New Liberal leader can call for advice any time, but Chretien won't meddle

sanctus

The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
4,558
48
48
Ontario
www.poetrypoem.com
By Mike Oliveira
TORONTO (CP) - Newly minted Liberal Leader Stephane Dion is welcome to call for free advice any time he likes, but former prime minister Jean Chretien said Wednesday he has no plans to butt in and try to run the party behind the scenes.

Chretien refused to confirm reports that he's advising Dion's transition team as they prepare for an election, saying only that he speaks with the new Liberal leader "when he calls me." "If he wants my view, he knows my phone number and he can call me, but he will run his own show," Chretien said.

"If they want my views, I'll tell them. If they use them, fine, if they don't use them, it's still fine."

Chretien, who spent nearly 15 years in Pierre Trudeau's cabinet, said a similar arrangement with his former boss worked well after Chretien was elected prime minister in 1993.

"I was talking with him once in a while (for advice), but he never called me to tell me what to do, and I don't intend to do that with anybody."

Chretien said he's confident that Dion can lead the Liberals to victory in a federal election and would make a good prime minister.

"He's been a minister for more than 10 years and he's a bright guy," he said. "He's a man of a lot of talent."

Chretien was in Toronto for a speaking engagement at the Professional Convention Management Association conference, where he shared the stage with Newt Gingrich, the former Republican speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.

In a session that was closed to the media, the pair discussed the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, which will require air travellers entering the United States to carry a valid passport when it goes into effect Jan. 23.

Chretien said he's sure Canada and the United States will find a way to solve their border security issues without causing cross-border traffic to grind to a halt.

"I'm confident that common sense will prevail, they will find a way to let the people cross the border," Chretien said. "I know they can find a way if they want to find a way."

Travellers can cross several national borders in Europe without any significant delays and something similar should be possible in North America, he added. "In Europe, you go from Austria, Germany, France, Spain to Portugal with nobody stopping you."

The problem is that there's more at stake for Canada than for the U.S, where the Bush administration needs to be convinced it really needs Canadian visitors and the tourism dollars they generate, Chretien said.

"We're very good to them, all these guys going to play golf in the United States and the snowbirds in California and Arizona and Florida," he said.

"(But) it's a big country and they look (after) themselves more than anything else and that's part of their mentality."
 

mapleleafgirl

Electoral Member
Dec 13, 2006
864
12
18
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windsor,ontario
By Mike Oliveira
TORONTO (CP) - Newly minted Liberal Leader Stephane Dion is welcome to call for free advice any time he likes, but former prime minister Jean Chretien said Wednesday he has no plans to butt in and try to run the party behind the scenes.

Chretien refused to confirm reports that he's advising Dion's transition team as they prepare for an election, saying only that he speaks with the new Liberal leader "when he calls me." "If he wants my view, he knows my phone number and he can call me, but he will run his own show," Chretien said.

"If they want my views, I'll tell them. If they use them, fine, if they don't use them, it's still fine."

Chretien, who spent nearly 15 years in Pierre Trudeau's cabinet, said a similar arrangement with his former boss worked well after Chretien was elected prime minister in 1993.

"I was talking with him once in a while (for advice), but he never called me to tell me what to do, and I don't intend to do that with anybody."

Chretien said he's confident that Dion can lead the Liberals to victory in a federal election and would make a good prime minister.

"He's been a minister for more than 10 years and he's a bright guy," he said. "He's a man of a lot of talent."

Chretien was in Toronto for a speaking engagement at the Professional Convention Management Association conference, where he shared the stage with Newt Gingrich, the former Republican speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.

In a session that was closed to the media, the pair discussed the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, which will require air travellers entering the United States to carry a valid passport when it goes into effect Jan. 23.

Chretien said he's sure Canada and the United States will find a way to solve their border security issues without causing cross-border traffic to grind to a halt.

"I'm confident that common sense will prevail, they will find a way to let the people cross the border," Chretien said. "I know they can find a way if they want to find a way."

Travellers can cross several national borders in Europe without any significant delays and something similar should be possible in North America, he added. "In Europe, you go from Austria, Germany, France, Spain to Portugal with nobody stopping you."

The problem is that there's more at stake for Canada than for the U.S, where the Bush administration needs to be convinced it really needs Canadian visitors and the tourism dollars they generate, Chretien said.

"We're very good to them, all these guys going to play golf in the United States and the snowbirds in California and Arizona and Florida," he said.

"(But) it's a big country and they look (after) themselves more than anything else and that's part of their mentality."


since dion is obvioulsy going to be our next prime minister, what the heck is chretien going to teach him-how tosteal 100's of millions of dollars and pretend he dosent know what happened or where it went?
 

marygaspe

Electoral Member
Jan 19, 2007
670
11
18
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since dion is obvioulsy going to be our next prime minister, what the heck is chretien going to teach him-how tosteal 100's of millions of dollars and pretend he dosent know what happened or where it went?

You should be blaming Paul Martin, not Chretien.
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
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Saint John, N.B.
You should be blaming Paul Martin, not Chretien.

Oh, tell me you are kidding.....

Pauly might have been Mr. Dithers, he might have stood by and watched, he might even have signed the cheques.....he is, after all, a good Liberal soldier in Quebec.........but it was Jean the Don that was the Godfather.

It was Jean the Don that set up the system.

It was Jean the Don that had connections to the fraud artist and arsonist hotelier.

It was Jean the Don that used the RCMP as his own personal hitmen.......against Mulrooney in the Airbus Affair, against APEC protesters, against the former president of the BDC, and against reporters that tried to investigate his connections with the above-mentioned hotelier.......

It was on Jean's watch that the Quebec wing of the Liberal Party of Canada came under mob influence......just ask the former president, who was terrified to testify without protection.

I know a little Canadian history, and Jean Chretien is the MOST corrupt politician to ever hold the office of PM in this country.

His GREATEST achievement was to make Lyin' Brian look like an honest man in comparison.