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All eyes on Ignatieff

Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from today’s National Post is an indication that at least some of the “eyes on Ignatieff” may be disenchanted with what they’ve seen:

http://www.nationalpost.com/news/canada/story.html?id=522245
Ignatieff rubs some Liberals wrong way

John Ivison, National Post

Published: Saturday, May 17, 2008

OTTAWA -There are whispers spreading in the Liberal caucus that Michael Ignatieff is the man who will never be king.

In the event that party leader Stephane Dion loses an election, there seems to be growing skepticism that Mr. Ignatieff should be the man to replace him -- even among MPs who supported him at the leadership convention in Montreal two years ago.

Gauging the extent of this backlash is difficult. A number of MPs declined to comment and those who did refused to speak on the record. But it seems to be more widespread than the usual bicker, brattle and back-stabbing common to all parties.

The apparent disenchantment with Mr. Ignatieff on the part of a number of MPs I spoke with, coincides with the arrival in the Liberal caucus of Bob Rae -- and it is perhaps no coincidence that the stock of the deputy leader is falling as that of the former Ontario premier is rising.

"It comes down to basic political judgment and understanding," said one MP. "With Rae you're dealing with someone who does know politics. There is a depth to him that allows him to interact more naturally with caucus [than Mr. Ignatieff]," he said.

Another factor is the impression that, while Mr. Rae is rolling up his sleeves for Team Dion, Mr. Ignatieff is more concerned with the next leadership contest.

A number of Liberals said they were less than impressed with a fundraising dinner for Mr. Ignatieff at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto last month, which was described as a barely veiled leadership campaign launch. "Lots of rank and file Liberals really found that a bridge too far. Its presentation was too ostentatious, too presuming," said one Grit, referring to clips that showed Mr. Ignatieff as a journalist interviewing Pierre Trudeau. Some felt this was intended to convey that Mr. Ignatieff is Mr. Trudeau's true heir.

If the party were to look for a successor to Mr. Dion, it is assumed Mr. Ignatieff and Mr. Rae would be the front-runners. Some might imagine Mr. Ignatieff, who came second at the leadership convention, might even have the edge. But that mis-reads the situation. The reality is that Mr. Ignatieff was not the second-most popular candidate -- those who ended up with Mr. Dion would most likely have supported Mr. Rae if Mr. Dion had not made it to the final two. "Most people who supported Stephane would have supported Bob," one MP said.

The sympathy shared by the Rae and Dion camps is evident: Mr. Dion has surrounded himself with former members of the Rae camp, such as national director Greg Fergus, and private secretary Johanne Senecal. Even Mr. Ignatieff's supporters are worried that, if Mr. Dion is forced to step down, he will all but hand the baton to Mr. Rae.

Despite the precariousness of his position in the event of another leadership contest, a number of Liberal MPs and insiders say Mr. Ignatieff has not been working hard to build bridges and alliances internally.

"He doesn't come to meetings and he doesn't engage in the lobby," one Liberal said. "People are noticing he's not participating. He's a much more polarizing figure than Bob."

The different style of the two men is equally clear in Question Period, where Mr. Ignatieff habitually scowls across the floor at the government as he rises each day after Mr. Dion's leadoff questions.

Mr. Rae's performance is more polished. Faced with a typically aggressive response by Conservative House leader Peter Van Loan yesterday, Mr. Rae responded artfully, declaring: "Mr. Speaker, I am absolutely devastated. I am wounded and devastated," before going on to ask how the Minister of Foreign Affairs managed to spend $22,000 on a flight to Laos.

One MP who supported Mr. Ignatieff said it's premature to talk of him losing support to Mr. Rae. "There is always a honeymoon period -- and Bob Rae is still in it. Most people are more focused on our current situation," he said. A senior figure in the still-active Ignatieff camp said he was surprised to hear murmurings of discontent about the Liberal deputy leader. He said Mr. Ignatieff is helping pay down Mr. Dion's leadership debts through events such as a fund-raiser in Montreal last week. "He's working hard doing a lot of fund-raisers for candidates at the leaders' request," he said. "My sense is that things are coming together." Even so, the impression remains that, while Mr. Ignatieff professes loyalty to Mr. Dion, he has trouble hiding his ambition. It may be that it has o'er leapt itself and his best chance to be king is already behind him.

jivison@nationalpost.com

It’s important to remember that this is just one report but only one robin is the first sign of spring, too.
 
