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Rae won't say so out loud, but he aches to be PM

Bruce Monkhouse said:
That was more a slap to Mr. Hudak's sorry miserable campaign than anything Mr. McGuinty earned.............................


I agree; the religious and social conservatives, the so called "hard right," whose candidate Mr. Hudak is, have a lot for which they must to answer. Given an acceptable, moderate, Tory leader we might have a sensible, responsible government in Toronto right now ... but, no, we get McGuinty because the Conservatives put purity before power.
 
Bruce Monkhouse said:
That was more a slap to Mr. Hudak's sorry miserable campaign than anything Mr. McGuinty earned.............................

Concur.  Hudak's campaign was a 'goat rodeo'.  The phrase "snapping defeat out of the jaws of victory," comes to mind.

McGuinty has never generated anywhere near as much intense hatred as Rae did.  The early to mid-90's were not just part of the "decade of darkness" for the CF....Ontarians were also wondering how bad things could get.


Regards
G2G
 
Bruce Monkhouse said:
That was more a slap to Mr. Hudak's sorry miserable campaign than anything Mr. McGuinty earned.............................

...and now, unfortunately, McGuinty gets a few years to remind us of why he should never have been re-ellected.
 
Good2Golf said:
If Paul Martin and the 'Blue Liberals' are backing Sheila Copps like it appeared on this morning's news, the Liberals will have a better chance challenging the CPC in '15, than they would with Rae.

When the Tory machine kicks into high gear, no doubt the record of all time for proroguement will be exposed as Bob Rae as Ontario Premier.


Regards
G2G


Looks like the "Blue Liberals" lost; CBC is reporting that Crawley, not Copps, is the nes Party President.
 
Ohhhh.....that's gotta stick in her craw...... ;D
 
I'm not sure what it (Crawley as Party President) means for the Liberal Party, which, I repeat, I wish well ... well enough to displace the Dippers, anyway.

The Liberals need to renew and rebuild; the convention just ending today does not look, to me, as having been a big step in that direction.
 
Crawley looks to be well versed in the backroom functions of the party, whereas Copps' experience is in the storefront operations....not sure how one translates into the other, but they have entirely different focuses and formats, with the same goal.
 
Yet more on Bob Rae and on the (totally without foundation) idea, if it can be called that, that Mark Carney might want to lead the Liberal Party, assuming that he even is a Liberal, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail:

Bob Rae and beyond: potential contenders for the top Liberal job

JANE TABER

OTTAWA— Globe and Mail Update
Posted on Wednesday, January 18, 2012

With the convention behind them and life for Liberals becoming a little more clear, there is growing speculation Bob Rae will not be the only contender for the party’s throne.

Rumours are there could be at least half a dozen Liberals who will take a run at the leadership including MPs Dominic LeBlanc, David McGuinty and Geoff Regan. Other names being floated are Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson and even Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty, the brother of the Liberal MP who gave a well-received keynote address to convention delegates.

As for candidates from Quebec, it’s believed former Chrétien cabinet minister Martin Cauchon could have some interest. He was very visible at the convention, where he hosted a hospitality suite. In addition, there is some buzz around Quebec Justice Minister Jean-Marc Fournier, who served as a senior adviser to former leader Michael Ignatieff.

No women’s names are being seriously floated although Belinda Stronach, a former Liberal cabinet minister who took a run at the Conservative leadership against Stephen Harper, was seen schmoozing at the convention. She is always considered a possible candidate.

While no one wanted to look too ambitious at the weekend event, David McGuinty told reporters he was considering a bid. But he noted he had a lot more thinking to do.

So far, however, the media focus has been on the Interim Liberal Leader and whether he will try for the permanent job. Mr. Rae had a high profile at the convention, making a dozens of appearances and speeches, including a stirring wrap-up address to delegates in which he urged them to go back to their ridings “and multiply.”

But with the spirit of renewal and sense the party needs generational change that came from the three-day gathering – Mike Crawley’s win as president over Sheila Copps reinforced that view – there is a hope among some Liberals that Mr. Rae will not compete for the permanent job.

One senior Liberal told The Globe he is hoping “people see the wisdom of what we did” – which was to open up the party to outside “supporters” to allow for a broad-based vote for leader.

So far Mr. Rae has remained non-committal about his plans. But party officials have said he would have to step down as Interim Leader well before the final leadership vote as that post gives him a big advantage over other candidates.

And patience is beginning to wear thin. Postmedia columnist Michael Den Tandt has written a piece calling on Mr. Rae to “come clean – and say he is not a candidate for permanent leader, or say that he is. In the latter case he should set a firm date for his exit as interim leader. And he should do so now.”

