April 23, 2005

To the polls! (C'mon, you know you want to.)

Apr. 23 - The impact of Adscam is finally returning to the one arena that most needs to be challenged: the Ontario voter. I say "returning" because when Ontarians went to the polls last year far too many of them surrendered to the devil they knew and returned the Liberal Party to power - albeit limited as other Canadians were less willing to consort with that devil.

There's no getting around it: Quebeckers punished the Liberal Party. Albertans punished the Liberal Party. The Liberal Party leads a minority government because some Ontarians punished the Liberal Party but those in greater Toronto area did not - and the mayor of Toronto is setting the stage for us to be bribed - again:

"It would be very serious," he told reporters Saturday. "It would cost us, directly, $40 to $50 million this year. That's equivalent to about a four per cent tax hike. And indirectly, tens of millions more."

The impact would only get worse in succeeding years, he said.

Miller is worried about his city's share of federal gas tax revenue promised by the Liberal government of Prime Minister Paul Martin.

The Toronto Star newspaper published an editorial Saturday opposing an early election. The newspaper said if the Martin government were defeated without the budget being passed, it would cost Canada's cities $600 million in lost gas tax revenue.

We've all read the accusations that Quebec holds Canada for ransom and that rivers of federal money flow into Quebec, but Quebeckers refused to be bribed in the last federal election. I wish I could say the same for Ontario.

Kateland recognizes the tip of an iceberg when she sees it:

Adscam only represents one Liberal run government program. If this is how the Liberals ran the sponsorship program in Quebec; whatÂ’s to say that all the other liberal government programs in Quebec and the rest of the country are not run the same way? Think GUN REGISTRY or STRIPPERGATE for starters. Adscam is only where they got caught holding the smoking gun - not evidence of innocence.
Let's take it even further. If Benoit Corbeil's statements are true, the Liberal Party systematically set out to destroy the Progressive Conservative Party in Quebec and see to it that the Liberal Party and Canada became synonymous. What's to say they didn't also try to subvert the democratic process in other provinces?

Joe Clark, the last leader of the federal Progressive Conservative Party, actually endorsed Paul Martin and the Liberal Party over Stephen Harper and the newly merged Conservative Party of Canada one year ago. Greg Weston wrote a column last May in which he accused some very senior Tories of making a secret deal with the Liberal Party in the 2000 election to secure Clark's re-election in return for securing Alberta Liberal Anne McLellan's re-election - and then some:

Two weeks before Jean Chretien called the country to the polls in October 2000, reliable sources say, a small group of top Tory officials cut a secret deal to help Chretien's ultimately successful national campaign for a third majority government.

In return, the Liberals agreed to throw the vote in the Calgary Centre riding of then Tory leader Joe Clark.

In what may have been a series of similar deals, sources say the Tories also agreed to "stand down" to help Liberal Deputy Prime Minister Anne McLellan hang on to her Edmonton seat, which she won by only 733 votes.

Sources refuse to divulge details of what, exactly, the Tories agreed to do for the Liberals. One would say only that the deal "without question, helped them (the Liberals) nationally."

Another tool in the Liberal Party bag has been bribery of provincial governments by means of transfer payments to provinces - and that means they can also withhold transfer payments to punish provincial governments.

People should be outraged that the government give or withholds their money according to "correct voting," (it isn't that different from the kind of tactic that people like Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe uses.) Nevertheless, the Liberal party was elected in Ontario with a general expectation that the federal Liberal party would loosen the purse-strings more readily for their provincial cousins than they had for the Progressive Conservative-led government and once the Liberals were installed, the federal government re-opened talks about extra money for Ontario - and nobody so much as blushed.

Kateland analyzed the reaction to Martin's pathetic speech April 22:

My conclusion was that the typical Ontarian will give him [Paul Martin] kudos and high marks for stating the obvious and delivering it with obvious sincerity. ..

Will that work? Canadians are neither naturally politicos or idealistic. We tend to take people at their word rather than judging them by their actions. I think the most common phrase in Canada is that “he means well.” That excuses all.

Here in Toronto, people desperately need that excuse so they can do the math from a high moral ground:

"he meant well"
+
"he'll give us money"
Toronto votes Liberal.

This should be easy, because it is for that monetary incentive that they voted Liberal last year. (Sheesh, sex workers have more brains than had the average Torontonian voter because they demand to be paid before rendering service.) The only question is how easily Torontonians can be fooled twice.

Martin's plea to let him "clean up the mess" sounds very reasonable unless you're alert like Laurent and remember a 1995 assertion from then Minister of Finance Paul Martin:

The problem is that Paul Martin has been claiming for the last 10 years that he was cleaning up. As soon as his 1995 budget speech, he claimed that he had introduced "a new and much tighter system to manage its spending" and that his first priority was to "eliminate waste and abuse and ensure value for Canadian taxpayers." We saw the results.
1995 was also the year of the referendum vote in Quebec and the the Liberal conspiracy to destroy the Progressive Conservative Party which was one of the goals for which the Sponsorship Program was designed. The question is inevitable: did Martin tighten the system or loosen it so that Adscam could proceed undetected for several years?

