The fact of the matter is that The Right Honourable Stephen Harper P.C., M.P. (Calgary Southwest), the Prime Minister, has been telling blatant lies to the House of Commons. This conduct on the part of a prime minister is entirely unacceptable, and he should be held accountable — by his Cabinet, his caucus, his party membership, and the electorate.
As far as his Cabinet is concerned, I think we have already seen some cracks start to form in his ministers' solidarity with the prime minister. Consider members of Cabinet who have spoken out to defend the integrity of Mr. Nigel Wright, the prime minister's former chief of staff. This includes a close and stalwart ally to the prime minister: The Honourable Jason Kenney P.C., M.P. (Calgary Southeast), the Minister of Employment and Social Development.
As far as his caucus is concerned, cracks here are apparent in the way that the prime minister has attempted to navigate this crisis. Members of caucus in both the Senate and the House of Commons have spoken out against the prime minister and his management of the situation:
(a) The Honourable Senator Hugh Segal (Kingston-Frontenac-Leeds, Ontario) has been a senator for the Conservative Party since 2005, and has spoken out sharply against the prime minister's efforts to subvert due process.
(b) The Honourable Senator Don Plett (Manitoba), the founding president of the Conservative Party, has spoken out against the prime minister for his lack of due process. He has been one of the more surprising members of caucus to speak out, considering his influence as founding president of the current iteration of the Conservative Party.
(c) Mr. Peter Goldring M.P. (Edmonton East) has openly decried the prime minister's wish to have the three senators-in-question suspended without due process, and has even considered an appeal to His Excellency the Right Honourable David Johnston C.C., C.M.M., C.O.M., C.D., the Governor General, to intervene. Mr. Goldring's preparedness to instigate a constitutional crisis to resolve the current Senate situation should emphasize the severity with which he views the prime minister's conduct here.
With respect to the party membership, coverage by CPAC of the Conservative convention now underway has demonstrated that there are many party members who expected the prime minister to take more ownership of the scandal in yesterday's address to party faithful. Instead, he reiterated the status quo — that whatever the evidence, these three senators should be thrown out of the Upper House post-haste.
And with respect to the electorate, I can only hope that Canadians' memories hold onto this political scene. It has become more clear than ever that the prime minister is no longer fit to govern the country. Being a competent manager of the economy doesn't make you a competent prime minister — there is so much more to it, and the prime minister falls down on everything outside of economic considerations.
That's a bit of an assumption there.
I was too young to pay any attention at all to politics during the sponsorship scandal. And I absolutely reject your continued assertion, here, that we should give the Conservative Party of Canada carte blanche to scandal-it-up as they please "because sponsorship scandal." How about we have some bloody standards for how Government should operate? Yeah, that sounds good.
As far as his Cabinet is concerned, I think we have already seen some cracks start to form in his ministers' solidarity with the prime minister. Consider members of Cabinet who have spoken out to defend the integrity of Mr. Nigel Wright, the prime minister's former chief of staff. This includes a close and stalwart ally to the prime minister: The Honourable Jason Kenney P.C., M.P. (Calgary Southeast), the Minister of Employment and Social Development.
As far as his caucus is concerned, cracks here are apparent in the way that the prime minister has attempted to navigate this crisis. Members of caucus in both the Senate and the House of Commons have spoken out against the prime minister and his management of the situation:
(a) The Honourable Senator Hugh Segal (Kingston-Frontenac-Leeds, Ontario) has been a senator for the Conservative Party since 2005, and has spoken out sharply against the prime minister's efforts to subvert due process.
(b) The Honourable Senator Don Plett (Manitoba), the founding president of the Conservative Party, has spoken out against the prime minister for his lack of due process. He has been one of the more surprising members of caucus to speak out, considering his influence as founding president of the current iteration of the Conservative Party.
(c) Mr. Peter Goldring M.P. (Edmonton East) has openly decried the prime minister's wish to have the three senators-in-question suspended without due process, and has even considered an appeal to His Excellency the Right Honourable David Johnston C.C., C.M.M., C.O.M., C.D., the Governor General, to intervene. Mr. Goldring's preparedness to instigate a constitutional crisis to resolve the current Senate situation should emphasize the severity with which he views the prime minister's conduct here.
With respect to the party membership, coverage by CPAC of the Conservative convention now underway has demonstrated that there are many party members who expected the prime minister to take more ownership of the scandal in yesterday's address to party faithful. Instead, he reiterated the status quo — that whatever the evidence, these three senators should be thrown out of the Upper House post-haste.
And with respect to the electorate, I can only hope that Canadians' memories hold onto this political scene. It has become more clear than ever that the prime minister is no longer fit to govern the country. Being a competent manager of the economy doesn't make you a competent prime minister — there is so much more to it, and the prime minister falls down on everything outside of economic considerations.
... Where were you when thousands of brown paper bags with cash were being passed about?
Getting all high and mighty about these ongoing abuses only when the party you oppose is in power is disingenuous.
That's a bit of an assumption there.
I was too young to pay any attention at all to politics during the sponsorship scandal. And I absolutely reject your continued assertion, here, that we should give the Conservative Party of Canada carte blanche to scandal-it-up as they please "because sponsorship scandal." How about we have some bloody standards for how Government should operate? Yeah, that sounds good.