It occurs to me that your membership, and mine as well, are pre-dated by the Conservative government. Current events...I'm sure there others who said similar things for the previous governments.
;-)
It also occured to me upon reflection, that many of the hacks I saw then crying the blessings of the LPoC, still are. Despite all the revelations...;-)
Partisan, stupid. What's the difference?
I stand corrected...:lol:
But your Honour. Why am I required to stand before you in court when others before me have done much worse? Is that not reason enough to grant me a pardon?
Now you're confusing crime with accepted, acceptable historical Parliamentary practice and rules.
I like how Conservative Party supporters here are suggesting that since there was inappropriate conduct on the parts of former governing parties, that we should allow up to the same level of inappropriate behaviour on the part of the Conservative Party without question.
Why is it inappropriate? It's only been made inappropriate now, by partisan force and coercion. Historically, it has been accepted, that a Minister could retain some secrecy, or documents without being forced to release them, solely on his word alone. Only now that it is politically expedient to do so, the opposition is making a big deal about it. With the assistance of a bias Speaker, they are now dismissing decades of precedent and common practice, to win cheap political points.
The point of general elections is to improve the standards of government that we enjoy, is it not?
Yes, and each and every time we get the same old shyte. Sometimes worse. And to date, the lists of wrong doing are not comparable.
As to the second ‘charge’, many members of the Commons were charging that the Government had held in contempt the Parliament of Canada over the refusal to hand over unredacted documents regarding Afghan detainees. It seems that this second issue has, fortunately, now been resolved.
Like I said, much ado about nothing, cheap political grand standing, with the aid of a partisan Speaker.
CDNBear, I did not say that there were legal charges levied against the Conservative Party—I’m simply using the word ‘charges’ as allowed in English, as opposition party members of the Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics committee are charging that Mr. Togneri has held the committee in contempt.
I know that, which is why I said spin the sin. Your use of the word "charge" was to elicit a reaction. It will either feed the braindeads like Soc, or cause people like myself to point out the over exaggeration, knowing full well your intent.
And now, it also seems that Mr. Rahim Jaffer could face charges of perjury for lying to a parliamentary committee. I wonder when Mr. Jaffer’s Conservative Party membership will be revoked?
Good question.
His fumbles has obviously been high-profile enough to warrant an expulsion from the national party membership.
I'd say country, but then the Liberals mights get their balls in a knot and accuse me of racism. Seriously. I didn't believe Guergis' in her interview, so I must be sexist. I think Jaffer is scum, so I must be racist too, that's the line of thought, no? Not that I'm accusing you.
And CDNBear, once more, The Honourable Peter Milliken M.P. (Kingston and the Islands), the Speaker of the House of Commons, has been one of our most reconciliatory holders of the speakership in recent memory. If I was a diehard Liberal, I'd think so too. The Speaker of the House, in his usual and expected non-partisan manner, ruled both for the Government and the Opposition; he acknowledged that parties would need to come to an arrangement to respect the Government’s legal obligations, while upholding the principle of parliamentary supremacy.
:lol:...
No he didn't rule for the Conservatives on the matters related to historical precedent. He ruled in favour of abandoning them. He threw a bone to the Cons, to appear impartial. If he had tried to rule any other way on the letters/emails, he would have been fully exposed as a partisan hack, if it went to court.
I am not disputing the supremacy of Parliament. I am disputing how it got to the point where that ruling had to be made. I am disputing how it is he can dismiss in one sentence, without a single piece of precedent to support him, a litany of historical precedent that a Minister, solely on his word, can withhold some documents, especially when in regards to ongoing military actions, compounded by multinational relationships.
To rule against the Opposition in that case would have, by precedent, granted the Prime Minister’s Office an unacceptable control over the information that Parliament can access.
Bullshyte. He would have merely upheld precedent and historical tradition. It's not like it's been done without giving a valid reason and explanation, in the past. Which very much mirrored the Gov'ts present line of reasoning.
I don't care who's in power, when I see rulings that ignore or dismiss past precedent out of hand, I get very curious.
Who's that?
Quite.
you seriously need political calibration....
:lol:...Your posts seriously need to show more maturity. Your posts are the epitome of blind, partisan hackary.
Now that's funny!!!