All of this has to be figured out by the new party president, Mr. Crawley, and his board. Liberal officials have until Oct. 1 to set the exact date for the convention that is to take place between March and June of 2013.

But internal reticence aside, Mr. Rae might want to seriously consider a bid. EKOS pollster Frank Graves recently ran a survey on who Canadians like as political leaders and the interim Liberal chief outranked the Prime Minister, scoring a 44 per cent job-approval rating compared to Mr. Harper’s 34 per cent.

“Bob Rae is showing some surprising strength for a caretaker presiding over a party with one foot in the grave according to Peter Newman,” Mr. Graves writes, referring to Mr. Newman’s new book – When the God’s Changed – about the demise of the Liberal Party.

“With 44 per cent approval, he eclipses the Prime Minister’s rating and with only 25 per cent disapproval he is seeing some receptivity from Canadians if he should decide to throw his hat in the ring again,” the pollster observes.

And for those who think that Mr. Rae’s record as Ontario NDP premier in the 1990s, in which he governed during a recession, is an “albatross,” think again. Mr. Graves’s research finds that Mr. Rae “fares better in Ontario than in the rest of the country and he has a very regionally even distribution of approval.. By contrast, Mr. Harper receives laurels in Alberta and raspberries in Quebec.”

Dalton McGuinty, meanwhile, has a 43 per cent approval rating but Mr. Graves says his high disapproval rating of 47 per cent could pose a problem for him. And just to stir the pot, Mr. Graves threw Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney into the mix.

Some pundits, like The Globe’s Lawrence Martin, have suggested the central banker could become Liberal leader after the next election. Mr. Carney has the highest approval rating of all in Mr. Graves’s survey – 57 per cent, with only 11 per cent of Canadians disapproving of what he is doing.

The online survey of 2,005 Canadians was conducted between Dec. 14 and 21.


I think Rae would be a mistake for the Liberals ... but, hey, I'm a card carrying, paid up to the max, Conservative so who cares what I think, right?

I also suspect that Mark Carney has his sights set elsewhere: maybe the World Bank, traditionally an American job and currently held by Robert B. Zoellick, the International Monetary Fund, traditionally a European job and currently held by Christine Lagarde, or something like Goldman Sachs where the current CEO, Lloyd C. Blankfein, gets a relatively small salary (only $600K per year) but where, until the crash of 2008, stock options of tens of millions were, routinely, awarded to the most senior executives, year after year.

 
I sense that the "supporters" issue might be something that backfires, but in the long run. It looks like it allows people who are not members to vote on who the leader is. However it might just get Rae what he wants. I agree that Rae would be a mistake for the Liberals. I also agree that he's toxic to the 50+ generation of voters to whom he must appeal the most. Rae's ascension to the liberal throne is not going to bring the era of renewal the the liberals so desperately need.

That being said, if they don't make significant gains in the next election (outside Quebec), I'm sure the liberals will throw him under the bus as they've done with every leader since Mr Martin last lost. Which in a Machiavellian way might just be the long term goal.
 
ModlrMike said:
... if they don't make significant gains in the next election (outside Quebec), I'm sure the liberals will throw him under the bus as they've done with every leader since Mr Martin last lost. Which in a Machiavellian way might just be the long term goal.


I suspect that a contender like Dominic LeBlanc might make a spirited run this time, aiming to finish a strong second without running up too much debt, knowing that

1. Rae will prevail and will lead the party into the 2015 election;

2. Rae cannot bring the Liberals to power in 2015, but he might unseat the NDP for second place; and

3. By 2017 or so he (Rae) will be far too old and "worn" and it will be time for a young, photogenic, Francophone from outside Québec to lead the party and, maybe even, to win the keys to 24 Sussex Drive in 2019.
 
The NCC reminds voters of Bob Rae's record: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aUF7GwzqYQ&feature=player_embedded

And you thought Mr Dithers, Stephan Dion and Micheal Ignatieff faced attack ads?
 
Part 1 of 2

Here, reproduced in twi parts under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail is an interesting and somewhat flattering (even a tiny bit fawning) biography of Bob Rae, the man who might become Liberal Party leader but is destined to follow Dion and Ignatieff as leaders who did not become PM:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/the-liberals-need-a-new-leader-what-about-bob/article2318206/singlepage/#articlecontent
The Liberals need a new leader: What about Bob?

SANDRA MARTIN

From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Saturday, Jan. 28, 2012

In a photograph from 1968, Bob Rae sits near the end of a long conference table, with shaggy hair and tweed jacket, holding a pipe in his mouth with a stem as long as a stiletto. The Vietnam War has polarized the academic community and the university is in upheaval. Mr. Rae is 20 and a member of the newly instituted university commission on governance, a radical experiment in opening the upper echelons of the ivory tower to the lowliest members of the academy.

