scoutfinch said:Bill Graham stated after the throne speech that the Liberals were in favour of Canada's presence in Afghanistan. I suspect the NDP will be the only naysayers; however, I wonder what the Bloc position will be.
CFL said:And what kind of pull do you have with the NDP?
scoutfinch said:however, I wonder what the Bloc position will be.
MarkOttawa said:Only one mention of Afstan during Question Period, very near the end: Dawn Black of the NDP criticizes the agreement--made under the Liberals--concerning the transfer of prisoners to the Afghan government. Meanwhile, Liberal National Defence Critic Ujjal Dosanj asked two questions, fairly early in, criticizing the appointment of Minister O'Connor on grounds of conflict of interest as a former lobbyist. Both good examples of their parties' real priorities.
Bzzliteyr said:There is a parliament OVER Afghanistan?? In an AWACS?? I am confused.. how'd they get there? And what do they want to debate about, airline food? (sorry, I had to.. the phrasing made me do it!!)
Leased C-17, I think...
(The Honourable Foreign Affairs Minister): Bill, Jack, if it wasn't important for you then, why is it suddenly important now? STFU you partisan hacks!
(Honourable Members) Here, Here!
Now there is a debate that should be held in Parliament!Harper is mulling expanding Canada's peacekeeping role in the conflict-ridden Darfur region of western Sudan.
GAP said:While I have argued against the need for a 2nd debate in parliament, I can understand the logic and apparent change in Harper's stance. As long as the other parties were able to use the deployment as an issue, people would get caught up in the rhetoric, rather than the reasoning. Now we have the opportunity for the opposition parties to express their points of view, without discrediting the Canadian Forces personnel to make their points. IN Theory.
What would be nice, would be to have the current Chief of Defense Staff, General Hillier be present and able to give "ACCURATE" responses to members of parliament. While MND O'Connor is present, he, by his own acknowledgement, does not know the details and everyday needs of the Canadian Forces...that's not his job, his is policy, not procedure. I am probably out to lunch on the last point, but I would like to see accuracy in the responses, rather than a political point of view.
As for Sudan, debate it. Let the Liberals, the Bloc & NDP point out to the rest of Canada why we should not participate in stopping a geniocide because it doesn't have the right optics. I think the point should be made somewhere that if there is to be a force going to Dafor, then it should be such that the present games being played by Sudan, be ignored and just go in and do the job.