The Bloc's priorities

The Bloc Québecois will use the current legislative session to push for changes to employment insurance and pay equity. It will also try to position itself as a defender of funding for arts and culture. Here's today's release from the BQ on their parliamentary priorities:

Ottawa, mercredi 4 février 2009 – Le leader parlementaire du Bloc Québécois et député de Joliette, Pierre Paquette, ainsi que la leader parlementaire adjointe et députée de Québec, Christiane Gagnon, ont dévoilé aujourd’hui les priorités parlementaires du Bloc Québécois pour la session qui débute.

« Les priorités que nous présentons aujourd’hui reprennent les propositions que nous avions énoncées dans le plan de relance économique du Bloc Québécois déposé le 24 novembre 2008 et qui ont été reprises par la coalition PLC-NPD », a déclaré Pierre Paquette.

« Au cours des prochains mois, nous allons mettre de l’avant ces propositions qui correspondent aux valeurs et intérêts des Québécoises et des Québécois et qui ne se retrouvent malheureusement pas dans le budget conservateur appuyé par les libéraux », a déclaré Christiane Gagnon.

En déposant des projets de loi et des motions émanant des députés ainsi que par le biais des journées d’opposition, le Bloc Québécois mettra tout en œuvre pour que le gouvernement fédéral réponde aux préoccupations des Québécoises et des Québécois en ces temps économiquement difficiles; notamment en défendant les dossiers suivants :

  • Délai de carence assurance-emploi : Le Bloc Québécois réclamera l’abolition du délai de carence de deux semaines pour la prestation de l’assurance-emploi afin de venir immédiatement en aide aux travailleuses et aux travailleurs qui perdent leur emploi.
  • Bonifications à l’assurance-emploi : Le Bloc Québécois proposera d’assouplir les conditions d’admissibilité au régime d’assurance-emploi et de prolonger les prestations pour s’assurer que les travailleurs des industries saisonnières et les travailleurs à statut précaire (principalement les femmes et les jeunes) soient couverts correctement. Le Bloc Québécois va aussi demander la mise en place d’un programme de soutien au revenu pour les travailleurs âgés.
  • Équité salariale : L’équité salariale est un droit fondamental et non pas un privilège négociable, comme l’a soutenu le ministre Flaherty dans son budget. Le Bloc Québécois défendra le droit des femmes à l’équité salariale de même que la possibilité pour les travailleuses et les travailleurs de faire appel aux tribunaux pour régler les questions d’équité salariale.
  • Supplément de revenu garanti pour les aînés : Le projet de loi du Bloc Québécois prévoit la majoration de 110 $ par mois du supplément de revenu garanti versé aux ainés, la poursuite, pour une période de six mois, du versement de la pension de vieillesse et du supplément à la personne dont l’époux ou le conjoint de fait est décédé, l’inscription automatique des personnes de 65 ans ayant droit au supplément de revenu garanti ainsi que le paiement de la pleine rétroactivité du supplément de revenu garanti aux aînés ayant été lésés.
  • Kyoto : Le Bloc Québécois demandera au gouvernement d’imposer des cibles de réduction absolue des émissions de gaz à effet de serre en se basant sur 1990 comme année de référence afin de permettre au Québec de participer notamment à un éventuel système d’échange de droits d’émissions de gaz à effet de serre pour l’Amérique du Nord.
  • Financement des organismes de développement économique : Le Bloc Québécois réclamera le rétablissement du financement des organismes de développement économique à but non lucratif qui a été coupé par le gouvernement conservateur.
  • Culture : Le Bloc Québécois exige que le gouvernement annule les compressions qu’il a effectuées en matière culturelle et qu’il rétablisse le financement des programmes coupés au niveau où il était au cours de l’année financière 2008-2009.

Pierre Paquette et Christiane Gagnon ont par ailleurs précisé que le Bloc Québécois portera également d’autres de ses engagements électoraux. Mentionnons notamment ceux-ci :

