Re: Even Tories are getting fed up.
I think MacKay assumed he'd get his shot at leader of the new "reborn" conservative party after Harper was done with it. MacKay has already shown he's more interested in his own fortunes by going back on promises he made to not agree to an alliance/CP merger, so I'm not surprised he'd want to keep a method of choosing a conservative leader that will give him the best shot of winning the race.
Is it any wonder that some Tory MPs are rebelling.
Conservative MPs used like 'trained seals,' Rathgeber says - Politics - CBC News
Very good points by Rathgerber.
Im surprised that MacKay is against one member one vote for choosing a new leader. I think thats the way they should all work. I guess he probably doesnt think he can win with that method in place. If Harper were to step down Mackay would be one of the top contenders for the position.
I think MacKay assumed he'd get his shot at leader of the new "reborn" conservative party after Harper was done with it. MacKay has already shown he's more interested in his own fortunes by going back on promises he made to not agree to an alliance/CP merger, so I'm not surprised he'd want to keep a method of choosing a conservative leader that will give him the best shot of winning the race.
Is it any wonder that some Tory MPs are rebelling.
Conservative MPs used like 'trained seals,' Rathgeber says - Politics - CBC News
Alberta MP Brent Rathgeber said he has left the Conservative caucus in part because of the control Prime Minister Stephen Harper's office exercises over backbench MPs, which was preventing him from representing his constituents.
The former Tory MP, who announced he was quitting late Wednesday night to sit as an Independent, said staff in Harper's office — who are "half my age" — pressure the caucus to obey their talking points and vote "like trained seals."
Very good points by Rathgerber.
"When you have a PMO that tightly scripts its backbenches like this one attempts to do, MPs don't represent their constituents in Ottawa, they represent the government to their constituents," he told reporters.
Rathgeber spoke bluntly about his former party and the influence the PMO has when he held a news conference in his Edmonton riding Thursday.
"I do believe that the PMO has too much power, that they don't properly respect the legislators and most importantly, there is not a proper degree of separation between the legislature and the executive," he said.
The $90,000 cheque that Harper's chief of staff Nigel Wright wrote to Senator Mike Duffy to cover his improperly claimed housing allowance is a prime example of the lack of separation, he said.
"The Prime Minister's Office seems to be accountable to nobody, not even the prime minister," said Rathgeber, who was elected in 2008.