One of Benoit Corbeil's assertions was that lawyers worked for Liberal party candidates with the expectation of receiving appointments to the bench. (Kind of a neat Canadian twist on "will work for food," eh?) Damian Penny and Bob Tarantino write eloquently of their outrage so I won't cover the same ground here.

I seem to be the only person I've read that liked Duceppe's rebuttal last Thursday (and I'm disappointed that CTV didn't see fit to post the text to his speech yet included NDP Leader Jack Layton's) but my impression of Duceppe's remarks was that he appealed to Canadians to restore honesty to the Canadian government, and however cynical one might be about the Bloc Quebecois, there really isn't much we can say to urge Quebec to stay in Canada especially as voting Liberal would be to condone the dirty tactics they used in Quebec which gave a whole new meaning to the phrase "special relationship."

Maybe it's because I'm coming at this whole thing with an American anti-federalist (i.e., pro-States rights, pro-provincial rights) attitude. I can completely sympathize with the desires of both Quebeckers and Albertans to be free of a federal government that increasingly usurps power from provincial governments, takes the revenues of the provinces and then uses that same money to reward or punish according to how the electorate votes.

But this is the interesting part: I think that Ontario and Toronto will get a better deal from the Conservative Party than the Liberals can offer. The Liberals can be fairly confident that, as Toronto voters love platitudes and scare pretty easily, the election is in the bag for them so they can afford to make promises they don't intend to keep, but Conservative MPs would, if elected, have to go extra lengths to meet their promises in order to be re-elected and retain power.

Ah, power. It really is all about power, but there seems to be a perverse disinclination in Canada to examine the pursuit of power. Maybe that's why "he meant well" has such traction and why people seem actually surprised that the Liberal party is as corrupt as it is, and maybe that's why Torontonians, under the veneer of their sophistication, are stupid voters.

The Liberal Party has ruled Canada with unchallenged arrogance for 12 years -- how could anyone realistically expect them not to be corrupt? It defies logic, psychology and history. Mark Steyn puts it succinctly:

In a one-party state, the one party in power attracts not those interested in the party, but those interested in power.
In an age when there is so much talk about empowerment it seems beyond strange that more people don't understand power - personal or political.

It looks as though the Conservative Party is putting together a slate (Conservatives line up high-profile candidates) and, if you can believe anything Layton says, he isn't selling out to the Liberal Party but is willing to go with the proposed Liberal budget if they meet his demands to, er, fight smog (and, socialist to the end, drop plans for a tax rebate cut for businesses.)

Although I don't know if Toronto will vote Liberal or Conservative (or Green, NDP or even Rhinosaurus) I do think it urgently necessary that an election be held now rather than later. Those who vote to oust the Liberals will at least have the knowledge that they personally did not give tacit approval to corruption.

Fighting isn't only about winning, but about reclaiming honour, self-respect and human dignity. People who give into outrage without a fight lose more than those who lose a fight: damage to the spirit lasts longer than bruises and, knowing they wimped out, it gets harder to fight back as each subsequent outrage piles higher like stones on a burial cairn.

(Globe and Mail and Reuters links via Neale News.)

Apr. 24 - 07:56: Criminey, even CNN has noticed that the Liberals are desperate to forge a deal with the NDP and that Bono is disappointed in Martin.

18:12 - I should have read Sari before I posted; she articulates what I felt about Duceppe:

Duceppe had me wishing - not for the first time - that he wasn't on the wrong side, because as usual he stole the show with a fantastic opening line to his speech, something to the effect of "the last time a prime minister addressed the nation, it was 1995 and Chretien was fighting to save Canada; this time, Martin's fighting to save the Liberals". He picked up votes for sure.
It is surprisingly possible that separatist sentiments in the West and Quebec will end up saving Canada by forcing the federal government to return those powers to the provinces which were originally apportioned to them in the Constutution - including health care - and restore the notion of local control over local concerns. Of course, that would mean less power concentrated in Ottawa ...

Apr. 25 - 11:00: RJ at Thoughtcrimes.ca has a key observervation about Duceppe:

Duceppe does not have to maneuver for position nationally as do Martin, Harper, and Layton, so that gives him a bit more room to step up and be statesmanlike. He talked about how the BQ are not supporters of federalism, but that the BQ had pledged to work within the system.

Key to both Harper and Duceppe's speeches was the distinction that the scandal allegations emerging from the Gomery Inquiry are Liberal scandals--not Quebec scandals. An important point that will continue to get much play from both BQ and CPC talking heads over the next few weeks.

The Meatriarchy may reflect the thoughts of many Canadians on Duceppe:
Duceppe - well I didnÂ’t really listen to him. Although the bit I caught he sounded better than usual. If anyone is growing in stature through this thing itÂ’s him.

