PC party in ‘crisis,’ says Caroline Mulroney

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
6,182
0
36
Ottawa
Conservatives everywhere lack leadership. They always have.

BS. As I’ve said before I’m no conservative but they’ve had some pretty strong leaders federally and provincially. The PCs haven’t had any particular great ones in a long time but they have before.

As for what Mulroney said, well, that’s obvious.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
113
Vernon, B.C.
I wouldn't at all surprised to hear they are all in crisis! What intelligent, reputable person would want to lead a political party. The only support they get is from those driven by greed! The pay is no great hell and there is very little time to spend with family.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
15,266
2,893
113
Toronto, ON
A PC Party in crisis is still one hell of an improvement over a Liberal Party that's become more corrupt than the Borgias. The unfortunate outcome is that we may very well end up with an NDP government if everyone else flunks the smell test.

Get used to B- Moody's ratings again.

I think any choice is better than the ruling party. I think the PCs under any leader would be the best choice. I don't think Ford will have enough support to actually topple the Liberals if he is the leader though. Either Mulroney or Elliot will.

As for the OP, I think she is campaigning and painting herself as the only choice to save the party from a perceived crisis.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
471
83
Dirty, filthy rats.


Repelled by Ontario PCs as if repelled by rodents

Ontario is now a magic kingdom. Like a magic-mushroom kingdom. Its politics are hallucinatory weird. And what's unfolding is definitely not some stoner comedy. What's unfolding beggars the description "surreal."

Take what happened on TV on Thursday evening. The wildly elastic fictive quality of it was phantasmagoric and nauseating.

Former Ontario Progressive Conservative Party leader Patrick Brown appeared on TV Ontario's The Agenda, interviewed by host Steve Paikin. Brown was inelegantly ousted a few weeks ago following allegations of sexual misconduct in his past. Paikin has also faced sexual-harassment allegations and denies them but, as a third-party investigation is carried out, he cannot deal directly with issues of sexual misconduct on the show.

None of this was actually explained. You figured it out yourself if you were following along. What was explained is that Paikin's wife has some volunteer connection to the PC party. Right. Sure thing. Trippy, but whatever.

Meanwhile, on Global TV, Caroline Mulroney, a candidate to replace Brown, was interviewed in a plush corporate office high above the city and talked about the corporate art in the office while trying to avoid questions about being elitist. Riddle me that.

You see, Ontario entered the post-truth, anti-truth era very suddenly and at warp speed a few weeks ago and it is now stuck there. We're all reeling and repelled.

The point of Brown's appearance was to sell himself as a smeared, unjustly treated chap now regaining possession of his good name, against all odds. An alleged rogue redeemed? Not so fast.

To call Patrick Brown a rogue would be an insult to rogues everywhere, an affront to those mere miscreants who use wink-and-nod craftiness to get ahead in life or politics. The brazenness of Brown surpasses that. This man-boy, this playboy not of the great Western world, but of the city of Barrie's bars and nightclubs, has an audacity that is epic. And a talent for evasiveness that is monumental.

"The truth is on my side" were the first words out of his mouth in the interview. Not being required to talk about sexual-misconduct allegations, he was obliged to talk about how he managed to be allowed to run to replace himself. Paikin seemed mildly astonished that he'd gotten away with it. Brown, grinning constantly and dressed in a light grey suit with a cheery, light-coloured tie – a perambulating ray of sunshine – declared "I was set up," and set up by "my political adversaries." Not that he would name them. Heavens, no. That would be ungentlemanly, or something.

In the matter of a large and expensively mortgaged house in Barrie, he declared: "My financial information was stolen" and "no one controls me." In the matter of a mysterious benefactor – yep, "mysterious benefactor" features prominently in this nonsensical narrative – he grinned and evaded some more. When Paikin put it to him that an editorial in this newspaper had called on him to pack up his kit bag and go away, he declared that the people of Ontario wanted someone with tenacity.

Mulroney, on Global News, made even less sense. The point of the interview was her call for Brown to quit the leadership race. But the optics were sensationally screwy. Asked how her former job in this Bay Street tower qualified her to run the province, she announced cryptically, "I've been thinking about what's efficient." Her views on a possible carbon tax were unsportingly contrasted by Global with images of melting ice and other climate catastrophes.

The reporter, one Alan Carter, kept going on about the artwork in the office. He asked and asked Mulroney to explain it. She couldn't and denied being responsible for its existence. She called on Brown to go away but, with Brown-level evasiveness, avoided saying she would reject an endorsement from Brown. It was breathtaking. She also denied being an "elite" from the vantage point of a Bay Street office surrounded by the sort of art that costs more than a year's salary for most people. There aren't machines that can measure the audacity.

Sober or stoned, one recoils from these people as one recoils from squabbling rodents. There's nothing funny about it, but if Premier Kathleen Wynne is found cackling, nobody would blame her.

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/new...cs-as-if-repelled-by-rodents/article38085110/