Here is an excerpt from Warren Kinsella’s blog:

”Ignatieff’s speech yesterday morning to the Economic Club of Canada was significant – because it was good, because it was delivered with aplomb, but mainly because it almost anticipated the chaos that beset the markets a few hours later. Ignatieff asked the simple, but most obvious question: where is the Harper government’s plan for what almost certainly lies ahead? I encourage everyone to read the speech, supra – it is the best critique of current Conservative fiscal policy anyone has seen in this campaign. (And you can tell it worked by the number of Notional Pest lickspittles who were called into service to attempt to attack it, immediately afterwards.)”

Others, including the “lickspittles” of the National Post, suggest - and I agree – that “talk has moved on about the outcome of this election to the next one: The race to replace Stéphane Dion in the leaders chair of the Liberal party.”

And, as the horse race course announced says, "Theeeeeeeey’rrrre off!

Bye bye, Celine.
 
And it just doesn't stop sliming sliding downhill

But, what about Herb ?
Monday, September 29
Article Link

A quiet lunchtime at Ottawa's top steakporium. But, such as it was, nuggets of insight were traded over bowls of piping hot split pea soup with ham and leafy plates of Caesar or spinach salad.

Notables notabling the decorum included a sprinkling of the city's top lobbyists, Canada's top internet newshound, even a few familiar TV faces .

But it was over by the bar that some of the finer variables were exchanged over victuals. Two people in particular, let's call them Pat and Matt for the sake of alliteration, stoked what will become the flames of a political revolution.

"Pat," said Matt.

"Matt," replied Pat.

"Do you believe the polls ?"

"Which ones ?"

"Pick one, they're a dime a dozen," said Matt, in case you are keeping track of who said what.

"It's looking lopsided, regardless of which one," noted Pat.

"Precisely", said Matt as he zeroed in with precision on his nibbly nuggett of caustic gossip.

"Well ... ?" Pat sipped his beer, the same variety Don Newman was sipping nearby.

"Herb has left the building", Matt dead-panned.

"Herb?" Pat choked on his wake of intake.

Matt nodded.

"What do you mean Metcalfe has left the building ?"

"He's no longer working the campaign", Matt whispered. "It's all hush-hush, but he's fed up and he's quit the campaign."

Pat looked over towards Newman to see if he had heard anything.

"At least that's what I'm being told by someone who knows someone who should know", shrugged Matt.

"Jeeziz H ...", hissed Pat, "he was an absolutely key component of Team Dion, where does that leave us now ?"

"Knee deep in homemade pickle brine, I'm afraid".

"So, what do we do now ?"

"Pat, there's only one thing I can think of at this time ... and I need enough to submerge at least three olives."

With that, Pat slumped in his seat, dejected, while Matt signalled to the bartender for his second three-finger three-olive Grey Goose martini. After all, party membership does have its priviledges.
 
Peter C Newman is not my favourite historian or political analyst, nor do I think very highly of him as a biographer (but he’s readable – a solid wordsmith), but I do agree with his assessment of the challenges facing Iggy and the nature of his responses, to date, in this commentary, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from today’s Globe and Mail:
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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081212.wconewman15/BNStory/politics/home

A sub-Arctic, WASP Obama is just what this country needs

PETER C. NEWMAN

From Monday's Globe and Mail
December 15, 2008 at 12:00 AM EST

Over the past week, I have watched with mounting fascination Michael Ignatieff's coronation as the Liberal Party's putative saviour. His liturgical face was afire. Having been toilet-trained at Harvard and Cambridge not to surrender to history's unpredictable bear traps, he assumed his new status with equanimity and verve. His daunting assignment is to ride herd over a bitch's brew of a political party that needs taming, while avoiding Harper-style self-immolations.

It will not be an easy gig.

This cool dude's political run had been remarkable. From the start, the Ignatieff campaign was based on the identical convictions that fuelled his university, literary and social-activist careers - namely that the world exists to be put in order, so that its scattered causes will make sense and can be mobilized. That takes as much guts as brains. Why else would he have advocated, during his initial run, constitutional reform that has ensnared every Canadian politician brave enough to venture into that quagmire since the Fulton-Favreau formula?

Looking back at Mr. Ignatieff's campaign two years ago, it seems as if he woke up each morning mumbling to himself, "Which beehive do I poke today?" At the time, he failed to develop the swordsman's eye for being alert to counterthrusts, so that he frequently had to wrap his sallies in retroactive, explanatory nuances.

In his second time around, which crested in his assumption of the Liberal Party's acting command last week, there was nothing accidental about his tactics or remarks; he adopted the manners of a prince and the tactics of a chess master. No campaign strategy has been so minutely executed since the 1968 leadership run by another party outsider, Pierre Trudeau, who similarly appeared to grab startling pronouncements out of the autumn breezes, although he was programmed down to every shrug.

