Conservatives target Ontario

Are the federal Tories thinking about election gains Ontario? They're all over the place there today and, notably, they are in places where the party wants and needs to win:

And, of course, yesterday, Transport Minister Lawrence Cannon and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty decided to use the backdrop of Union Station in downtown Toronto to announce they were giving $690-million to VIA Rail. VIA Rail, of course, is headquartered in Montreal and this announcement likely makes just as much of a difference for Montrealers as it does for Torontonians.

As the Throne Speech nears, pleas for cash go out

The votes on the Speech from the Throne will either sustain Canada’s Conservative government or topple it, sending the country to the polls later this fall. And while many Ottawa insiders believe that, in the end, the government will not fall on the Throne Speech, the opposition parties sent out the call to supporters this week looking for money, just in case they have to fight an election.

I have not seen a ‘we need money’ letter from the federal Conservatives. One may exist but I also suspect that the Conservatives have plenty of cash to fight an election already. It’s the other parties that need to match the Conservatives.

Here’s Conservative-turned-Liberal Garth Turner’s pitch to Liberal supporters, contained in an e-mail that landed in my inbox today:

[Stephen Harper and the Conservatives favour] a concept called ‘incremental Conservativism’ – a plan for a right-wing government to hoodwink voters by making popular, moderate promises and then, once in majority, to unleash a pure, hardcore fundamentalist agenda.

Why would Tom Flanagan admit this in print? Because he’s telling Mr. Harper’s social conservative supporters to be patient, to lie in the weeds, and wait for unsuspecting Canadians to give this minority government a majority mandate.

My opposition to this agenda that the majority of my constituents do not want is what drove me from the Conservative caucus. I joined Stephane Dion and the Liberal Party to stand up for the agenda of tolerance and moderation and ethics in Ottawa. And now we need you.

All Canadians need to be told what the stakes are in the next election. That takes money, and your small donation will help get that message out. It is so important.

Mr. Harper and Mr. Flanagan have this all figured out. You and I and Stephane Dion stand in their way. Please take the time to donate, and give us the weapons to fight for the best interests of Canada.

Mind you, the NDP believes that Turner, Dion and the Liberals are ready to lie down and take one for the team when the Throne Speech comes down. In the NDP pitch for funds, which was sent by e-mail Thursday from Éric Hébert-Daly at NDP Election Headquarters, the NDP says only Jack Layton is ready to stand up to Harper:

You know that it’s just a matter of time before Stephen Harper’s Conservative government falls. With a confidence vote on Harper’s Throne Speech next Tuesday, we could be in an election as early as next week.

With his leadership in crisis, Stéphane Dion and the Liberals are looking inward, focusing on internal strife – they’re in no position to stand up to the Conservatives. 

So it’s up to Jack Layton and New Democrats like you and I to take on Harper.

I’m writing to ask you to make a generous pre-campaign donation right now. I need your help to ensure the NDP is election-ready before this crucial confidence vote.

Stephen Harper will be using the Throne Speech vote to secure a mandate that is wrong for today’s families.

With money in the bank, the corporate-backed Conservatives are ready for an election.  Harper is betting that the opposition will be intimidated into giving him a free pass.

It’s time for the other parties to show their cards. Who will stand up to Stephen Harper’s agenda? 

I’m a little curious how the NDP figures the Conservatives are ‘corporate-backed’. With new campaign finance laws, corporations (or unions, for that matter) can’t give money to any party. And back in the days when corporations could, it was the federal Liberal Party that reaped the most money from Corporate Canada. Moreover, the Conservatives huge success in raising money has come as a result of being the party which is best at tapping into small ‘grassroots’ donations.

And, finally, here is Green Party deputy leader Adrienne Carr from e-mail pitch yesterday:

Last week, Mr. Harper told the opposition parties that they must support his entire agenda or force an election.  Or, to use his words, “It's time to fish or cut bait.”

But what does his ultimatum mean?

It means that from now on it’s Harper’s way or the highway. It means government refusing to listen to other ideas. It means:

  • Canada continuing to conspire with George W. Bush to sabotage the Kyoto Accord solution and fiddle around with half-hearted measures while the planet burns its way to climate catastrophe;
  • Canada continuing to send our brave men and women in uniform to war in Afghanistan;
  • Canada surrendering our sovereignty to the United States under the so-called Security and Prosperity Partnership.

The last thing Canadians want is to spend millions of their tax dollars on the third general election in four years. But if it comes down to a choice between giving Harper free rein to force through his agenda unchanged or giving Canadians the opportunity to cast judgment on the dangerous direction he is taking our nation, the decision is easy.

… We need to hire people so that we can fully prepare our slate of candidates. We need to get our election signs, pamphlets and ads into production. We need to set up canvasses and phone banks to reach out to voters. We need to finalize thousands of details for Elizabeth’s campaign tour.

What we need most to accomplish all of this is money, and lots of it. Elizabeth came a close second in the London North by-election last fall. Her fully-funded $80,000 campaign needed every dollar. (Thank you to everyone who donated!)

