Xi Jinping Secures 3rd Term as Chinese Leader | China In Focus

Ellanjay

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Apr 11, 2020
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Xi Jinping Secures 3rd Term as Chinese Leader | China In Focus


China in Focus

Chinese leader Xi Jinping has secured his third term, making him the first to hold the position for this long since Mao Zedong. He faced zero competition, with zero votes against him. Plus, he stacked his cabinet full of his loyalists. With growing scrutiny on him, Xi Jinping is now lashing out at the United States, naming Washington in a rare show of directness. But is it all for show, to bolster nationalist pride inside China? Or is this a foreshadowing of what's to come? And how will it impact Taiwan?

 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
29,009
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Now that we have allegations that the election interference network supposedly in operation in 2019 involved three parties, can we have a public inquiry?

Or do we need to wait for media leaks that China has also tried to interfere or influence the federal New Democrats and the Bloc Quebecois? What about provincial politicians in British Columbia, Quebec or Alberta?
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been doing everything he can to avoid an inquiry or even committee investigation into election interference allegations. In doing so, including blocking his chief of staff Katie Telford from testifying, he has made the non-partisan issue of election interference into a partisan one.

The federal Conservatives, New Democrats and Bloc Quebecois have all called for a public inquiry even though information could come out that would hurt them. Only the Liberals have resisted the public knowing more about this issue and that makes them look guilty.
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Remember, the initial reporting was that a scheme run out of the Chinese consulate in Toronto helped 11 candidates in the 2019 election, both Liberals and Conservatives. Later reporting said that was broken down as nine Liberals and two Conservatives.

It’s also been reported that CSIS approached the Liberals before the 2019 election to share concerns they had that then Liberal candidate, now MP, Han Dong, had received help from the Chinese government. While Dong has denied all allegations against him, Trudeau has never denied the reports that CSIS briefed his team…about something…but not what….

That’s why opposition parties want to brief Trudeau’s chief of staff, Telford. It’s believed that she is the one CSIS would have briefed on any concerns. Instead of allowing her to appear before committee, the Liberals have spent two weeks trying to block that from happening.

Dong is also still in the Liberal caucus despite the allegations.

Compare that to Ontario where MPP Vincent Ke has left Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservative caucus after he was named as an alleged participant in the election interference network. Ke denies all allegations against him, as does his lawyer, but he left the PC caucus within hours of the allegations being made public.
If he’s found guilty, spank him to the full extent that the law allows.

The Ford government has also denied that they have ever been approached about allegations by CSIS or anyone else about any sitting or former MPP being suspected of being involved in an election interference network. When first stories came out, without an MPP being named last November, senior officials in Ford’s office asked their own security and intelligence officers, and then CSIS in Ottawa for information – none was provided.

That’s an important distinction between them and the Trudeau government in Ottawa.
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There are now two men facing public allegations, without evidence or a chance to clear their names, that they were part of a scheme to alter Canada’s elections at the behest of a foreign government. More names will eventually come out, more parties will face allegations – people in the intelligence community say all parties have issues on this front.

That will continue to erode public confidence in Canada’s elections and faith in our politicians.

It will also mean more individuals facing the prospect of serious allegations being leveled where they are neither convicted nor exonerated. If Dong and Ke are innocent, which they both claim they are, then they deserve the chance to clear their names.

Mostly, Canadians deserve to know the truth, something Trudeau seems to want to keep to himself.
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What the prime minister needs to do is follow Ford’s lead and remove Dong from the Liberal caucus until these allegations are cleared up. Then he needs to both call a public inquiry and stop blocking the work of the Commons committee looking into this.
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The truth will set you free and Trudeau should set the truth free even if it hurts the Liberal Party in the short term.
 
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
29,009
10,962
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Justin Trudeau’s deeply cynical tactics of denial and deflection in recent weeks is not the behaviour of someone who is taking seriously allegations that Beijing supported multiple Liberal candidates in the 2019 and 2021 elections through covert and illegal donations.

Dismissing allegations of foreign interference as the unreliable leaks of someone from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, with potentially ill intent, as the government and its advisors have done, was always a transparent dodge. As is the Liberals filibustering to prevent Trudeau’s chief of staff, Katie Telford, from testifying at committee under oath.

No matter how many times the prime minister says he is taking the issue seriously, he remains committed to pretending everyone but himself is playing partisan games.