Mr. Ignatieff decided early on that he had to differentiate himself from the Liberal brat pack. He did so by jettisoning many of the political verities that had kept his party in power for most of the past century and the first half-decade of this one. Instead of maintaining Canadian Liberalism as the sacred instrument of sedate populism that legitimized its claim to being the country's "natural governing party," he gave notice that he intended to push the envelope right out of the ballpark - to coin an overreaching metaphor. He has aimed at nothing less than ultimately creating a new political movement, one with a contemporary vision and brave thrust that would move the party's rank and file, as well as veteran apparatchiks, into the 21st century.

This is a gamble that might have tested Kenny Rogers. As one of his closest advisers told me, "All of us are saying to each other, 'Jesus, is he going to blow himself up before he gets there?' " He almost did. Each time, the litmus test of his precarious endeavours was whether he would stand behind his tactics and pronouncements. He did, with the determination of the 16th-century theological reformer Martin Luther's famed cry: "Here I stand. I can do no other."

Mr. Ignatieff's half-dozen books on ethnic nationalism and the uses of moral indignation have won a significant following, but unlike most public intellectuals, he has also ventured into fiction. His novel Scar Tissue was nominated for the Booker Prize, while Charlie Johnson in the Flames has been compared to Graham Greene and Len Deighton.

Michael Ignatieff could be just the man for our time. Canada's most serious dilemma is not the continuing calamitous state of our health-care system, not our growing irrelevance on the world stage, nor our recent test run as a banana republic. It is the belief among ordinary citizens that they can no longer improve their lives through the political process that deserves the most urgent tending. At the moment, we are in danger of sinking politically to the dismal level of professional wrestling.

Because democratic activism is Ignatieff key doctrine, he just might turn out to be a sub-Arctic, WASP Obama who restores the civility, trust and vitality that will steer us back on course.

He is our first postmodern politician, which, if it means anything, should allow him some slack in resolving his inner contradictions. He cares more for ideas than people and sports a fatalistic approach to history as an accumulation of tumbling paradoxes. He recognizes that while the essential issues may remain insoluble, they are susceptible to creative improvisation; that while it may be absurd to actualize innovation and basic reforms of Canada's faltering political system, it's even more absurd not to try.

Peter C. Newman is the author of the recently published Izzy: The Passionate Life and Turbulent Times of Izzy Asper.

--------------------

Too much is made of Ignatieff’s lesser writings (the ”half-dozen books on ethnic nationalism and the uses of moral indignation”) and not enough on his best (only really ‘good’) book: Isaiah Berlin: A Life. The book has been well criticized for its (many) failings but Berlin remains such a huge subject for (real) liberals that we will not see a full, useful biography in my lifetime and scholars may be writing about him 250 years from now – as they still do about e.g. David Hume. The book, I think, tells us nearly as much about Ignatieff as it does about Berlin – for a start he is an unstinting Berlin admirer – something which cannot and will not please the left wing of the Liberal Party of Canada, the wing that constitutes the most powerful part of the Liberal base. But it does give hope that Ignatieff might be more, maybe just a bit more than the average retail politician – the likes of which are all to familiar to Canadians in the 21st century.

 
Here, in a column reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from today’s Globe and Mail, Lawrence Martin (pace Rifleman62) asks the questions: ”Where’s Iggy:
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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090104.wcomart05/BNStory/specialComment/home

Ignatieff is a man of magnitude. So where is he?

LAWRENCE MARTIN

From Monday's Globe and Mail
January 4, 2009 at 9:30 PM EST

Michael Ignatieff has been completing a book over the holidays, the last chapter in a family saga. That's fine and well, but there are Liberals who wish he'd chosen another time – a better moment than the immediate aftermath of becoming party leader.

With the departure of Stéphane Dion, it was thought there would be a rush of momentum for the Grits, heady sensations of relief and revival. With the eloquent Mr. Ignatieff as the new regent, hopes were further heightened.

By comparison to his predecessor, he is a man of magnitude. But where is the new dynamism? And where is he? At a volatile political juncture when the moment needs be seized, Iggy's off to a quiet and rather unremarkable beginning.

It's not so much his own doing. Circumstances have not been kind. There was no leadership race. That meant no high-profile campaign, no media-saturated convention, no hallmark speech. His overnight enthronement served the good purpose of quickly terminating the Dion stewardship. But coronations cannot be said to be democratically edifying. Rather than bolstering credibility, they can bleach it.

