So, predictably, Fantino was made to look like a fool during question period (again) yesterday. This time, they called him out on peddling the same line over and over again instead of actually answering the questions posed to him. When the opposition called him out on it, they were interrupted about four times, so it made for some pretty hilarious irony when they kept repeating their criticism of him repeating his peddling.
When the opposition finally got through, Fantino lost his cool and made a one-liner response that didn't actually address the question.
TALKING HEADS Dec. 12: The biggest joke
“I presume that the associate minister has re-found his notes. ‘We are on the right track’, they say,” Kellway began again. “The associate minister keeps saying that he is –”.
Here he was cut off, again by noise from the government side.
The Speaker called for order.
Kellway started again.
“I think I can count on the associate minister having found his speaking notes now,” he said, as members of his caucus laughed around him, all enjoying the joke. “The associate minister keeps saying that he is on the right track and yet he now says that we may not buy 65 planes –”.
Again, Kellway was interrupted.
Speaker Scheer stood up again.
“I am giving the honourable member some extra time because he has been interrupted so many times,” Scheer said. “The honourable member for Beaches—East York is entitled to put his question.”
Kellway asked how much time he had left (about 10 seconds) and started again. “All right, so we were with the speaking notes, ‘everything is on the right track,’ and yet the associate minister now says that we may not buy 65 planes. Is this plan B, i.e., fewer planes than the minister talked about–.”
Yet again, there were protests from the government.
“I am afraid we are off to a rough start this week,” Scheer said. “I will give the floor to the honourable associate minister.”
Fantino stood up at the far end of the House.
“Mr. Speaker, even my grandchildren would not stoop to answer that silly question,” he said, and sat down to a standing ovation from his party peers.
During the exchange between Kellway and Fantino in the House, MPs from both sides were laughing, some bent over completely, as if wracked with uncontrollable mirth.
They seemed overjoyed at a perfect example of exactly the kind of thing at least some of them convinced voters everywhere in May was wrong with Ottawa: that it was broken and it was time to fix it.
TALKING HEADS Dec. 12: The biggest joke | iPolitics