Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff speaks with the media during a news conference in Ottawa on Wednesday.
Bring down a good budget or we’ll bring you down, Liberal leader says
Ignatieff puts PM on notice - Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca
Michael Ignatieff began his tenure as Liberal leader with a blunt challenge to Stephen Harper: change your divisive, ruthlessly partisan ways or we’ll bring you down.
Just an hour after being named interim party leader Wednesday, Ignatieff declared he’s prepared to topple the minority Conservatives and try to form a coalition government if he’s not satisfied with the coming federal budget.
He also began imposing discipline on his fractious troops, asserting that he — and only he — speaks for the Liberal party.
Most Liberal MPs, who had been determined to defeat the government 10 days ago over an inadequate fiscal update, fell in line, adopting their new leader’s more qualified approach to the coalition.
Ignatieff said the fate of the government will depend on the prime minister’s conduct and the content of the Jan. 27 economic blueprint.
He noted that while other countries have taken action to deal with the economic crisis, "Harper has shut down Parliament."
"Stephen Harper’s government is not providing Canada with the leadership or stability it needs . . . he’s offered no hope, no solutions, no plan for our country," he told a news conference.
"Where Mr. Harper has failed, we can succeed."
Ignatieff signalled his willingness to work with the government to come up with a budget.
But he said it’s up to Harper to initiate any discussions and to demonstrate that he’s changed his "spiteful," "divisive" and "polarizing" attitude toward opposition parties.
"The prime minister must be in no doubt whatever . . . that our party will vote a motion of non-confidence in this government if we do not get a budget that responds to the national interest of our country. Period. I can’t be clearer about that. "
Late Wednesday, Harper called Ignatieff and offered to talk any time he wants, a spokesman for the prime minister said.
Ignatieff also warned that his co-operative attitude will evaporate if the Conservatives try to undermine his fledgling leadership with vicious attack ads — a tactic they successfully employed against his predecessor, Stephane Dion.
"It would seem to me . . . a very, very serious mistake to engage in partisan attacks against a party leader at this moment. I hope I make myself clear," Ignatieff said, squinting ominously into the cameras.
"We’re in the middle of a parliamentary crisis. It’s not conducive to engage in partisan political attacks against me or any other member of the House of Commons."
"Look where it’s got him. I think he should walk back."
The Tories didn’t wait for Ignatieff to take over before launching their first attack.
Doug Finley, Conservative national campaign chairman, sent out a fundraising letter slamming the Liberal party for short-circuiting its leadership selection process and quickly installing Ignatieff before party members could cast ballots. Finley called it a "stunning and unprecedented demonstration of Liberal contempt for our democratic rights."
What a moron.... based on the limited time to get everything situation, and based on the fact that he was the deputy leader of the party and has every right to take over for Dion, this is yet another typical and sad attempt to make everyone else look evil compared to the Conservatives.
And he's one to talk about contempt for our democratic rights when Harper delays our democracy to avoid a confidence vote..... friggin hypocritical.
Noting that Harper prorogued Parliament rather than face a confidence vote he was bound to lose, Ignatieff retorted: "I don’t take lessons in legitimacy from Stephen Harper."
Ignatieff said he’ll abide by the coalition agreement struck by Dion with New Democrats and supported by the Bloc Quebecois. But he disputed NDP Leader Jack Layton’s insistence that Harper should be defeated no matter what’s in the budget.
The Liberal national executive unanimously endorsed Ignatieff as interim leader Wednesday, after consulting with about 800 key Liberals across the country.
Liberal MPs and senators also unanimously endorsed Ignatieff, who is to be acclaimed as permanent leader at a convention in Vancouver in early May.
In a show of solidarity, Bob Rae, who withdrew from the leadership race Tuesday, nominated Ignatieff at the closed-door caucus meeting. The lifelong friends then hugged.
"When Bob Rae and Michael Ignatieff embraced, it was hard to keep a dry eye," Toronto MP Martha Hall Findlay said afterward.
"It was just an extraordinary moment."
New Brunswick MP Dominic LeBlanc, who pulled out of the leadership contest Monday to throw his support to Ignatieff, seconded Rae’s motion.
Dion, whose accelerated resignation as leader cleared the way for Ignatieff’s coronation, joined the former rivals in appealing to the fractious party to unite and rally behind their new leader.
"There’s a unity and strength in our caucus that I’ve never seen before," said MP Mark Holland. "I think there’s a whole new day for our party."
The Vancouver convention was supposed to be the culmination of a six-month leadership contest. But the party short-circuited the process in a stampede to stabilize its leadership before heading into a potential parliamentary showdown over the budget.
Some Liberal MPs appear more enthusiastic about pursuing the coalition than their new leader is.
Holland said the coalition is "very much a viable option" that Liberals will be more likely to adopt if the Conservatives unleash a series of personal attack ads against Ignatieff.
"If they keep pouring poison into Parliament and keep spitting vitriol, I see it as very unlikely that they have a very long future in this Parliament," Holland said.
Dion, who negotiated the coalition deal with the NDP, said its fate is now in Ignatieff’s hands. But he added: "I strongly support it."
Well Iggy is putting the boots to the current system right off the bat... good on him.
Although I still ain't gonna vote Liberal.