I cannot imagine a Green who doesn’t think as I do: that this election is the chance for us to break through. The people and the planet are with us. To be a major player in this election and elect Canada’s first Green Party MPs, we must build a massive Hope Chest, and we need to do it right now. We must ready ourselves to mount a campaign the likes of which we’ve never run before.

So I am joining Elizabeth in asking you, for the sake of Canada and the planet, please donate now

 

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, by the way, has already launched her campaign Web site. She hopes to unseat Defence Minister Peter MacKay in the Nova Scotia riding of Central Nova.

In case you were wondering about Bill Casey …

Earlier this week, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Nova Scotia Premier Rodney Macdonald stood side-by-side in the foyer of the House of Commons to announce that they had pretty much sorted out their differences over the Atlantic Accord and equalization payments.

Bill Casey, the MP from Cumberland—Colchester—Musquodoboit Valley, had stood on the side of Macdonald and many Nova Scotians in this dispute and felt so strongly about it that he voted against his own government’s budget over it. That act got him turfed from the Conservative caucus.

So, now that things with Nova Scotia are patched up, we asked the Prime Minister this week if he was ready to bury the hatchet with Casey:

No. 

Mr. Casey made demands that he knew were incompatible with our budget, that he knew that this government would not agree to and has not agreed to. 

Mr. Casey is not welcome into our caucus and just so I can be as clear as I can be on it, when there is a federal election there will be a Conservative candidate in Mr. Casey's riding and it will not be Mr. Casey.

And for those who just can’t get enough of this whole equalization debate, we have for you a copy of the letter Finance Minister Jim Flaherty wrote to his counterpart in Nova Scotia, Michael Baker, to “conclude our discussions on the application of the 2007 Budget to Nova Scotia”.

Pat Carney packs it in

Conservative Senator Pat Carney (left), summoned to the Senate in 1990 by then Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, is retiring.

Carney, a former journalist who was a Mulroney-era Cabinet minister who helped speed the Free Trade deal along, is retiring from the Senate three years before the legal retirement age of 75.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper made the announcement and did not say why she is retiring:

“On behalf of the Government of Canada, I would like to thank Pat Carney for her 25 years of service to our country.  She has been a passionate voice for British Columbia, first as a Member of Parliament, a Cabinet Minister and as a Senator.

Pat has been a strong voice for women’s rights in Canada and aboriginal and non-aboriginal communities in her native British Columbia.

She was elected as the Member of Parliament for Vancouver Centre in 1980, the first woman to serve as a Conservative MP from British Columbia, and was re-elected in 1984. Summoned to the Senate of Canada in 1990, Pat is the second longest serving member of the Conservative Caucus.

Once again, I thank Pat for all her hard work on behalf of her constituents and her country.”

Ottawa braces for record-setting vehicle imports

Nick Bontis gets the deal of a lifetime: He buys a brand-new 2007 Lincoln Navigator which has an MSRP of $80,000 CDN for $46,200 US — the equivalent, this week at least, of $45,000.

OTTAWA — The federal government agency responsible for tracking cars and trucks imported into Canada from the U.S. is bracing itself for a record-setting year as tens of thousands of Canadians head south to buy vehicles for thousands of dollars less than they could get them in Canada.

The Registrar of Imported Vehicles, an agency of Transport Canada, is on track to deal with as many 160,000 vehicles this year, which will be bought by Canadian consumers from U.S vendors. As recently as 2002, the Registrar was averaging about 38,000 vehicles a year.

In 2006, as the loonie started its climb versus the U.S. greenback, the Registrar recorded 113,000 transactions. This year, it's on track to record between 150,000 and 160,000 transactions.

“Our numbers just went through the roof,” said Gary Moriarty, the Deputy Registrar of Imported Vehicles. “We are now receiving 5,000 phone calls a day.”

Before the loonie surged against the greenback, calls to the Registry were averaging about 900 a day, said Moriarty. Earlier today, one U.S. dollar was worth 97.63 cents Canadian. Or, put another way, one Canadian dollar was worth 1.024 U.S. dollars.

'Pretty sweet deal'

Nick Bontis, an associate professor at the DeGroote Business School at McMaster University in Hamilton, is one of the thousands of Canadians who have found significant savings south of the border. This week, Bontis took delivery of a 2007 Lincoln Navigator, a luxury sports utility vehicle, that has a manufacturers' list price in Canada of about $75,000. After winning an online auction, Bontis paid a New Jersey dealer $46,200 U.S., the equivalent of about $45,000 Canadian.

[Read the full story..]

One year to Olympic tickets !!!

The Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC) announced today the ticket pricing scheme for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games. CTV, if I haven’t yet mentioned it, is the Official Broadcaster for these Games. ‘Course, even if I managed to behave myself and stay employed with CTV for another three years — a length of employment I’ve never ever matched but hope to this time! — there’s no guarantee us political reporter types will get the nod for Olympia. Aaaah, to be Todd Battis, our wonderfully talented Vancouver Bureau Chief ..

