free_life2 wrote:Now wouldn't it be something if all the party leaders failed to win their ridings.
Now that sounds like a movement and I'm not sure whether I mean a course in direction of a bodily function.

free_life2 wrote:Now wouldn't it be something if all the party leaders failed to win their ridings.

Peter O'Donnell wrote:CBC News is reporting that the firing of Helena Guergis was based on unsubstantiated rumours from a private eye in the pay of the PMO, and letters from a party lawyer to the RCMP, all of which resulted in no actual evidence of wrong-doing. Despite the fact that this all happened within about three months, a year ago, there has been no apology and no reinstatement of the maverick MP and former Cabinet minister.
It strikes me that this is very damaging political material that casts doubt on the ethical practices of the PMO and the Prime Minister. If he wasn't responsible for the original conduct or mistakes, he is certainly responsible for the outcome. And he needs to apologize, and perhaps consider resigning. What that would do to the election, I can't say, but one possible solution would be to have a group of candidates continue on as an independent caucus and assume that they would elect a leader after the election, to serve as either PM or party leader, depending on how they now fare. But Harper, in my opinion, is now toast. I can't see how he can continue on, and there's apparently more stuff coming about what we knew in Afghanistan.
If Canadians are willing to endorse the leadership of a man who would arbitrarily subject an elected MP to false allegations that were not retracted for over a year, then what chance do you or I have for justice in Canada? Of course, I would know, having been blacklisted for thirty years, so to Helena Guergis I say this, welcome to the gulag.
styky wrote:Peter O'Donnell wrote:CBC News is reporting that the firing of Helena Guergis was based on unsubstantiated rumours from a private eye in the pay of the PMO, and letters from a party lawyer to the RCMP, all of which resulted in no actual evidence of wrong-doing. Despite the fact that this all happened within about three months, a year ago, there has been no apology and no reinstatement of the maverick MP and former Cabinet minister.
It strikes me that this is very damaging political material that casts doubt on the ethical practices of the PMO and the Prime Minister. If he wasn't responsible for the original conduct or mistakes, he is certainly responsible for the outcome. And he needs to apologize, and perhaps consider resigning. What that would do to the election, I can't say, but one possible solution would be to have a group of candidates continue on as an independent caucus and assume that they would elect a leader after the election, to serve as either PM or party leader, depending on how they now fare. But Harper, in my opinion, is now toast. I can't see how he can continue on, and there's apparently more stuff coming about what we knew in Afghanistan.
If Canadians are willing to endorse the leadership of a man who would arbitrarily subject an elected MP to false allegations that were not retracted for over a year, then what chance do you or I have for justice in Canada? Of course, I would know, having been blacklisted for thirty years, so to Helena Guergis I say this, welcome to the gulag.
All I can say is that is this the best that the CBC could do. If I were the CPC I'd cut their funding May 3rd
Peter O'Donnell wrote:styky wrote:Peter O'Donnell wrote:CBC News is reporting that the firing of Helena Guergis was based on unsubstantiated rumours from a private eye in the pay of the PMO, and letters from a party lawyer to the RCMP, all of which resulted in no actual evidence of wrong-doing. Despite the fact that this all happened within about three months, a year ago, there has been no apology and no reinstatement of the maverick MP and former Cabinet minister.
It strikes me that this is very damaging political material that casts doubt on the ethical practices of the PMO and the Prime Minister. If he wasn't responsible for the original conduct or mistakes, he is certainly responsible for the outcome. And he needs to apologize, and perhaps consider resigning. What that would do to the election, I can't say, but one possible solution would be to have a group of candidates continue on as an independent caucus and assume that they would elect a leader after the election, to serve as either PM or party leader, depending on how they now fare. But Harper, in my opinion, is now toast. I can't see how he can continue on, and there's apparently more stuff coming about what we knew in Afghanistan.
If Canadians are willing to endorse the leadership of a man who would arbitrarily subject an elected MP to false allegations that were not retracted for over a year, then what chance do you or I have for justice in Canada? Of course, I would know, having been blacklisted for thirty years, so to Helena Guergis I say this, welcome to the gulag.
All I can say is that is this the best that the CBC could do. If I were the CPC I'd cut their funding May 3rd
That would be a month too late to help them. I'm not saying this is bad because it was on CBC, I'm saying it was bad because it was bad.