  • Reconnaissance concrète de la nation québécoise : Afin de concrétiser la reconnaissance de la nation québécoise, le Bloc Québécois revendiquera entre autres l’application de la Charte de la langue française dans les entreprises sous juridiction fédérale sur le territoire du Québec en ce qui a trait à la langue de travail.
  • Projet de loi anti-briseurs de grève : Le Bloc Québécois veut interdire l’utilisation de travailleurs de remplacement dans tous les conflits de travail pour protéger les travailleurs sous juridiction fédérale au Québec, qui sont toujours privés d’une telle loi.
  • Section d’appel des réfugiés : Le Bloc Québécois proposera la création d’une section d’appel des réfugiés dans le but de permettre aux réfugiés déboutés de pouvoir faire appel plus efficacement de la décision du gouvernement du Canada de ne pas leur attribuer le statut de réfugié.
  • Crédits d’impôt pour les diplômés qui s’installent en région : Pour contrer l’exode des jeunes et la pénurie de main-d’œuvre qualifiée en région, le Bloc Québécois demandera que le gouvernement fédéral accorde un crédit d’impôt aux jeunes diplômés qui s’installent dans une région ressource pour y occuper un emploi.
  • Retraités floués : Le Bloc Québécois exigera que le gouvernement fédéral offre une compensation aux retraités victimes de la faillite de leur ancien employeur et qui ont vu leur rente de retraite amputée. La compensation devrait prendre la forme d’un crédit d’impôt équivalent à 22 % de la perte subie.

Senator Duffy's maiden speech: Swipes at Premiers Williams and Ghiz

Senator Michael Duffy, as he is styled in Hansard, gave his maiden speech in the Senate yesterday and used the occasion to praise the prime minister and then please the prime minister with some shots at Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams and PEI Premier Robert Ghiz He also forced some debate on the use of BlackBerrys in the Senate. Some highlights:

“…one cannot be a successful leader without sound political judgment and the courage to make tough decisions despite determined opposition.

I am here to tell honourable senators today — this is where the hard part begins — Stephen Harper has both that judgment and that courage. He has an economic plan that I believe is right for these troubled times. Despite the bleating of a few, this economic action plan does more for more people in more parts of Canada than any budget in my memory.

Duffy's BlackBerry then buzzed and, true to form, he stopped what he was saying, read it, and then immediately worked it in to his speech:

My BlackBerry just went off with a message from my staff person in Prince Edward Island, who reminds me, having read this text in advance, not to forget how important small business is to P.E.I. Sixty per cent of all our economic activity is small business.

Shortly after that, he took on Williams and Ghiz:

Honourable senators, I urge you to ignore the nattering nabobs of negativism on the East Coast, particularly the Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador, who, I believe, does not do Newfoundlanders and Labradorians any favours by the kind of personal attacks he has made over the last couple of years; nor by his remarks that paint Newfoundlanders, who are the among the most generous, caring and committed Canadians, as greedy and selfish. Those remarks are unworthy of the great people of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Honourable senators, I was disappointed to see that our dynamic young Premier in Prince Edward Island, Robert Ghiz, has climbed into bed with the Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador, and honourable senators know what a grotesque scene that is. Do honourable senators know what happens when two politicians climb into bed together? One of them comes out on top and I am afraid that when one is in bed with Danny Williams he will come out on top and I would hate to see where that will leave P.E.I. in the end . .

Senator Joan Fraser, who, like Duffy, was a journalist — she was the editor of The Montreal Gazette — prior to her appointment quickly follows and has some bad news for the new senator from Prince Edward Island:

We are always glad to see new senators, particularly when they come from the world's greatest craft.

The honourable senator obviously has many friends in his caucus, and I am sure they have all been helping, supporting and instructing him. However, I wonder whether any of them have yet drawn to his attention a Speaker's ruling that suggests that BlackBerrys are not okay in the Senate chamber.

But, happily for Duffy and other Blackberry-addicted Senators, the Senate rules have been slightly modified, as the Speaker of the Senate, Noel Kinsella, rules:

Senator Duffy: It was brought to my attention that devices that make noise are not allowed in the chamber. I did not realize that BlackBerrys are banned.

The Hon. the Speaker: As reference has been made to the Rules of the Senate, and as it is the responsibility of the Speaker to maintain order and ensure that the rules are followed, I must say that the Honourable Senator Duffy is absolutely correct. Rule 19(4) states that “No person, nor any Senator, shall bring any electronic device which produces any sound . . .” into the chamber.

Hon. Joseph A. Day: It is my understanding that BlackBerrys indirectly make a sound in this chamber by interfering with our sound system. If the Speaker is ruling that it is okay to bring BlackBerrys into the chamber if they are on vibration mode, that is okay, but I do not think that is what we understood to be the situation

The Hon. the Speaker: They did interfere with our older loudspeaker sound system, but we modified the system in the chamber so that they no longer interfere. That is the technical advice we received.

The rule is that if a device makes a noise, it is not allowed in the chamber.

