separatists. All because the parties who lost the last election have decided this is what is in the best interests of Canadians even though they all campaigned against this coalition idea in an election six weeks ago. The government will have no mandate or legitimacy but will be in power nonetheless.

Now Bob Rae is right there is no turning back. This coalition is now responsible for all wrong with the economy not Harper and the Conservative Party anymore. In the next election there will be a two party system. Opposition vs. Incumbants. Liberals can no longer say the NDP doesn't understand the economy with any kind of credibility. NDP can no longer call Liberals arrogant or right wing. Neither the NDP nor Liberals can campaign negatively against the Bloc Quebecois or say working with them threatens national unity. Frankly they are now all the same party and will all go into the next election with identical records. Blue Liberals no longer have a place in their party (but would be welcome in ours as the only party not on the extreme left). Federalist and economic credentials within the Liberal Party are now suspect and questionable because of this arrangement. Federal Liberals have proven that they are in fact an arrogant power driven party that lacks any kind of identifiable principle. What they have demonstrated today is that they haven't learned from their sense of entitlement exposed during the sponsorship scandal that forced them out of power to begin with.

If this coalition falls a part or turns out to be a disaster, Canadians will only have one option to replace all of them with - the Conservative Party. The question now is, what kind of country will be left by the time we finally face the people and earn our majority and role in government? What does this mean for Harper's leadership? What is the fastest way we can bring this dangerous alliance down? What exactly has been promised to the separatists to guarantee their support for 18 months? Who will be the next Prime Minister in May assuming this coalition lasts that long before an election is called?

Today is a sad day to be a Canadian. Our vote no longer counts in this country. Canadians who say they have lost faith in all politicians would be tough to argue with right now.
-Darryl

**

Globe and Mail Update

Liberal Party Press Office

New Democratic Party Press Office

Bloc Québécois Press Office

Monday, December 1, 2008

To our fellow citizens,

Canada is facing a global economic crisis. Since the recent federal election, it has become clear that the government headed by Stephen Harper has no plan, no competence and, no will to effectively address this crisis. Therefore, the majority of Parliament has lost confidence in Mr. Harper's government, and believes that the formation of a new Government that will effectively, prudently, promptly and competently address these critical economic times is necessary.

The contrast between the inaction of Mr. Harper's government and the common action taken by all other Western democracies is striking. We cannot accept this.

A majority of Canadians and Quebecers voted for our parties on October 14, 2008. Our Members of Parliament make up 55 per cent of the House of Commons.

In light of the critical situation facing our citizens, and the Harper government's unwillingness and inability to address the crisis, we are resolved to support a new government that will address the interests of the people.

Today we respectfully inform the Governor General that, as soon as the appropriate opportunity arises, she should call on the Leader of the Official Opposition to form a new government, supported as set out in the accompanying accords by all three of our parties.

Respectfully,

Hon. Stéphane Dion Leader,

the Liberal Party of Canada

Hon. Jack Layton Leader,

the New Democratic Party of Canada

Gilles Duceppe Leader,

the Bloc Québécois

Blast from the Past: Liberal 2006 attack ad about Harper and the Bloc


Blast from the Past: Liberal 2006 attack ad about Harper and the Bloc

Click here to see it. And Liblogs are calling us hypocritical...

Quote from the 2006 Liberal campaign ad against "Harper and the Bloc".

"Gilles Duceppe and Stephen Harper worked together to bring down the government. Lots of late night secret meetings. Apparently, they're quite a team. Which is great. Because if Harper wins this election? He'll have to work very, very closely with Duceppe. Unfortunately, their unity won't do much for Canada's unity."

Funny how what was scary for unity in 2006 is now what is best for Canadians in 2008.
-Darryl

Breaking News: Dion will lead the coalition


Breaking News: Dion will lead the coalition

Apparently he received unanimous consent among Liberal MPs. They also say they have agreed on a 30 billion dollar stimulus package with the other two opposition parties. Three questions...

Will Dion implement the carbon tax he campaigned on six weeks ago?

Is it true that Liberals have agreed to raise corporate taxes 50 billion dollars to secure NDP support?

What has been promised to the separatists?

Raising taxes on Canadian corporations that provide jobs, a carbon tax on individuals and a government that requires separatist support on every issue does not give me much confidence. Somehow I am not sure that all of this is the solution to our economic troubles in Canada.

-Darryl

First Question in the House of Commons for Prime Minister Ignatieff or Dion


First Question in the House of Commons for Prime Minister Ignatieff or Prime Minister Dion

In the event of a coalition, all opposition questions should focus on the legitimacy of any proposed coalition government. Here are two potential questions for Prime Minister Ignatieff or Prime Minister Dion should this coalition actually happen. Liberals feel free to use the comment section to try and come up with an answer.
-Darryl

Prime Minister Ignatieff:

"Mr. Speaker, the current Canadian Prime Minister has lived most of his life outside of Canada, has limited experience in the House of Commons and was not elected leader of his own party by Liberal members or Prime Minister by Canadian voters. Mr. Prime Minister...who has given you a mandate to sit in that chair?"