He has been invited there, as a rising student activist, to voice his views to Claude Bissell, then president of the University of Toronto, a man old enough to be his father – indeed, Mr. Bissell went to school with Mr. Rae's diplomat father, Saul, in the 1930s.

Four decades later, that table has turned: Mr. Rae is now 63, and his hair is snow white (although there's lots of it) and his skin is ruddy and wrinkled, and he has just presided over a Liberal Party policy convention where more than a third of the delegates are under 30. Like Mr. Rae in his youth, they have a voice (now amplified by social media) and they intend to use it. One signal was a new set of rules for choosing leaders that should put an end to old boys in backrooms deciding whom to anoint.

“The whole top-down politics is changing,” says Mr. Rae's erstwhile rival and recent ally, former Ontario Liberal premier David Peterson. “There's an Arab Spring taking over politics everywhere and you are going to have younger, media-savvy different ways of communicating. It won't just be the same old baloney you and I know from watching politics.”

You might argue that's just what the Liberals need. The party of Wilfrid Laurier and Pierre Trudeau, the one that likes to dub itself the natural governing party of Canada, is in rough shape. The last time it won a majority in the House of Commons was in 2000, when Jean Chrétien was prime minister. Since he stepped down in 2003, the Liberals have turnstiled through three leaders: Paul Martin, Stéphane Dion and Michael Ignatieff, each more improbable than the last. They didn't just lose the federal election on May 2 – they were walloped, losing their status as the Official Opposition and limping into third place behind the governing Conservatives. It was the party's worst showing in its history.

Mr. Rae is no longer the young prophet in the academic temple, the Rhodes Scholar, the NDP finance critic who toppled Joe Clark's government on a budget motion in 1979 or the surprise winner of the 1990 Ontario election, the first NDP premier ever elected east of Manitoba. He carries the burdens of what happened after that: the infamous “Rae Days,” crossing the floor from the NDP to the Liberals, and perhaps flip-flopping on his promise not to seek the party leadership again.

For now, he is caught in limbo, allowed to be interim leader so long as he doesn't admit publicly that he wants the job for real. But he also was voted parliamentarian of the year by Maclean's magazine in November, delivered three barn-burner speeches at the policy convention two weeks ago – without a Teleprompter – and has soared to 35 per cent in the approval ratings, according to an Angus Reid poll released this week.

“If the election were today, we would be begging Bob to run, because there's nobody else,” Mr. Peterson says. “He's a smarter guy than he was. He's had more experience, he's learned the game and he's battle-ready.”

The one flaw Mr. Rae can't bat away is his age. “You have to think ahead in this business,” Mr. Peterson says. “Is he the right guy to lead the party in four years' time, in the only race that matters?”

That's the rub: This could have been Mr. Rae's moment, but there isn't going to be an election any time soon. It's unlikely Prime Minister Stephen Harper will visit the Governor-General to ask for a dissolution of his parliamentary majority until 2015. Mr. Rae will be 67 by then, and probably 70 before he, or his party, could realistically expect to move into 24 Sussex. Will it be his fate to have been the right man at the wrong time?

The Liberals invited communications guru Don Tapscott to be their keynote speaker at the convention in part because of his reputation for understanding the Millennial generation. He isn't counting Mr. Rae out. “It would be reasonable to conclude that anybody of Mr. Rae's age is yesterday's man,” he says. But, in fact, Mr. Rae is one of the people “driving this vision” of the party as an engaged, open network that reaches out across all kinds of channels to build community and draw young people into a real discussion about ideas.

“The party needs a leader who understands this generation, their culture, their modus operandi, and embraces it,” Mr. Tapscott says, “and I don't care if that person is 20 or Methuselah.”

Is that the new Bob Rae? Mr. Rae certainly thinks so, although he insists he hasn't decided whether he wants to be permanent leader. Listening and patience are the biggest differences in him, he says. Being the smartest person in the room doesn't cut it any more. The key is “learning how to make sure you get people working for you who are even smarter than you, and that you aren't afraid of them. ... That's something you've got to figure out.”

And some of the younger Liberals agree: “My opinion of Bob Rae has changed since he has become interim leader,” says Ryan Barber, 31, president of the Liberal riding association in Simcoe North. “He's had 20 years to toughen up and articulate why his critics are wrong and he is right. Our last two leaders got blindsided because they were relatively inexperienced in being in a leadership role and they didn't see it coming. … I think Bob has shown in a lot of interviews that he isn't knocked off course by a tough comment or an attack. Bob's personality strikes you as the person who beats up the bully in the schoolyard.”