In the meantime, I plan to sell much of vinyl record collection in order to join you and yours in line for the following:

For a premium event like the opening and closing ceremonies, prices will range from $175 to $1,100, said Dave Cobb, VANOC's executive vice-president of revenue, marketing and communications.

The must-see events for Canadians are the gold medal games in men's and women's hockey. The prices reflect that. Tickets for the men's event will start at $350 and peak at $775.

Here’s the bumpf from VANOC’s press release:

As the countdown to the first day of ticket sales for the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games begins, we're excited to introduce an accessible and affordable ticket program ensuring all fans have a fair chance to attend the Games and experience this once in a lifetime event.

Highlights of the ticket program include:

– tickets will go on sale in October 2008
– half of all Games tickets will be priced at $100 or less
– more than 100,000 tickets will be available for $25

Information about the ticket program is now available at vancouver2010.com, and new information will be added throughout the coming year.
http://cp20.com/Tracking/t.c?Qde-pBy-3LT656

Follow the links below to find out more about:

– ticket prices
http://cp20.com/Tracking/t.c?Qde-pBz-3LT657
– how to buy your 2010 Olympic Winter Games tickets
http://cp20.com/Tracking/t.c?Qde-pC0-3LT654
– frequently asked questions about the ticket program
http://cp20.com/Tracking/t.c?Qde-pC1-3LT655

What is the government doing to address the high price of gasoline?

In response to a request made under Canada’s Access to Information law, I received today some of the “House Cards” prepared in April, 2007 for then-Industry Minister Maxime Bernier. “House Cards” are prepared daily by departmental staff to prepare the Minister with a suggested answer and background information for questions they might received that day during Question Period in the House of Commons. Most departments prepare these House Cards daily even when Parliament isn’t sitting, in case pesky journalists ask about this issue or that issue.

I had asked on May 23, 2007 for the House Cards prepared in April for Bernier. After much review by government officials, I finally received the heavily censored 37 pages of Bernier’s April “House Cards.”

Here’s one: On Thursday, April 19, an unknown bureaucrat at the Competition Bureau prepared a House Card to answer this question: What is the Government doing to address the high price of gasoline?

The minister’s suggested response is entirely blacked out — a section of the Access to Information Act allows bureaucrats to black out anything that remotely resembles “advice to the Minister” and a ‘suggested response’ qualifies as ‘advice’ — but there is some interesting background provided to the Minister. Here is that background:

Since 1972, the Bureau investigations in gasoline and heating oil have led to 13 trials lnvolving local price maintenance, eight of which resulted in convictions. The Bureau also conducted six major investigations into allegations of collusion and other anti-competitive behaviour since 1990. In each of these investigations, the Bureau found no evidence to suggest that periodic price increases resulted from a national conspiracy to limit competition in gasoline supply, or from abusive behaviour by
dominant firms in the market Instead, it found that market forces such as supply and demand and rising crude oil prices caused the price spikes.

On June 2.2006, the Commissioner of Competition confirmed that the Competition Bureau was investigating allegations of price fixing between competitors in the retail gasoline industry in local markets in the province of Quebec. The investigation is ongoing.

High prices during volatile market conditions are not contrary to the Act. However, agreements among competitors to artificiall fix or raise prices unduly are prohibited under the criminal conspiracy provisions of the Act. The provisions are strictly enforced by the Bureauat all times.

MP Dan McTeague recently blamed closures of refineries in Canada for current shortages in supply and high gasoline prices. Recent supply problems are due to unforeseen events including a fire at the Nanticoke refinery and limited transportation alternatives for refined products.

Get yer tickets for Vancouver 2010!

The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Games will announce details of the ticket program tomorrow:

The Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games are a global event and will be an experience of a lifetime for everyone who attends,” said Dave Cobb, VANOC Executive Vice President, Revenue, Marketing and Communications. “It’s been our goal since day one to develop a fair, affordable and accessible Olympic ticketing program and we look forward to sharing the details of the plan this week with Canadians and potential spectators from around the world.”

VANOC’s announcement on Thursday, October 11 will include the on-sale date for tickets to the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games, how and where the public can access tickets, the pricing of the tickets to each event and a flavour of what the public can expect to experience when they attend Vancouver 2010 events.

Dang! Elvis has left the election …

Well, Danny Williams is still Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador. And sadly, his Opposition — and yes, Virginia, Danny will have an Opposition — will not include Elvis Loveless. Though I don’t know him, I was rooting for him largely because of his name and also, because some Newfoundlanders here in the capital whose opinion I respect, were also rooting for Elvis.

But, sadly, Tracey Perry, the Progressive Conservative candidate in Fortune Bay—Cape La Hune, proved to be nearly twice the candidate Elvis was — beating him 2,539 to 1,395.

Elvis, a Liberal candidate who once worked in former Premier Brian Tobin’s office, shouldn’t feel so bad. His leader, Gerry Reid lost by seven votes in his riding and, across the province, just three Liberals were elected. I’m calling it a Danny Tsunami. They join NDP Leader Lorraine Michael — the only NDP candidate to win — as King Danny’s opposition.