Some issues transcend partisan politics. This is major trouble for Harper. It will become evident once everyone processes the information. If I were wrong about that, I think I would be inclined to take the advice I got and leave Canada. I have to say (possibly for the last time) that my treatment here has been an ethical nightmare and something that almost any other country on earth would have taken action over. Canadians seem to be almost numb to this sort of thing and perhaps what I am seeing is post-traumatic stress disorder. Anyway, partisans can say what they want, Harper is done.
styky wrote:In Brampton, a suburban boom city grows on fertile electoral ground
JOE FRIESEN
BRAMPTON, ONT.— From Friday's Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Apr. 14, 2011 10:29PM EDT
Last updated Thursday, Apr. 14, 2011 10:59PM EDT
Eight years ago, the riding of Brampton-Springdale didn’t even exist. Today, it’s among the biggest in the country and one of the most fiercely contested seats in this election.
Conservative Leader Stephen Harper made a point of launching his campaign in Brampton and has already returned twice, part of an exceptional effort to target not only Brampton-Springdale, but Brampton West, which the Liberals won by just 231 votes in 2008, and neighbouring Bramalea-Gore-Malton.
Together they make up the kind of suburban boom city that for the past two decades has attracted much of Canada’s population growth. Brampton was once a bastion of old Anglo Ontario, where the Protestant Orange parade was the year’s big occasion. Today, the flying of orange flags signals the arrival of the Sikh Khalsa Day celebration. Just under half the city’s residents are immigrants, and one in three is from South Asia.
These groups represent some of the most coveted demographics in this campaign. Both parties have tailored their policies and political strategies to appeal to new Canadians and their families. The Conservatives in particular, led by Mr. Harper’s lieutenant, Immigration Minister Jason Kenney, have invested heavily in their ability to wrest these seats from the Liberals. The Liberals, who have seen their comfortable margins in the region dwindle, are endeavouring to hold on.
But stand still for a minute in Brampton and the ground will shift. The pace of growth here is relentless. The city, 45 minutes outside Toronto, added an astounding 100,000 residents between 2001 and 2006 as immigrants began to bypass the core of big cities for life in edge communities like this one.
Every evening around sunset, 30 or 40 Indo-Canadian seniors gather in Brampton’s Blackforest Park to chew over the day’s news, men on one side of the road, women on the other. These are some of the voters who’ve been the subject of relentless courting by the Conservative Party.
Major Singh, 67, was a Liberal for most of his 30 years in Canada. He has voted for the incumbent, Liberal MP Ruby Dhalla, in previous elections but won’t support her this time. He doubts she can win again. Mr. Singh senses there’s been enough of a shift among Indo-Canadians to put Ms. Dhalla’s Conservative opponent, Parm Gill, over the top.
Ms. Dhalla, unusually for an opposition MP, has become almost a household name in Canada thanks to her high profile in the media. But her victories have narrowed in every election. The margin now stands at less than 2 per cent, down from 20 per cent in 2004. She has been hurt by a national trend that has seen immigrants turn away from the Liberal Party, as well as by her own bad press.
The Springdale area in the riding’s east, where much of the Indo-Canadian community lives, has been the site of intense campaigning. Both the Conservative and Liberal organizations accuse the other of slashing and uprooting signs. This is the district where Ms. Dhalla must seize a healthy lead if she is to win the riding again.
In the last Parliament, Ms. Dhalla proposed that seniors who had been in Canada for just three years should be eligible for old age supplement payments. It’s the kind of policy that might appeal to Mr. Singh and the rest of the group, but it doesn’t. They dismiss it with shaking heads, all of them surprisingly familiar with the private member’s bill.
“It’s not good policy,” Joginder Pooni said.
Parshotam Goyal, a retired teacher, asks how Ms. Dhalla can be re-elected when her attendance record in the House of Commons is so poor. She missed nearly half the votes in Parliament from 2008 to 2010, though he wrongly believes the figure is 70 per cent. He’s voting Conservative, he said.
more = http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... le1986393/
styky wrote:2nd Liberal says residents targeted by harassing calls
CBC News
Posted: Apr 16, 2011 2:12 PM ET
Last Updated: Apr 16, 2011 2:12 PM ET
Liberal candidate Bob Speller says that harassing phone calls are being made to residences of some people known to be Liberal supporters. Liberal candidate Bob Speller says that harassing phone calls are being made to residences of some people known to be Liberal supporters.
Two Liberal candidates have now asked Elections Canada to investigate reports that residents in their ridings are being harassed by calls falsely claiming to be with their campaigns.
more - http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canadav ... sment.html
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