That may just be enough to make him leader. But is it enough to get time back on Mr. Rae's side?

The two Bobs

After the party convention, the Liberals are pumped, and nobody more so than Mr. Rae. He hits the ground running, using the lag time between the convention and the reopening of the House of Commons on Monday to cross the country visiting community colleges on a skills-and-trades tour. I catch up with him on Tuesday morning at the Centre for Hospitality & Culinary Arts at George Brown College in Toronto. Wearing a white chef's jacket and toque, he tours the various prep rooms shaking hands, asking questions.

For most of his career, there have been two Bob Raes: the public performer who comes alive in the spotlight and the socially awkward, distant guy who seems preoccupied at a dinner party. The first Mr. Rae was in full tilt at the convention, exhorting delegates to “go forth and, for heaven's sake, multiply!” But the other Mr. Rae, the distracted, self-absorbed one, seems to have vanished. At the culinary institute, he seems goofy in his outfit but genuinely interested in meeting the students and watching them knead dough, roll pretzels or fashion delicate roses to decorate wedding cakes, skills they will use to seek jobs in an economy about as tough as the one Mr. Rae faced as premier of Ontario in the 1990s.

Intrigued by a garish sculpture of three swans, including a black one floating on an inky pool of caramelized sugar, he stops for a closer look. “Could you make a loon?” he asks wistfully. This is a glimpse of a more private Rae, the son of a peripatetic diplomat's family who got his sense of home from the one-acre island that the family bought at Big Rideau Lake in the fall of 1956, where Mr. Rae has spent nearly every summer since.

“We watch the loons by day and listen to their primeval cries at night,” he wrote in his 1996 memoir, From Protest to Power. The lake is where the family spread his younger brother David's ashes after he died of complications of leukemia in 1989, and where “I know the same will be done one day for me.”

Mr. Rae was born Aug. 2, 1948, in Ottawa, the third of four children of Saul Rae and his wife, Lois. His maternal grandmother, Nell, the daughter of a Clyde shipyard draftsman, was born near Glasgow, where she met and married Willy Cohen, a tailor and the son of Jewish refugees from Lithuania. They eventually immigrated to Canada, settling first in Winnipeg and then Toronto, where the Cohens became the Raes (a circumstance Mr. Rae didn't know until he was an adult).

Nell Rae took in boarders to put food on the table, and turned her offspring into a vaudeville musical act called the Three Little Raes of Sunshine. Grace, the eldest, eventually became a Rockette at Radio City Music Hall; Jackie, the youngest, earned a Distinguished Flying Cross as a Spitfire pilot in the Second World War, and became a singer-songwriter and a producer of TV variety shows; Saul, the middle child, was the brainiest, so his mother wrangled him a scholarship to the University of Toronto.

It was there that Saul met George Ignatieff, with whom he also went on to Oxford and then into the External Affair Department in the diplomatic swirl around Lester Pearson in the 1940s and 1950s. He met and married a British, Cambridge-trained historian named Lois George and together they raised their four children in diplomatic postings in Washington, Ottawa and Geneva.

Bob Rae inherited the intellect, the fateful connection to the Ignatieff family and the love of song and dance, though he mainly keeps that last one under wraps these days.

Party man

Mr. Rae had his first brush with the Liberal Party as a student, working for Pierre Trudeau at the leadership convention in 1968 – by then, his older brother, John, was a staffer for Jean Chrétien and his sister, Jennifer, was working on Mr. Trudeau's media team. But Mr. Rae didn't think of himself as a Liberal. He sensed a smugness in the party, and he was wary of what he saw as a conservative streak in Mr. Trudeau. As he described himself in From Protest to Power, “I was a thoroughgoing democrat, whose socialism was never Marxist and always pragmatic.”There are some people, NDP stalwart Stephen Lewis among them, who think Mr. Rae persuaded himself that he was something he wasn't – a social democrat.

After university, Mr. Rae won the Rhodes Scholarship that had eluded his father and went off to Balliol College at Oxford in 1969. He flourished in the intellectual stimulation of tutors such as Isaiah Berlin, but socially he was out of place in tradition and class-ridden England.Unable to see his future, he fell into a lengthy depression.

Friends like Michael Ignatieff, who was doing a doctorate at Harvard, helped, as did extensive therapy. But he was energized by working on behalf of poor tenants in a legal-aid clinic in North London. Fixing things – institutions, people, political parties – became a lifelong preoccupation: It led to his return to Canada, a law degree, a practice as a labour lawyer and his decision to run for the NDP in a federal by-election in 1978, when Ed Broadbent was leader of the party and Mr. Trudeau was prime minister.