Prime Minister Dion:

"Mr. Speaker, the current Prime Minister was clearly rejected by the Canadian voters in the last election. Among all leaders he consistently polled as the worst option to become Prime Minister. His party finished at their lowest levels since confederation. Only 26% of Canadians voted for him and his party. He lacks confidence even within his own party. To the Prime Minister - what gives you a mandate to serve in that role and how can any Canadian have confidence in your weak leadership during these tough economic times?"

First opposition day motions:

"The Canadian House of Commons recognizes Quebec as a province within a united Canada"

"The Canadian government reaffirms its support of the Afghanistan mission until 2011."

How will the BQ vote on the first one? How would the NDP vote on the second one?
-Darryl

NDP and Liberals reach a deal but is Iggy onside?


NDP and Liberals reach a deal but is Iggy onside?

It appears the NDP and Liberals have reached a deal on a coalition, but is Michael Ignatieff on side? It appears he might be getting cold feet knowing it is most likely that he will lead the Liberals into the next election and is starting to see the consequences of what this unholy alliance could mean for the next campaign. If Igantieff or any of the other leadership candidates are smart, they would let Dion be leader. I would not want my leadership tarred by working with the Bloc Quebecois and the socialists. I would also be afraid to take leadership during a time of economic crisis where the inevitable deficits, increased unemployment and other economic indicators are sure to impact the popularity of whoever is the Canadian Prime Minister over these next few months. If I am Michael Ignatieff I would also be afraid of Question Period where his legitimacy to serve as Prime Minister would be heavily attacked.

With a lack of Conservative support on any issue, it is clear that the Bloc, NDP and Liberals will be forced to agree on everything to get something accomplished. If the coalition agreement only means that the BQ will support the government on confidence votes, than the consequence of that means nothing will get passed except on confidence votes or unless the Bloc supports the legislation. Committees will be disfunctional. Western premiers would be angry about their lack of influence in the new government. World leaders might be confused about who is running the show in Canada. Protests are possible. The Liberal leader at the head of the coalition would be forced to give in to extortion from the NDP and Bloc Quebecois at every turn or else they would face an election as the alternative. Michael Ignatieff is a smart man and I believe he wants no part of this coalition. A good friend of mine posted on his facebook that for the cost of 30 million dollars Flaherty has managed to unite the left. That is probably true, but I would also argue that the price of this coalition may be a Conservative majority that up until now has not been possible. Any Liberal west of Ontario knows full well they would be toast if they were part of a coup that completely reduced all influance in the West and replaced it with a government controlled by 69 Quebec MPs with 50 of them representing a separatist party. Does the NDP want to keep their seat in Alberta? The opposition has a choice, power now illegitimately for a period of time with the consequence being opposition for a generation after the next election or they can rebuild and earn power through democratic means. I predict Liberals will take the quick route to power because in their minds it is an entitlement.
-Darryl


Ignatieff balks at joining NDP, Bloc

John Ivison, National Post Published: Monday, December 01, 2008


Liberal leadership candidate Michael Ignatieff is unlikely to support the coalition deal being negotiated by lame duck leader Stephane Dion -- a decision that would doom the opposition parties' attempt to bring down the government next week in a vote of no-confidence in the House of Commons.

A person close to Mr. Ignatieff said that any deal with the Bloc Quebecois and NDP struck by Mr. Dion would be a "poison chalice" for the next leader.

He said that Mr. Ignatieff has the support of more than 50 of the 77 Liberal MPs, so the success or failure of a coalition proposition will depend on how the leadership candidate views any deal.

Although Mr. Ignatieff has publicly maintained the official Liberal line that the government should fall over its handling of the economy, his supporters say any coalition deal with the left-wing NDP and separatist Bloc is fraught with risk. It would only take nine Liberals to be absent from the House next Monday for the government to survive, and the source said he fully expects a number of no-shows.

Liberal attempts to reach a deal with the NDP face a number of hurdles, not least of which is the New Democrats' insistence on a senior economic portfolio such as industry for leader Jack Layton.

The Liberals are equally determined that those economic jobs should be held exclusively by them. But one senior Grit confided that the internal leadership dynamic creates even bigger obstacles to an agreement than negotiations with the New Democrats.

The source in the Ignatieff camp said Mr. Dion is making all the decisions on coalition talks with the NDP and the Bloc Quebecois, and is not consulting with leadership candidates, Mr. Ignatieff, Bob Rae or Dominic LeBlanc.

