- Reaction score
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:not-again: Not even with Jeff Dunham's hand up his butt.E.R. Campbell said:....can you imagine Justin Trudeau making the complex socio-economic policy argument....
:not-again: Not even with Jeff Dunham's hand up his butt.E.R. Campbell said:....can you imagine Justin Trudeau making the complex socio-economic policy argument....
Thucydides said:The NP weighs on on McGuinty as potential Liberal Party of Canada leader. Looks like the Liberals may have to decide between the "least worst" choice in the high profile division, or actually do the work and pick a leader with some substance who can carry out the long deferred work of party renewal. Of course, Kelly McParland nails it in the last paragraph:
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/10/18/kelly-mcparland-mcguinty-rumours-move-liberals-from-fantasy-to-farce/
E.R. Campbell said:Denis Coderre will make an announcement today ~ probably to say he is leaving federal Liberal caucus to enter municipal politics.
E.R. Campbell said:What Kelly McParland gets wrong is that, in 2015, the Liberals need Quebec ~ Ontario will have to wait until 2019. Quebec is where the next Liberal leader has to meet and beat Thomas Mulcair. By custom, a custom to which I expect the Liberals to adhere, the next leader should be a French Canadian so I suspect it is one of Cauchon, Coderre, Garneau or Trudeau
Denis Bertshi Martin Cauchon Marc Garneau Justin Trudeau
Age: 52 Age: 50 Age: 63 Age: 40
My guess is that a team is in place to fiance M. Garneau's bid, I suspect neither Cauchon nor Coderre have much support but I will be surprised if they (one or the other, maybe both) don't give it a try, if only to make their place for next time.
M. Trudeau has the charisma, M. Garneau has the gravitas, each is deficient in what the other has, but I cannot believe that a good PR person cannot create some excitement around M. Garneau, after all he was orbiting the earth when M. Trudeau was a schoolboy.
Thucydides said:While I have no idea how broad or deep her campaign is, Deborah Coyne is also a contender for the Liberal Leadership: deborahcoyne.ca/
I have also heard Martha Hall Findley has paid off her campaign debts; she may well be throwing her hat int he ring as well.
I wonder if there will be an ABJ movement among the various Liberal party delegates opposed to the idea of a coronation?
PrairieThunder said:However, I still fear that they'll basically hand Mr. Trudeau leadership and doom their party for years to come.
Second time lucky? Hall Findlay enters Liberal leadership race
Former MP Martha Hall Findlay has formally announced in Calgary she’s entering the federal Liberal leadership campaign. This is the second time since entering politics as a candidate in the 2004 federal election for the Ontario riding of Newmarket-Aurora, that Ms. Hall Finlay, 53, has sought to lead the federal Grits.
Here’s the text of her launch speech.
Interestingly, the former high-profile Liberal MP chose to make her announcement in the heart of true-blue Tory country and not in her old riding that she lost in 2011 to Conservative MP Chungsen Leung. She’s also chosen Stephen Carter to run her campaign. He’s credited with leading the successful leadership and provincial election campaigns of Alberta Progressive Conservative Premier Alison Redford.
Hall Finlay has had an up-and-down political career: she lost the Newmarket-Aurora riding in the 2004 election to Conservative Belinda Stronach; she was eliminated after the first ballot of the 2006 leadership race and threw her support behind the ineffective Stéphane Dion; she won the riding of Willowdale in a federal by-election in 2008 and was re-elected in the general election later that year, but lost her seat in the 2011 vote.
She joins MP Justin Trudeau, lawyer Deborah Coyne, Vancouver Crown prosecutor Alex Burton, Ottawa lawyer David Bertschi and former B.C. Liberal party president David Merner in a contest that will conclude in April 2013.
Frankly, I don’t think Hall Finlay has much of a chance. To begin with, she has not demonstrated a solid record of winning elections. Moreover, she’s tied closely to Dion’s losing campaign platform in the 2008 general election—Hall Finlay was the party’s platform outreach chair. And, finally, she lacks gravitas.
Oh, she’s well educated and seems like a very nice person, but I don’t see her taking hold of the Liberal caucus. Nor do I see her chairing a G8 meeting or representing Canada at other international conferences.
I must say, though, I was more than a little impressed with Hall Findlay’s research paper calling for the dismantling of Canada’s supply management, something I’d call a rare bit of Canada-first positioning by a politician. Here’s the National Post’s John Ivison’s take on Hall Finlay’s paper:
As Martha Hall Findlay reeled off the reasons why Canada’s supply management system should be dismantled, you could almost hear time’s winged chariot changing gears in the background. The former Liberal MP’s research paper, which landed in the week the Harper government joined the Trans-Pacific Partnership talks, has the potential to change everything.