Within the year, Mr. Trudeau had called and lost an election, Progressive Conservative leader Joe Clark had become prime minister, and Mr. Broadbent had appointed the eager, media-savvy Mr. Rae – the only NDPer elected in Toronto – as finance critic. From this perch, he successfully presented an amendment to Mr. Clark's budget bill and brought down the government. It was Dec. 12, 1979. Mr. Rae was 31.

Another election, in February, 1980, saw Mr. Trudeau emerge from the shadows to win a majority government. Mr. Rae held on to his seat. Five days later, he married Arlene Perley, his political soulmate and now the mother of his three grown daughters. Meanwhile, the Ontario NDP came calling.

Nurtured by Donald C. Macdonald over the decades, the party had flourished under Stephen Lewis in the early 1970s, forming the official opposition in 1975. Now, though, it was floundering and Michael Cassidy had decided to step down as leader after the party's disappointing results in the 1981 election. Who better to come to the fore than Mr. Rae, the Tory-government slayer and repository of quick barbs in Question Period?

A private dinner was arranged with Mr. Rae, Mr. Lewis and their wives at the home of a mutual friend in Toronto, and Mr. Lewis was “very cheered” by Mr. Rae's interest.

But, while driving home afterward, Mr. Lewis's wife, journalist and feminist Michele Landsberg, turned to him, the way that wives often do at the end of an evening, and said: “Did you not understand that he is not one of us? His basic convictions are not ours.”

Mr. Lewis replied, as husbands often do: “Are you crazy?”

As history unfolded – with the NDP's move to the centre, the Liberal-NDP accord after the 1985 election, the NDP's surprising victory in 1990 and Mr. Rae's desperate attempts to cope with the deep recession of the early 1990s and the loss of more than 300,000 manufacturing jobs in the cataclysmic adjustment to free trade – Mr. Lewis says he came to see that his wife “was entirely and totally right.”

He cheerfully admits that “she's never let him forget it,” especially when Mr. Rae instituted the Social Contract, in which public-sector employees kept their jobs but were forced to take two or three unpaid holidays a week – the notorious Rae Days, which lost him support on the left even as he was being pummelled over deficits and affirmative-action policies by the right, and led to the landslide election of Mike Harris's Tories in 1995.

Mr. Rae resigned his own seat in 1996 and quit the party in 1998, but it wasn't until 2002 that he published an opinion piece in the press announcing a definitive break with the NDP, saying its economic policies (as well as its position on Israel) had become out-of-touch. And it was only in 2006 that he joined the Liberals and made his first run for the leadership, losing to Mr. Dion. He returned to Parliament as the Liberal member for Toronto Centre in 2008, then lost a second leadership contest to Mr. Ignatieff that summer.

Mr. Rae says he always knew that he wasn't an ideologue. But, as premier, he had to confront rhetoric with pragmatism and, for somebody who had always excelled at politics, the failure of his own ambitions.

For his part, Mr. Lewis believes that Mr. Rae has “an extraordinary and uncanny political ability” and is “one of the most able politicians in the country,” but “he seems a thousand times more comfortable as a Liberal than he ever did a New Democrat.”

There was more going on in Mr. Rae's rocky performance as premier than lousy economic times, Mr. Lewis says: “He was a Liberal acting as a New Democratic premier and he didn't know how to integrate the two into his performance,” he said. “And now he is a Liberal acting as a Liberal and he is totally comfortable.”


End of part 1



 
Part 2 of 2

The best defence . . .

“What Bob Rae has to worry about are the attack ads,” a pal proclaimed at a Toronto dinner party just after Christmas, alluding to the Conservative tradition of ad-hominem assaults, dating back to Kim Campbell and the television images ridiculing Jean Chrétien's facial deformity in the 1993 election campaign, but especially the way the Conservatives lacerated both Mr. Dion and Mr. Ignatieff – the latter with the much-repeated slogan “He didn't come back for you.”

On the eve of the Liberal policy convention, the Conservatives tipped their hand that they considered Mr. Rae a leadership threat by issuing a statement ridiculing the Liberals for being like “lemmings,” ready to follow him off the edge of a political cliff.

Mr. Rae came out swinging in a blistering defence of his tenure as premier of Ontario before the caucus, saying, “I was a piker compared to Jim Flaherty and Stephen Harper. Better a Rae Day than a Harper lifetime.” He was still at it the following week in an interview with GeorgeStroumboulopoulos, delivering a “just watch me” diatribe worthy of Mr. Trudeau during the October Crisis.

In conversation, Mr. Rae, who has always said politics is more like “hockey than ballet,” is less heated but equally insistent that he can and will defend his record. But he has a few other arrows in his quiver aside from toughness. He credits his experiences as a mediator and as an international representative with improving his “basic ability to interconnect.”

