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Fri

15

Aug

2008

Harper Promises Most Divisive Election in Canadian History
written by Chris Cook
Harper Promises Most Divisive Election in Canadian History
by C. L. Cook
Canada's minority government prime minister, Stephen Harper has threatened a Fall election saying the current government was not "tenable." It's an unsurprising move to any who have watched Harper hit the stump over the summer, or to those receiving flyers in the mail emblazened with what will be one of Harper's key issues, 'Youth Crime.'
 
Taking a cue from the Karl Rove school of political manipulation, Harper's hit squad, the shadowy Conservative Research Group, is behind the mass mailings, already controversial for their use of parliamentarian's access to free postage from Canada Post.
 
State news organ, the Canadian Broadcast Corporation simplify the issue below. 


Harper hints at triggering election
by CBC News
Prime Minister Stephen Harper addresses the crowd as he visits Cupids, N.L., on Thursday. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)Prime Minister Stephen Harper hinted strongly Thursday that he may do something to trigger an election because Parliament is not functioning anymore.

Speaking in Newfoundland and Labrador, Harper said Parliament is becoming increasingly dysfunctional, laying most of the blame on Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion and his party.

  • "Quite frankly, I’m going to have to make a judgment in the next little while as to whether or not this Parliament can function productively," Harper said, without elaborating on his plans.

He said legislation is being stalled in the Liberal-dominated Senate and obstructed in the House of Commons "principally by Mr. Dion."

Harper added that the committee system is "increasingly in chaos," an apparent reference to bickering taking place at an ethics committee probe into Tory election ad spending.

Opposition MPs have complained that senior Conservative witnesses have refused to appear while Tory members have accused the committee of being partisan.

He said Dion keeps threatening to force an election. But he said Dion should let Parliament work; otherwise Canadians will have to decide who should have a mandate to govern.

  • "Two of the three opposition parties don't support the government and say we should be defeated. Mr. Dion says he doesn’t support the government but won't say, you know, whether he will defeat us or not," Harper said.

  • "I don’t think that’s a tenable situation."

Last month, in a speech to Conservative party members in Quebec, Harper said Dion should "fish or cut bait" on a fall election. But he appeared to go one step further with his comments on Wednesday.

  • "This is an important message that he sent today because he is really for the first time himself opening the door to the idea that he would be the one to go and dissolve Parliament and provoke an election," CBC's Rosemary Barton said.

There is legislation that sets a fixed election date, the next one scheduled for October 2009.

But Harper could go to the Governor General, explain why Parliament isn't working and dissolve Parliament himself, Barton said.
 
 
 
 
 

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