Posted by: Debbye at 11:56 PM | Comments (8) | Add Comment
Post contains 2009 words, total size 14 kb.

1 Excellent post Debbye. I am absolutely amazed that 36% of Ontario voters still say they support this corrupt and morally bankrupt Liberal party. Clearly the battle will be won or lost in Ontario. We have a lot of work to do to convince our fellow citizens that there is no future in voting Liberal again and again. We keep hearing that no one wants an election. Hell, I don't want an election - but Canada needs an election. And the sooner the better.

Posted by: Bill at April 24, 2005 09:15 AM (utOoq)

2 I'm with you all the way, so I'll engaged in semantic terminological hairsplitting instead. "...I'm coming at this whole thing with an American anti-federalist (i.e., pro-States rights, pro-provincial rights) attitude." The original anti-federalists were the people (like Patrick Henry) who opposed ratifying the US Constitution. The term "federalism" in the US means supporting autonomy for the states (e.g., the Federalist Society, made up of rightwing law students of whom I was one when I was in law school), so a modern "anti-federalist" would be a centralizer. Or not: it's just an ambiguous phrase.

Posted by: Dave J at April 24, 2005 01:25 PM (kLLbt)

3 Hey Debbye, Whew! Quite a post. "I seem to be the only person I've read that liked Duceppe's rebuttal last Thursday (and I'm disappointed that CTV didn't see fit to post the text to his speech yet included NDP Leader Jack Layton's) but my impression of Duceppe's remarks was that he appealed to Canadians to restore honesty to the Canadian government... &" I think the reason that many of us pay little attention to Duceppe is that we have already factored Quebec independence into the equation. Quebec is, de facto, independent. We don't care any more. Therefore, whatever the leader of the BQ or the PQ may have to say about Canada is just background noise. Now, we Canadians want to talk about our future amongst ourselves. The opinions of Duceppe or of the President of Ethiopia may be spot on, but they are of little tangible consequence.

Posted by: keith at April 24, 2005 04:58 PM (HRjgG)

4 Unholy coalition, Batman! Paul Martin and NDP leader Jack Layton are meeting today to hammer out a coalition deal between the Liberals and the NDP. In return for his support of the Liberal government, Layton demands, among other things, that corporate tax cuts promised in the current budget be removed. Jack Layton has political suicide written all over his face - and that of his party. How foolish do you have to be to agree to strike a deal with a party that the whole country knows has been engaged in criminal activities? Could it be that Layton wants to get his share of the Liberal loot? Did he feel left out in the mafia games played by the Liberals for years? Is he miffed because he has never been invited to one of those Italian restaurants in Montréal to collect one of the money-filled envelopes left on a table in a dark corner? Right on the heels of Paul Martin's TV speech, Layton felt the need to establish once and for all that the NDP is also entitled to be part of the mafia family. He clearly wants a seat at the table of the district bosses and divvy up the loot. Let's see how smart (Ontario) voters will be during the next election. But given the fact that more and more Ontarians are swinging towards the Conservatives, and away from the Liberals and the NDP, it could very well happen that voters may leave a horse's head on Layton's pillow or dump him in Lake Ontario with a pair of cement shoes. Remember one thing, Jack: if you lie down with dogs, you'll wake up with fleas.

Posted by: Calgary Cafe at April 24, 2005 05:49 PM (UVWco)

5 Duceppe is a formidable politician, and he certainly outshone everyone else on the stage that night in terms of the statesmanship he displayed.

Posted by: RJ at April 25, 2005 10:17 AM (voaoa)

6 Is anyone digging into where the money went on the Gun Registry? Because it's flat-out impossible that that much money was spent on, well, developing a Gun Registry.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at April 25, 2005 10:50 AM (+S1Ft)

7 Dave, you're probably right, I am not an anti-federalist in the 18th c. sense but I find the ever-growing size of the U.S. federal government very alarming, and the Canadian federal government is even larger (comparative to populations.) Actually, the proper term up here for the union of the provinces is confederation, which for obvious reasons I'm even less likely to use. Pixy, deep respect to you and all Australians on ANZAC Day. In terms of the gun registry, evidently the software cost a million dollars. (Stop laughing! there are actually people up here who believe that figure credible.) Also, the government waged an advertising campaign to fight opposition to the registry. The Gomery Inquiry is not mandated to look at anything besides the Sponsorship Program, but maybe an election will open the doors to a few more questions.

Posted by: Debbye at April 25, 2005 11:06 AM (36r6u)

8 RJ, great post! I read it shortly before I went to work last night but was running too late to link right then. It hadn't occurred to me that Duceppe had more manuevering room precisely because he has no need to run a national campaign, and he could play an interesting role if the media covers his campaign in Quebec.

Posted by: Debbye at April 25, 2005 11:14 AM (36r6u)

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