He says he is also “a lot more relaxed than I used to be. I genuinely enjoy meeting people and going on tours, and I think that has allowed me to put things in perspective.”

As well, unlike Mr. Dion or Mr. Ignatieff, Mr. Rae is a known quantity. His record as premier has been minutely documented, beginning with Thomas Walkom's excoriating condemnation, Rae Days: The Rise and Follies of the NDP, in 1994. Can there possibly be any more skeletons in that Queen's Park broom closet?

No, says Ms. Perley Rae, a fervent supporter of her husband's record and abilities. “He's got the wisdom and the learning, but there is nothing else to reveal,” she says. “There is a slightly brash confidence that comes when you are young, but suddenly to be hurled into the premiership was a big job. He's more relaxed now. He's more fun.”

An entire generation has grown up since Mr. Rae's government was defeated in 1995. In the meantime, as a self-defined “recovering politician,” he developed a reputation for taking on difficult issues: the Air India bombing, the restructuring of the Red Cross, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, the crisis at Burnt Church and nation-building in the Forum of Federations.

That's the way Mr. Rae sees the interim leadership – as a challenge to fix the Liberal Party. “This is more complicated because it is a political party and everything is done in public.”

Comeback kid

Mr. Rae is far from being the first politician to come out of the wilderness and back into the fray. The list includes Robert Bourassa in Quebec, Mr. Chrétien and even Richard Nixon in the U.S.

But is he too old? “Bullshit,” he says.

At the convention, I heard him use an even stronger expletive, after pointing out that his grandmother, Nell, had lived to be 107 and that his mother was doing just fine at 97. “My generation are going to want to stay active, and frankly they are going to have to, in many cases,” he says. Rather than age, he wants to talk about experience and vision.

Mr. Barber, the delegate from Simcoe North, who is also a teacher at a correctional centre in Penetanguishene, Ont., agrees, citing Jean Chrétien as an example. He was dubbed “yesterday's man” when he became Liberal leader in 1990, but went on to win three majority governments.

“People re-elected Jean Chrétien consistently because he had a good sense of what the Canadian public wanted,” Mr. Barber says. “And that is something we have lost. Bob, for all of his history, is very forward-looking.”

Mr. Barber thinks that the party needs to absorb the lesson of the current NDP, which is dropping in the polls after the death of Jack Layton. “You need a really good organization and a strong leader. If you are missing one or the other, your success isn't going to last.”

The only way to have both is to open up the institution – as Mr. Bissell, the University of Toronto president, did when Mr. Rae was a student – and let a younger generation participate in rebuilding for a new, more democratic age.

That process, led by Mr. Rae, will draw in more leadership candidates, Mr. Barber is betting, and that's a good thing – for the party and Mr. Rae. He has “made the job look attractive again.”

Sandra Martin is a feature writer for The Globe and Mail.


I had not heard the story of Michelle Landsberg's prescient observation that "he (Rae) is not one of us (real, dyed in the wool, born and bred NDPers) ... His basic convictions are not ours."


End of Part 2 of 2
 
Evidently Conservative attack ads are not Bob Rae's only problem, according to this article which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the National Post[/i}:

http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/03/20/john-ivison-conservative-ads-could-force-bob-rae-to-make-decision-on-liberal-leadership/
Conservative ads could force Bob Rae to make decision on Liberal leadership

John Ivison

Mar 20, 2012


You can tell when Bob Rae is getting annoyed — the contrived chuckle is superceded by a sound like a sausage stewing in its own grease. When he was asked about the new Conservative ads that attack his record as Ontario’s NDP Premier on CBC’s Power and Politics, he started to fizz and pop.

The ads ask if Mr. Rae “couldn’t run a province, why does he think he can run Canada?” They have clearly chafed the interim Liberal leader. If the Conservatives are going to highlight all the bad news that happened on his watch, they should also mention the Toronto Blue Jays won two World Series, Nelson Mandela was released from prison and the Soviet Union collapsed, he told Evan Solomon. Eh? Maybe he’d been out in the unseasonally sunny weather too long without a hat.

“I’m not uniquely responsible” for the recession that sent unemployment and deficits soaring in Ontario in the early 1990s, he said. No — but the NDP government made the worst of a bad job, by the account of even the most charitable observers.

Mr. Rae now thinks the Liberal party has a “responsibility” to respond and defend his record as NDP Premier. The party is planning to raise new money in response to the ad and mount a counter-attack with those funds.

This has triggered a backlash from a number of Liberals I spoke to Tuesday, who are uncomfortable about the idea of squandering the party’s meagre war-chest to defend the man who is still, nominally, the interim leader.