"Dion is like Frankenstein's monster -- he's on the slab and just had a jolt of life injected into him. He's going full tilt ahead with this coalition but his caucus isn't going with him," the source said.

Mr. Ignatieff's supporters are aware that a coalition would be shaky, and probably short-lived. The Conservatives opened their war room yesterday, just in case the country is plunged into an election next week, and are already preparing to hammer the Liberals for striking a deal with the sovereigntist Bloc. "Ignatieff knows he will probably be leader next May, so why not do it cleanly and properly? What's in it for him to be part of this power grab?" asked one Conservative, who said he was also hearing from sources that Mr. Ignatieff does not want to be part of any deal.

Despite the increased likelihood that the government will survive the confidence vote, the coming week is still likely to be full of high drama.

Yesterday, the government continued its attempts to remove the irritants that provoked the crisis. The proposed ban on strikes for the public service was ditched, following the remarkable U-turn on the public funding of political parties issue on Saturday. Jim Flaherty, the Finance Minister, said yesterday that he will bring down a Budget on Jan. 27, although he stopped short of promising the kind of stimulus package the opposition parties have been demanding.

Scott Brison, the Liberal finance critic, said that the government's moves mean nothing. "We can't trust anything this government says anymore. We have no faith in this Prime Minister," he said.

The Conservatives hope that the focus of media coverage will now shift to the potential coalition partners and what the some Tories have been calling their " coup d'etat."

The allegation that NDP leader Jack Layton and the Bloc Quebecois' Gilles Duceppe held conversations about a coalition long before the current crisis offered the Conservatives the chance to hit back after days of being pounded over the political funding issue. They charged that the confidence vote is not about the handling of the economy or the government's fall update, "[It] is merely a trigger to execute a long-standing secret deal between the NDP and the Quebec separatists."

The Conservatives have alleged that the moves by the opposition parties to offer themselves up to the Governor-General as a viable alternative, should the government fall, are undemocratic. However, the Liberals retaliated by saying that Mr. Harper, Mr. Layton and Mr. Duceppe presented precisely the same proposal to former Governor-General, Adrienne Clarkson, in 2005.

The only certainty amidst the drama is that Stephen Harper has been wounded by his miscalculation. His reputation for strategic brilliance is in tatters and many Conservatives have started speculating about leadership challenges.

Final option: prorogue parliament until January 27


Final option: prorogue parliament until January 27

It is clear that Stephen Harper has lost the confidence of the House of Commons. Opposition parties have been planning a coup d’état since the results came in on the last election six weeks ago. Harper now has two choices. Give up power to a coalition controlled by Stephane Dion, the separatists and socialists or simply attempt to govern constantly under threat of a coup and as a result lose the right to actually govern due to the fact that a united opposition would constantly force his hand. We have made concessions, but the opposition will not back down. They smell power even if it is unearned, even if the government would be illegitimate, even without a mandate from the people. At this point we can no longer control what happens. It comes down to an election or coalition government sooner vs. later. Therefore Harper should consider two options. The first option prorogue parliament until January 27. This would eliminate the House of Commons until the Harper government has a chance to come back with a budget. The budget could address things such as the stimulus package, auto industry and neutralize opposition arguments for a coalition. It could also be positioned as an election document and platform for what would likely be an election campaign in short order rather a coalition occurs or not. It could also demonstrate that the coalition simply wants power at all costs. Finally it would save us an election campaign over the Christmas and holiday season. Harper has a second option as well and that is to gamble people are disgusted by this coalition and visit the governor general right now or before December 8. That would force the opposition to rapidly put together their common agenda, conclude negotiations and formally sign a three way pact that the opposition could govern. If they are bluffing or if the coalition talks break down; we are in an immediate election campaign and the people can decide if they want the separatist Bloc Quebecois in their government coalition during these economic times.

Personally if I was Harper, I would prorogue the parliament until January 27. I would then put together a well thought out budget on the economic crisis along with a Conservative vision for going forward that could be used in an election campaign. If most "lack of stimulus" demands are addressed by the Conservatives as dictated by the opposition, the argument for the coalition will disappear. At that point any power grab would be seen for what it really is - opposition parties overturning the results of the election campaign. There is no question we have already lost the confidence of the House and can no longer work within this parliament. The only choice that remains is to visit the Governor General now and avoid delaying the inevitable or otherwise prorogue parliament, come back with a strong budget and position ourselves in the best possible way against this coalition. Volunteers and the Canadian electorate should enjoy the holiday season. Obviously parliament is disfunctional with nothing getting done. It is time to prorogue parliament until January 27 to give us the opportunity to prepare a budget and plan to address this economic crisis while at the same time delaying the total disaster a Dion led separatist and socialist coalition would become. Prorogue or visit the GG now. The choice is yours Mr. Harper.
-Darryl