A decade ago this week, Stockwell Day lost his leadership of the Canadian Alliance to Stephen Harper, an event which turned out pretty well for both men. On that anniversary, I spoke to Day (below) who was in Mumbai, India when I reached him. We talked about that Harper decade but we also reflected on another leadership race — the race New Democratic Party’s race to name a new official opposition leader this week. In our papers today, I argue that more Canadians have moved left than right during the Harper decade. Day, in our interview, welcomes the disappearance, if you will, of the centre because he believes it will focus policy debate in Canada and may even mean fewer ad hominem political attacks and more back-and-forth focused on policy. “What it will mean is much clearer lines of debate for Canadians. Clearer policy differences.” Watch the video…
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Has Canada moved left during the Harper decade?
In my column across our chain today, I suggest that the answer to that question may be yes!
Harper has convinced fewer than a million Canadians to move right in the last decade, while Jack Layton convinced a whopping 3.4 million Canadians to move left to vote NDP in same period.
Moreover, a New Democrat looks a good bet to win the premiership in B.C. next year.
A New Democrat is premier in Manitoba and Nova Scotia. New Democrats are the official opposition in Saskatchewan and hold the balance of power in Ontario
Please, if you would, read the rest of my argument at the Ottawa Sun’s site...
The Wildrose bus and its, er, odd tire placement
UPDATE: Scroll down for the poll!
The Wildrose Party and its leader Danielle Smith today unveiled the election bus it will use this spring in an attempt to unseat the Progressive Conservatives and Premier Alison Redford. Seems to me Wildrose is off to an, um, eye-catching start. (Photo credit: Amber Bracken Edmonton Sun.) Continue reading The Wildrose bus and its, er, odd tire placement
Wildrose MLA suddenly remembers: "Alberta taxpayers do not owe me anything"
A couple of weeks ago, the Canadian Taxpayers Foundation held its annual awards for the most egregious examples of wasted tax dollars. The winner in the provincial category was the Alberta legislature’s Standing Committee on Privileges and Elections, Standing Orders and Printing Committee which hasn’t met since 2008 but the 21 MLAs who serve on that committee have been paid $1,000 a month for “working” on that committee nonetheless.
The revelation immediately caused an uproar in Alberta. Progressive Conservative Premier Alison Redford, who must face the voters within weeks, immediately cancelled the pay program for this moribund committee. Continue reading Wildrose MLA suddenly remembers: "Alberta taxpayers do not owe me anything"
Ontario's sorry court document system and other Web bits
Recommended bits from around the Web:
- At the SLAW blog, Simon Fodden puts up some extended quotes from Justice David Brown who delivered “a scathing and at times sardonic denunciation” of Ontario’s Sorry Court Document Management System Ripped by Judge
- Over at Forbes, Elise Ackerman notes that Government Investigations of Google Pile Up. Back at the SLAW blog, Michael Lines provides an excellent Google Roundup of how the company that once promised itself to do “Do No Evil” may be drifting from that mission.
- Tufts University professor Daniel Drezner puts up a relatively provocative post at Foreign Policy asking Should Women Get Ph.Ds in international relations? Continue reading Ontario's sorry court document system and other Web bits
Carroll to ETHI committee: Relax, I'll be there when I'm better
The House of Commons Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics wishes to have Adam Carroll appear before it on the Vikileaks30 matter. Carroll is the former Liberal party staffer who confessed to being behind that Twitter account. Here is the response to the committee’s request from Carroll’s lawyer Paul Champ: Continue reading Carroll to ETHI committee: Relax, I'll be there when I'm better
Back and forth with the NDP leadership race
A few interesting developments today in the NDP Leadership race:
- Leadership candidate Martin Singh is telling his supporters that after marking him as number one on the preferential ballot being used in the race, they should mark rival Thomas Mulcair as number two. This comes after a week in which the Brian Topp Continue reading Back and forth with the NDP leadership race
The beefcake pics! Trudeau vs Brazeau fight for the cure!
The Papineau Pugilist, Liberal MP Justin Trudeau (left) is all set to take on the Senate Slugger, Conservative Senator Patrick Brazeau (right), on Saturday, March 31 at the Hampton Inn Ottawa. Can’t make it? Don’t worry — Sun News Network has the exclusive broadcasting rights and we’ll be showing it live!(Thanks to mediaball.ca for those great pix.)
It’s all for a great cause, too — raising money for cancer research.
Ringside seats are already sold out but there’s singles left. Find more info at fightforthecure.ca
We’ve been watching both men train and it looks like a decent matchup. Brazeau looks to have a heavier punch but Trudeau is taller with a longer reach and looks pretty quick on his feet. Good luck, gentlemen!
Will Ottawa turn to the U.S. to solve its search-and-rescue plane problem?
For a few weeks now, defence and aviation industry sources have been buzzing about fate of the fleet of a couple of dozen C-27 Spartans sold to the U.S. air force by their manufacturer, Italy’s Alenia. To cut its monster-sized military budget, the U.S. is mothballing its C-27 (right) program and may be ready to sell the planes, possibly to Canada. Canada, for a decade, has been trying to ‘procure’ new fixed-wing search-and-rescue (FWSAR) planes to not only replace our 50-year-old fleets of West Coast-based FWSAR craft but also boost our FWSAR capability in the rest of Canada. Continue reading Will Ottawa turn to the U.S. to solve its search-and-rescue plane problem?
Margaret Atwood: The Turnip Who Would Be PM and other Tales from the Enchanged E-Forest
I’ll bet a nickel that this is the first time the populist Toronto Sun has been cited in the New York Review of Books, a favourite of left-wing intellectual elites. (I read and enjoy both!).
The citation comes via Margaret Atwood who blogs at NYRB.com about Twitter, The Rotating Skull, The Ford Brothers, The Turnip Who Would Be PM, and other Tales from the Enchanted E-Forest. An excerpt: Continue reading Margaret Atwood: The Turnip Who Would Be PM and other Tales from the Enchanged E-Forest