In public, Mr. Rae dismisses the thought he might run to be permanent leader as “idle speculation.” But in his own mind, it seems, he already has the job. If you doubt this, go to the Liberal.ca website and scroll to the Meet Bob Rae section, where he is introduced as “Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada.”

“I became Liberal Leader to put my experience to the task of rebuilding our Party and defending the socially compassionate, fiscally responsible values that are at the heart of our vision for a Liberal Canada,” says Bob the Rebuilder. In line 27, you can find the word “interim.”

Senior Conservatives said last year that they weren’t planning to waste their time and money assassinating the character of a stop-gap leader. Perhaps they just got tired of waiting for it to become official.

Whatever the catalyst, it has resuscitated the deep uneasiness many Liberals feel about Mr. Rae continuing to act as interim leader while not ruling out his ambitions to run for the job permanently. In a report last year, former Liberal president Alf Apps suggested it would be unfair for the interim leader to run for the full-time job, given the in-built advantages of incumbency, such as control over caucus appointments and access to party funding and communications resources.

Either from fear or a genuine sense of party unity, none of the MPs or senior party figures who covet the permanent job are prepared to break ranks but neither are they impressed with the idea of spending party funds to defend Mr. Rae’s record as NDP Premier.

Unity is holding for now but pressure is building for Mr. Rae to make a decision: Either renounce any hopes of becoming permanent leader and stay as interim; or, declare his ambition and step down. “People want to know,” said one person with leadership ambitions. “It’s not personal but he’s put himself and the party behind the eight ball.”

Marc Garneau, the Montreal Liberal MP who is testing the waters for a bid of his own, said he would like Mr. Rae to make a decision by the fall. He said he wants to talk to his caucus colleagues before making any comment on whether the Strong Start fund, designed to pay for counter-attack ads, should be tapped to defend Mr. Rae’s record. “When we created the notion of a separate fund, it was for the [permanent] leader,” he said.

Yet Liberals say leadership is the subject that dare not speak its name — certainly not in caucus, where Mr. Rae has never raised it.

And why would he? There’s a chill running along the Liberal benches looking for spine to run up. Until someone forces the issue, Mr. Rae can continue to fashion the game to his own advantage.

National Post
jivison@nationalpost.com

The Liberal Party has some real leadership problems:

First: By long standing party tradition it is a francophone's turn to lead (but need (s)he be a Québec franco?). Rae is an anglo Ottawa native who was raised and educated there and in Washington and Europe; he attended the University of Toronto and Oxford; that pedigree hardly puts him in the league of Laurier, St Laurent, Trudeau, Chrétien and Dion; and

Second: The party may have seen the errors of its ways in having been focused too much in the leader and too little in the potential cabinet team. To be fair this problem is neither new nor uniquely Liberals.

As a card carrying, dues paying Conservative I rather hope Bob Rae becomes the leader - despite being smart, a good parliamentary performer and, even, charming, I am 99.99% convinced that he cannot lead the Liberals back into power in 2015, and either or both of age and Liberal long knives will deny him an opportunity to do so in 2019.
 
Here is a reverse view, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/john-ibbitson/bob-rae-attack-ad-shows-its-a-liberal-revival-the-tories-fear-most/article2376179/
Bob Rae attack ad shows it’s a Liberal revival the Tories fear most

JOHN IBBITSON

Globe and Mail Update
Published Wednesday, Mar. 21, 2012

There is a reason the Conservative Party launched an attack ad against Bob Rae on the same week as the NDP leadership convention.

The Conservatives are convinced Mr. Rae will lead the Liberal Party into the next election–an increasingly safe assumption. And they fear him more than they fear whomever the New Democrats choose on Saturday. So while the Tories wait to learn who will lead the official opposition, they’re getting their licks in against what they see as the greater threat.

Though nominally only interim leader, Mr. Rae’s hold on the job appears unassailable. Potential rivals – Quebec MP Justin Trudeau, former Quebec cabinet minister Martin Cauchon, New Brunswick MP Dominic LeBlanc – have either decided they’re not interested, or have tested the waters and found them frigid. Ottawa MP David McGuinty, brother to Ontario’s premier, and MP and former astronaut Marc Garneau may also be interested, but at this point Mr. Rae is seen as by far the most credible permanent leader for the third party.

Mr. Rae has solid support in caucus, and can point to rising poll numbers as proof of his effectiveness on the job. He may also be the best candidate to execute a strategy penned by John Duffy, a former adviser to Paul Martin, whose recent article in Policy Options magazine has been widely and carefully read by Liberals everywhere.

Mr. Duffy believes Canada is fracturing between the commodity producing West and the industrial East, which is suffering from the high dollar those commodities fetch.