The President's first four calls

I know, I know — everyone in Canada is ga-ga for Obama. Still it's kinda cool that when Obama decided to make his first calls to world leaders, he told his staff: Get me the leaders of Canada, Saudi Arabia, and Great Britain on the phone. After those, then I'll do the Secretary General of the United Nations.

Am I being a homer for noting that Obama called Harper first? I dunno. But the British were pretty chuffed that Brown was the first Euro-leader to hear “Prime Minister, I have the President of the United States on line 1.”

Shame about the minor typo in the White House press release but, as someone who's made oodles in his career, who's gonna complain?

Merrill's darker view: It's going to get worse

Merrill Lynch Canada's Economist and Strategist David Wolf updates his economic outlook for Canada today and it's not exactly a cheery view:

“we continue to see Canada experiencing a deeper recession than does the consensus, with concomitant downward pressure on inflation, interest rates and company earnings.”

All forecasts, and Wolf's is no exception, hinge on the forecaster's prediction for Canada's gross domestic product this year. The “consensus” call (not exactly an average but close enough) of private sector forecasters is that GDP this year will shrink 0.8 per cent. The Bank of Canada thinks it will be worse than that, that GDP will shrink 1.2 per cent. Wolf believes it will be much worse: A contraction for the year of 1.7 per cent.
Why? “Consumer spending … appears to be declining at an alarming pace.”
The worst part of the year is right now, Q1. Wolf cut his forecast from GDP growth of -2.9 per cent to -5.2 per cent.
“The weaker activity outlook prompts a weaker employment profile, with our estimate of the peak-to-trough jobs decline rising to roughly 400K, yielding aprojected unemployment rate of 8.6% by year-end,” Wolf writes.
And what does that mean for the key overnight interest rate in Canada? Wolf says the Bank of Canada will have no choice but lower it to “effective zero.”

January On The Hill

We had more than 128,000 unique visits here in the month of January. Thanks to all who dropped by.

The most popular destination here was a post I made in complaint of a piece published at the online newsletter of the University of Guelph's student government, the Central Student Association. The whole Kinsella-and-Chinesefood thing rated a close second. And a note to those complaining that the MSM gives Kinsella a free pass: I am the MSM. This made the Vancouver Sun, the Ottawa Citizen, the Globe and Mail and many others. Do you guys ever read a paper anymore? (Man, you Conservatives sure do exercised about him!)

Here's the rest of January's hit list with the date of the original post in parantheses:

  1. A request – and a complaint [Sat 10 Jan 2009 11:14 AM EST]
  2. MP demands Kinsella's resignation [Fri 30 Jan 2009 12:25 PM EST]
  3. Chinese restaurant to win new parliamentary business [Fri 30 Jan 2009 02:07 PM EST]
  4. Chinese Conservatives outraged at Kinsella [Wed 28 Jan 2009 12:40 PM EST]
  5. How much does the middle class make? [Mon 05 Dec 2005 07:58 PM EST]
  6. The size of the inaugural crowd: A journalist's dilemma [Sun 18 Jan 2009 10:20 AM EST]
  7. I'm de-Twittering: Here's why [Thu 29 Jan 2009 10:42 PM EST]
  8. Mac OS X YouTube to iPod? Help! [Fri 02 Jan 2009 09:51 PM EST]
  9. 24 Sussex Drive — Great for street hockey [19 Jun 2006 10:46 AM EDT]
  10. Who's heard Tory attack ads on the radio? [Fri 16 Jan 2009 12:29 PM EST]
  11. On the Hill [Mon 12 Jan 2009 05:38 PM EST]
  12. F-35 – Test Flight [Wed 10 Jan 2007 03:07 PM EST]
  13. Learning the hard way: USB Turntables and your Apple Mac OS X computer [Tue 30 Dec 2008 01:11 PM EST]
  14. The toughest job in politics [Thu 08 Jan 2009 06:01 PM EST]
  15. Senator Duffy (and others) join their caucus [Wed 07 Jan 2009 11:00 AM EST]
  16. Will the NDP vote for the budget? [Tue 13 Jan 2009 05:23 PM EST]
  17. Mercedes' SmartCar [Thu 20 Jan 2005 01:03 PM EST]
  18. Bestselling cars and trucks in Canada [Thu 08 Jan 2009 12:24 PM EST]
  19. Who pays for this blog? Some disclaimers [Fri 13 Aug 2004 08:09 AM EDT]
  20. In his last days, Bush looks north [Mon 12 Jan 2009 06:55 PM EST