“Written for Jack Mintz’s School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary, it is the latest to lay out the irrefutable case for consigning the supply management of dairy, poultry and eggs to history.”
It has to be said too that others—to their regret—have underestimated this former ski racer. She’s got pluck enough, though I fear that may not be enough to win.
Justin Trudeau caught lying about Liberal candidate apologizing for war vets campaign signs
November 14, 2012 — BC Blue
If you’d like to see a perfect example of what leadership ‘qualities’ MP Justin Trudeau brings to the table, check out this video from Sun News that catches him making up a lie about Liberal candidate Grant Humes (see here). http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid868989705001?bckey=AQ~~,AAAAybGjzqk~,6NfTc6c241GVQxOh-GBHNHu5Cuhlf-y9&bctid=1967868022001
Also: See earlier post on Humes’ campaign signs here
http://bcblue.wordpress.com/2012/11/12/liberal-candidate-uses-war-vets-as-political-fodder-in-campaign-signs/
Update: Trudeau has hissy fit when asked about this Liberal candidate using war vets as campaign fodder (see video here)
http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/sunnews/politics/archives/2012/11/20121114-145514.html#.UKQOTut7nns.twitter
PanaEng said:What about his Ex-Military person:http://www.ottawacitizen.com/story_print.html?id=7535779&sponsor
Anyone here heard of her?
Grit leadership wannabes: No seat? Don’t compete!
BY WARREN KINSELLA, QMI AGENCY
UPDATED: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012
Now that the Liberal Party of Canada’s leadership race is officially underway — and that the party is moving up dramatically in various public opinion polls — here’s what some of the leadership candidates need to do.
Drop out.
We live in one of the world’s great democracies, and it goes without saying that any citizen should be able to run for any post he or she desires. The Liberal Party, too, should be open to the ambitions of any Canadian who shares its views.
But just because you can run for something doesn’t mean that you should.
Just because you want to be a leader of a political party doesn’t mean that everyone else thinks so, too.
It gives me no pleasure to say this, but Deborah Coyne, David Bertschi and Martha Hall-Findlay need to seriously reconsider their bids to lead the Liberal Party of Canada. They need to call it a day.
I’ve met Coyne, and have known David and Martha for a long time.
All of them are the kind of people the Liberal Party needs.
All of them are the kind of people we need more of in Parliament.
Smart, decent, hard-working and dedicated to public service.
But they shouldn’t be running for leader of the Liberal Party.
Nor, for that matter, should the Toronto technology lawyer, the former political aide, the Vancouver lawyer, or the other Vancouver guy — the one running his campaign out of a mobile home.
All of them need to quit, now.
There’s the winning thing, for example.
None of them can win, and none of them will.
In the case of Coyne, Bertschi and Hall-Findlay: Is it too much to ask that you win your own riding, before you start asking us to believe you can win the country?
If you can’t, say, win your own neighbours over, how do you expect to win over the whole country?
And, in the case of the others, would it not be advisable to run, and win, a seat in Parliament before you offer yourself as leader of one of the (formerly) most successful political parties in Western democracy? Would it kill you to do that?
They all seem to have fancy-looking websites.
But a website does not a national leader make. If it did, Lady Gaga would be president of the United States. Her website is pretty neat, too.
I don’t want to be critical of any of these people.
We need more like them. But isn’t it a bit, well, arrogant to want to become CEO before you ever work on the shop floor?
Listen up, lesser-known Liberal leadership candidates: we Liberals are in trouble.
We got put in the penalty box, some seven years ago, and we deserved to be there
We had lost touch with the people, and ourselves. We had lost our way.
Now that we are back on the ice, to extend the hockey metaphor, we are starting to look good again.
Folks in the stands are starting to give us a second look. They might just start cheering for us again, if we play well.
People like Justin Trudeau, and Marc Garneau — and Bob Rae, quite frankly — are the main reason for that. They have helped to keep the Liberal Party relevant, and in the papers.
They have helped make us an attractive political option again.
We Grits are in a remote corner of the House of Commons.
We came a distant third in the May 2011 general election. What we need now, desperately, are winners.
Not folks looking to burnish their C.V., or get an ego boost.
You want the Liberal Party leadership?
Fine.
Go win a seat, first, and then we can talk.