When asked repeatedly by Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre during Question Period about the “clandestine” funnelling of money via China’s Toronto consulate towards “preferred candidates,” Trudeau oscillated between ignoring the question and indulging in a bit of sophistry.

“We have no information on any federal ‘candidates receiving money from China,” he said. It was the same apparent dismissal Trudeau gave in the fall when CSIS leaks about interference began surfacing in the news media.

The key word here is “candidates,” which the prime minister may be choosing to define narrowly. He is using “a very tiny technical term called ‘candidate’ which only applies to a limited scenario 30 days before an election,” as Poilievre put it.

The Opposition leader then broadened out his questions to include money given to “any parties, leadership campaigns or electoral district associations,” and asked “how much the Liberal Party or its various arms received in money from Beijing. How much?”

Trudeau gave up denying he knew nothing about such funding and instead accused Poilievre of questioning “the loyalty to Canada” of other members in the House, which the prime minister described as “unfortunate and despicable” as well as “disgusting.” On cue, the entire Liberal caucus stood clapping.

The Conservative leader has avoided hyperbole. No reasonable person who watched Question Period that day would conclude Poilievre was questioning anyone’s loyalty, not even the prime minister’s….”look over there! Healthcare!”

But that is what Trudeau wants Canadians to think, and the CBC, at least, was happy to oblige, by carrying the headline “Trudeau calls Poilievre’s suggestion he isn’t loyal to Canada despicable.”
“Look over There!!”

Earlier, when reporters asked Trudeau directly what did he know about election interference and when, he responded “I understand the extent to which Canadians have very real questions about this” and then repeated the various panels and committees tasked with investigating foreign interference.

Rather than explain what he knows, Trudeau is suggesting there will be an investigation into what he knows. Will NSICOP study whether it, itself, already briefed the prime minister? Will it feature members of the committee asking themselves questions?

If Trudeau wants questions answered, he could obviously just answer them himself. No need for a public inquiry, or, for a special rapporteur to conduct an inquiry into whether or not we need an inquiry.

All this posturing is ultimately fruitless and pointless. The Liberals could have spared the country this confusing process by simply acknowledging the gravity of the allegations weeks or months ago. Instead, as was done in the wake of the SNC Lavalin and WE Charity scandals, the government is permitting a constant drip of evidence of wrongdoing to pile up.

It might be incompetence, or part of a deliberate strategy to overwhelm and confuse the story, so that even those paying attention have trouble describing what exactly has happened. Accountability is never the goal. The goal is to drag the scandal out until no one can remember why it matters. Bonus if you can tar the opposition along the way.

There was the “Trump” card: giving reasons to mistrust elections is not good for society, “that’s something that we have seen from elsewhere,” said Trudeau, echoing a senior Liberal who more openly accused the opposition of “Trump-style tactics.”

The “nothing to see” card: “Canadians can have confidence that the integrity of our elections held.”

The partisanship card: he accused the opposition of “sowing confusion and mistrust” by even raising the allegations.

The “it’s all lies” card: “We are very concerned with the (Globe) leaks, particularly because there are so many inaccuracies in those leaks.”

And, of course, the racism card: he referred to “a rise in anti-Asian racism” to deflect a question on the subject.

Then, on Monday, in an ignoble and shameless act, he threw in the two Michaels card: “We worked day and night to bring back the two Michaels after they were arbitrarily detained in China, including over the course of the 2019 and 2021 elections.”

What the hell have the two Michaels got to do with this? Look over there!!
 
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Taxslave2

Senate Member
Aug 13, 2022
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A deep dig into both turdOWE's own election campaigns and the turdOWE foundation finances is required.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
29,009
10,962
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
A deep dig into both turdOWE's own election campaigns and the turdOWE foundation finances is required.
Whatever happens, and whomever is picked by JT to do it, it’ll have a super-wide highly diffused mandate to dig shallowly into many-many directions, but not those directions regardless how shallow or diffused any looky-loo might be.
 
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Taxslave2

Senate Member
Aug 13, 2022
5,029
2,833
113
Whatever happens, and whomever is picked by JT to do it, it’ll have a super-wide highly diffused mandate to dig shallowly into many-many directions, but not those directions regardless how shallow or diffused any looky-loo might be.
We can wait for a change in government.