Hillary's message tempest in a teapot

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
140
63
Backwater, Ontario.
Or so says Larry (loose) Cannon.












Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon speaks with CTV's Question Period in Ottawa, on Sunday, April 4, 2010.




Clinton criticism 'tempest in a teapot,' Cannon says
04/04/2010 12:33:58 PM
CTV.ca News Staff
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was expressing her personal opinion when she criticized Canada's maternal health initiative, not the policy of the Obama administration, Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon said Sunday.


"Mrs. Clinton expressed not her government's position; she expressed her personal point of view … her personal opinion," Cannon told CTV's Question Period.
But in the wake of Clinton's criticism of the Canadian initiative, a key foreign policy program for the Conservative government going into this summer's G8 summit, Cannon acknowledged that the Canadian plan may have to be amended.

























During a visit to Canada last week, Clinton said any maternal health plan must include family planning and abortion, issues the federal government had initially attempted to leave out of its initiative.
Cannon said the issue will be on the agenda when ministers of international aid and development from the G8 nations meet later this month.
"This is a discussion that is ongoing. There are other options that are out there [and] they'll be looked at."
But Liberal MP Scott Brison called Clinton's criticism a "smack down" of the Harper government's maternal health initiative.
"You can't improve the lives of women in the developing world or the lives of children in the developing world without a maternal health plan that includes contraception and family planning as part of it. And everybody knows that," Brison told Question Period.
"Hillary Clinton was simply stating a fact. Her words were welcomed by a lot of progressive Canadians on this issue."
Cannon said that the criticisms voiced by his blunt and outspoken U.S. counterpart during last week's visit did not signal a cooling of relations between Ottawa and Washington.
Clinton appealed to the government to consider keeping some Canadian troops in Afghanistan after their 2011 deadline for withdrawal, and criticized its decision not to invite indigenous groups and Scandinavian countries to talks on the Arctic.
"This is a tempest in a teapot," Cannon said. "This is not snubbing anybody; this is nothing that is detrimental to Canada-U.S. relations. Our relations are the best relations in the world."


________________________


"Our relations are the best relations in the world."



Yepper, as long as we shut up and keep suckin!!.

:canada:(Hilary says we should change this to some stars and things)
 

Icarus27k

Council Member
Apr 4, 2010
1,508
7
38
But in the wake of Clinton's criticism of the Canadian initiative, a key foreign policy program for the Conservative government going into this summer's G8 summit, Cannon acknowledged that the Canadian plan may have to be amended.


Wow. Hillary single-handedly has that kind of power?

She's one scary person, isn't she?
 

Bar Sinister

Executive Branch Member
Jan 17, 2010
8,252
19
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Edmonton
It is not the first time a senior US official has critiqued the Canadian government, and it probably won't be the last. In this case I suspect Mrs. Clinton might just be right.
 

Liberalman

Senate Member
Mar 18, 2007
5,623
35
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Toronto
Now can you imagine if she was the president of the United States she'd be one tough witch with a capital B