“If the Liberals can convincingly tag the Conservatives as favouring the commodity economies of their political heartland at the expense of the rest,” he wrote, then the Liberals will possess “narrative and demographic and regional bases of support that truly challenge the foundations of Conservative power.”

The Liberals believe that Mr. Rae has more experience and popular support in Quebec than Montreal MP Thomas Mulcair, who is favoured to become Leader of the Official Opposition after Saturday’s leadership vote. (If the NDP chooses a leader from outside Quebec, so much the better for the Liberals.) The path to power for Mr. Rae and the Grits lies in stripping away from the NDP their Quebec gains while appealing to financially stressed voters in suburban ridings outside Toronto and other Ontario cities. Such a coalition would also embrace voters everywhere who can be found on the losing side of the “two Canadas” that Mr. Duffy sees: one prospering and happy with smaller government, the other struggling and in need of help.

To destroy Mr. Rae’s credibility before it becomes too deeply entrenched, the Conservatives are already trying to tar him with his record as Ontario NDP premier in the 1990s. Whether Ontario voters are ready to forgive and forget that unhappy past could determine Mr. Rae’s future. In any case, for the Tories the 2015 election is clearly already underway.

The Conservatives and the NDP would both benefit from seeing the Liberal Party expunged. For the NDP, it would make them the only realistic alternative to the Conservatives. For the Conservatives, a two-party race against social democrats is a race they are confident of winning over and over again.

No doubt the Tories will also prepare a line of attack against the NDP leader, once he or she is in place. But their heart won’t be in it. It is a Liberal revival they fear most.

That fear is behind the Tory attack ad on Bob Rae. It will be the first of many.


While I agree that Bob Rae is a very effective HoC debater and does well on TV - where he almost always gets a sympathetic interview - I really doubt he can revitalize a political party that has lost its way and, I think its purpose. The big danger for the Liberals will come from a Mulcair led NDP which will try to move towards the political centre, squeezing the Liberals out.

I think the Conservatives are engaging a target of opportunity, they are not wasting ammunition - Rae is a worthwhile, legitimate target, but the full fire plan - aimed at damaging both the Liberals and the NDP - will not be unleashed until later this year and it will grow in intensity until the campaign, proper, in 2015.

 
I think that if the LPC elects a francophone to be the leader, it will confirm the LPC is old Canada, and new Canada will not vote for the Liberals. It will be worse if the new leader is a Québec franco.

We are sick to the teeth with Quebec and it's constant whining.

My bucket list includes throwing out bilingualism (sorta Bill 101 for Canada), while still offering Federal services in French and English as dictated by population percentages in that area.
 
Rifleman62 said:
I think that if the LPC elects a francophone to be the leader, it will confirm the LPC is old Canada, and new Canada will not vote for the Liberals. It will be worse if the new leader is a Québec franco.

We are sick to the teeth with Quebec and it's constant whining.

My bucket list includes throwing out bilingualism (sorta Bill 101 for Canada), while still offering Federal services in French and English as dictated by population percentages in that area.

Wow, pretty sacreligious there, R62.  :) I think I will put this on my bucket list too.
 
I would expect that the voter results seen in Layton's old riding during the By-election does not bode well for CPC.  Mind you a great deal can happen between now and 2015, however, if this Robocall issue takes wing and necessitates numerous new By-elections the CPC will take a beating in every riding involved.  This could be a game changer for the LPC in returning from the dead and back into power in 3 years.  I'm sure Rae must be on the horns of a dilemma with drooling in anticipation and the to be or not to be-ish of it all.  The sounds of squirrels that must be running in their cages at the LPC headquarters right now must be deafening.  >:D
 
There was never any chance that Layton's seat would not remain in the hands of the NDP. The vote numbers have absolutely no bearing on the national scene. WRT robocall et al, Elections Canada has already stated that they had no bearing on the outcome of the election. Don't hold your breath waiting for by elections. That being said, the after effects for the guilty party may be spectacular.
 
ModlrMike said:
There was never any chance that Layton's seat would not remain in the hands of the NDP. The vote numbers have absolutely no bearing on the national scene. WRT robocall et al, Elections Canada has already stated that they had no bearing on the outcome of the election. Don't hold your breath waiting for by elections. That being said, the after effects for the guilty party may be spectacular.
Of course Layton's seat was pretty safe, no issue.  Was not aware that EC said no on outcome of vote.  If the election was being held today the results might be vastly different.  I don't believe there would be a majority for sure and maybe not even a minority for the CPC, people are mighty pissed off.  Whomever is responsible for the Robocall issue is going to rue it when the smoke clears.
 
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