Senate Scandal? What scandal? We've got Trudeau to cover!

Trudeau and Dubourg
DRUMMONDVILLE, QC: Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau (left) introduces Bourassa candidate Emmanuel Dubourg at the meeting of the General Council of the Liberal Party of Canada (Quebec) on Nov. 9, 0213. (Monia Puzet/QMI AGENCY)

As we left the House of Commons last Friday before a “break week”, NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair — the leader of Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition — had spent much of the week giving Prime Minister Stephen Harper the gears over the so-called Senate scandal. Noted curmudgeon political columnist Andrew Coyne called Mulcair’s performance the best he’d seen in Question Period.

But the triumph for Mulcair — and the doldrums for Harper — were to be shortlived.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau was hitting the road as “break week” opened up — and was ready to steal the headliness.

First stop: A trendy meeting place in downtown Toronto for “Ladies Night” with JT. And a headline-making opportunity it was:

Then, while at Ladies Night, Trudeau professes admiration for “China” and its “basic dictatorship.” What prompted this observation? Wasn’t a gotcha question from a reporter — it was a query from the event organizer, loyal Liberal Amanda Alvaro!

We reported it immediately. Completely. Included Trudeau’s “joke” about Sun News. For other news organizations, it took a day or four but the headlines would come:

At this point, Toronto Star senior writer Susan Delacourt is able to write a very thoughtful and level-headed blog post about “Trudeau’s Three Thursday Mistakes

So Saturday was a down day.

Then, on Sunday afternoon, Trudeau hauled out the iPad and engaged in some idle chit-chat with followers. He noted his favourite movie, gave up his last iTunes music purchase and, oh yes, he mused about rolling back some of those mandatory minimum sentences. Didn’t say anything else about it though. Just sit back and watch the fun!

And, again, while we reported on the mandatory minimum issue right away, the country’s columnists were still getting their heads around the China comment from the previous Thursday. So, Monday’s papers included:

Again — I’ve not mentioned anything that went out across our chain — we reported and opined on this extensively — lest you think this issue was a hobby horse of Sun Media’s. But I’m sure you’ll find what I and my colleagues wrote/reported in the usual places.

On Monday, Trudeau ceded the headline-making ground to one of his MPs. Jim Karygiannis goes on CBC’s politics program and criticizes a Harper government program which gives wounded veterans a lump sum for a disability rather than pension. What’s Karygiannis’ beef with a lump sum for veterans? Well, it would encourage those disabled veterans to blow it on a fast car or booze. Karygiannis made this comment on, of all days, Remembrance Day. He issued a clarification some hours later.

All right, surely Tuesday would be better. Mmm. Not quite. First, Trudeau travels to Montreal, to the riding of Bourassa where he is rallying his troops ahead of the Nov. 25 by-election there. He does this by saying:

But wait a minute. That begs the obvious question: The Liberals have held Bourassa since 1997. If they were indeed “ready for change”, wouldn’t they vote for anyone but a Liberal? Meanwhile, back on that CBC show, another one of Justin Trudeau’s colleagues was taking the hint Trudeau tweeted on Sunday and really, really running with it. Here’s Maclean’s John Geddes:

This is interesting because:

We are two days into a break week — and six days from the historic suspension of three sitting senators, suspended in a scandal that reaches right up to the Prime Minister’s Office. And yet — there’s Trudeau. Hogging all the headlines.

 

9 thoughts on “Senate Scandal? What scandal? We've got Trudeau to cover!”

  1. Thank you for reminding us of why the Liberals are now the third party.

    The Keystone cops of Canadian politics, Justin’s Liberals, need a time out – and then reflect on what – if anything – they believe in.

    Which federal party is goofier – the Liberals or the Conservatives?

    Which federal party is more ethically bankrupt – the Liberals or the Conservatives?

    Tom Mulcair is an island of sanity in an ocean of old-line party bafflegab, corruption and entitlement.

  2. I guess the Drive by Consensus media has actually been forced to report on “the boy”. It won’t change a thing though. They will still be Romancing the Stoner” a year from now.

  3. Sun News and particularly Mr Akin, led the nation in political news last week. Well done!
    SunNN and social media have somewhat leveled the playing field, the Libluvin media can’t control the newswires anymore.

  4. Sure sounds a lot like the cons are starting to fret a bit. Character assignation is their tool…..just like a lot of their “base”.

  5. Yet again Trudeau gets misquoted. Sure he rambled on giving lots of opportunity for taking quotes out of context. Please provide the full quote and let the readers decide whether he admired the “basic dictatorship” or the “basic dictatorship in their ability to turn the economy around on a dime.”
    Does Trudeau admire the Chinese dictatorship as the Conservative propaganda would have us believe? Or does Trudeau really admire the ability to turn the economy on a dime?
    Conservative propaganda will always give you quotes and statistics taken out of context. If you write, as Dave Akin does, for general consumption you should do your homework, dig beyond the propaganda and give us readers the full story. You will be doing a service to all Canadians.

  6. The Cons and their followers like Akin never cease to amaze me. Not that Justin’s an angel by any means (no politician is), or doesn’t have his share of faults as a candidate, are you seriously suggesting that his comments outstrip the Senate fiasco as the most scandalous story of the week? Let’s see: dupe tapayers out of literally hundreds of thousands, with at least a paper trail leading to the PMO and investigations by the RCMP, no less, that is far from over; or, a ridiculous and irresponsible comment made (and again, let’s be clear, it was a ridiculous and irresponsible comment) by Justin Trudeau. If forced to, David, which event would you choose as the most damaging to the credibility of any government? Sorry, but your attempt to shield the troubles of the PMO behind this smoke-screen is lame at best.

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