Iggy's investiture had the added disadvantage of coming just before the Christmas break. It meant that, with all the holiday distractions, he couldn't showcase himself. Instead, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has maintained the higher profile with his year-end interviews and hockey tournament photo-ops.

The public discussion centres not so much on the new lord of the Liberals but on the continuing aversion to the idea of a Liberal-led coalition. Archduke Ignatieff, perhaps for good reason, has not wanted to disown the coalition concept.

But it's hard to stake out a leadership image that's crisp and gallant when you're seen as flirting with the concept of hooking up with others.

Iggy's quick ascension also deprived him of the opportunity of developing and brandishing a new set of policies to accentuate his differences with Mr. Dion. On events since his takeover, he has been reluctant to put out firm policy positions. He is seen as strong on foreign policy, but developments abroad have brought him more unhelpful news. The renewed Israeli-Palestinian clash highlights an area where his credibility is, at best, suspect. On the invasion of Lebanon in 2006, the reputed wordsmith stumbled over his words twice, first saying he wasn't losing any sleep over civilian casualties, then saying the Israelis had committed war crimes.

The party he inherits is not in the gruesome shape that some suggest. The last election was actually far from its worst performance. In four other elections, the Liberals finished with lower seat totals. In most other defeats, the party didn't hold the winner to a minority as it did this time. Its record low score in the popular vote total was misleading because five parties competed in this election, whereas there were three in many of the others.

But the Liberals' image has to be turned around, and the thinker doesn't have the luxury of much thinking time. He has to move quickly. At least thus far, unlike in Mr. Dion's case, he has been spared the bite of Conservative attack ads. He warned Mr. Harper against resorting to that kind of garbage and the PM, pilloried over his bid to strip parties of public funding, is perhaps reticent to unleash his dogs of war, at least for the moment.

He may feel he doesn't have to, considering all the negative publicity over the coalition. Mr. Ignatieff is in a bind on this. It isn't exactly a sponsorship scandal he has been handed, as was the case for Paul Martin. But it's an albatross just the same.

Public opposition to the coalition idea has been allowed to cement. No concerted attempt by Mr. Ignatieff or his followers has been made to discredit misconceptions surrounding it. If Iggy really wants to keep this option open, he should be loudly making the case of how coalitions have worked in Europe, how they are more democratically representative than single-party governments, how the Bloc Québécois could be kept at arm's length with no veto power in a coalition.

It's probably too late to succeed with such a campaign. But the coalition question is one on which Mr. Ignatieff has to fish or cut bait, lest he be Dionized. He has to get himself out of the early limbo. It needs to be emphasized that he has only just begun his leadership journey. But it also needs to be emphasized that opening steps are steps remembered. His low profile speaks too much of a party inclined to stay the course, as opposed to being in a rush to change it.

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Aside from the neat bit of linguistic manipulation that turns a noun (Dion) into a new verb: Dionize, I don’t see much with which to disagree:

• Ignatieff has been pretty nearly invisible since he became leader;

• His ‘coronation’ as Liberal leader deprives him and the Liberals of great gobs of adoring, free media coverage; and

• The much unloved (if not downright despised) coalition is a problem for him.

The Liberals are not ready for another election campaign – not financially and not in any other way, including having and established, trusted leader on offer. The country does not want another election and will punish whomever they perceive to be to blame for provoking one. Harper/Flaherty are going to offer a budget that will meet most of the demands made by Ignatieff, Brison and McCallum – it will be hard to vote against it and wear the blame for bringing on another election over a few small details. Ignatieff does, indeed, therefore risk being Dionized by the Bloc and the NDP for voting with the government – for not being the ‘real’ opposition.

All eyes are, indeed, on Iggy - or, at least, they will be when he comes out of hiding.



Edit: typo
 
How appros.....Dionized .

Dion has now defined a category that all future party leaders, especially Liberal ones, will want to avoid. You never heard other leaders labeled as Turnerized, Cambellized, or Martinized (although that came close with Mr. Dithers).....
 
GAP said:
How appros.....Dionized .

Dion has now defined a category that all future party leaders, especially Liberal ones, will want to avoid. You never heard other leaders labeled as Turnerized, Cambellized, or Martinized (although that came close with Mr. Dithers).....

Ah!  But you forget Trudeaumania and the Trudeauites.   ;D
 
oops......the salient point I can use to my defense is that they do not  describe total incompetence......
 
Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from the National Post web site, is a (nasty) opinion piece:
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http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2009/01/09/kelly-mcparland-michael-ignatieff-s-magical-mystery-tour.aspx

Kelly McParland:
Michael Ignatieff, king of the road

Posted: January 09, 2009, 8:30 AM by Kelly McParland

Michael Ignatieff is a travelin’ kind of guy.

As I may have mentioned before, the Liberal leader has a new book coming out in the spring. It’s called “True Patriot Love: Four Generations in Search of Canada”, and it’s about his “illustrious family tree” and their experiences here in the new country.

As part of his research, Ignatieff set out to retrace the steps of one illustrious tree member in particular, great-grandfather George Munro Grant. He and the wife, according to a puff promo, “begin their journey at the rent-a-car counter at the Thunder Bay airport and visit old Hudson’s Bay forts, traversing mile after mile of the Canadian shield, following the Yellow Head highway through the farm lands of Manitoba and Saskatchewan and visiting Canadian landmarks from Fort Francis to Wanuskewin to Batoche, from West Edmonton Mall to the Fraser River Valley.”

Great. Now, you may have noticed that Mr. Ignatieff -- who apparently spent the Christmas holidays finishing up the book -- is off on another cross-country adventure, this time a “listening tour” that started Thursday in Halifax. The new Liberal leader plans to spend several weeks on the road, accompanied by fellow MPs Scott Brison and John McCallum, getting a feel for where the country stands on this economic calamity situation that’s going on. Oh, there’ll be town hall meetings, and sessions with businessfolk, and get-togethers with local Liberal worthies -- a real cram session on just what the people think.

“At a time when Canadians are worried about their jobs, their pensions, and their savings, Michael and the Liberal party are committed to holding a national conversation about Canada’s economy,” according to a Liberal release.

It’s probably churlish to wonder why Mr. Ignatieff needs to fly around the country with his pals from the caucus, asking folks if they’re worried about their jobs, when he’s already crossed the country once, and presumably had a chance to make inquiries about the local economy when he wasn’t searching out tidbits on Grandfather Grant. What was he doing out there on the Yellowhead highway, or nosing around Batoche ... swatting flies?

Yes, the two are different. One’s his day job, the other’s just for extra cash. I get it. Still, I can’t help feeling a little like the object of an anthropological expedition. Mr. Ignatieff’s career as a writer and academic tends to centre on similar excursions, in which he visits war zones, hot spots and ancestral homelands in search of wisdom with which to spice up  his latest work of academic insight. He explored his Russian roots in "The Russian Album". He criss-crossed Europe to examine the dark corners of nationalism in "Blood and Belonging". Now he’s going to sort out Canada. (Look -- Eskimos! And what’s that thing they do with their noses?)

I’m also worried about the prose that may result. Here’s an example from "True Patriot Love": “Loving a country is an act of the imagination. You love the country because it gives you the possibility of sharing feeling and belief. You cannot love the country alone. The emotions you have must be shared with others in order for them to make any sense at all. A solitary patriot is a contradiction in terms. Love of country is an emotion shared in the imagination across time, shared with the dead, the living and the yet to be born.”

Five bucks to the first one who puts that in talk a hockey player can understand. “You cannot love the country alone.” No kidding ... not unless it was a real small country.

“You love the country because it gives you the possibility of sharing feeling and belief.” Also because it means you don’t have to live in Iran and pretend you think Mahmoud Ahmedinejad is a really bright guy.

Look, it’s a free country, and I kind of admire that Mr. Ignatieff spent the holidays finishing his personal book project rather than wasting time trying to save the party that just chose him as leader. Still, why do I suspect that, should the leadership job fail to work out as expected, there will be a book soon after examining Canada’s political failings and our inability to appreciate his gifts?

National Post

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As I said, it hardly qualifies as a puff piece but Liberals might want to contemplate what they have bought into.

 
E.R. Campbell said:
Look, it’s a free country, and I kind of admire that Mr. Ignatieff spent the holidays finishing his personal book project rather than wasting time trying to save the party that just chose him as leader. Still, why do I suspect that, should the leadership job fail to work out as expected, there will be a book soon after examining Canada’s political failings and our inability to appreciate his gifts?

:rofl: :rofl: :rofl:
 
Mr Ignatieff's positions on a lot of things have suddenly sounded like Prime Minister Harper's, while on other things he engages in doublethink. I am a little less than impressed with the new "new" leader of the Liberal Party, but then again, with Bob Rae as the alternative where do Liberals turn?

http://crux-of-the-matter.com/2009/01/10/ignatieff-the-emperor-has-no-clothes/

Ignatieff: The emperor has no clothes!

Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff is like the emperor with no clothes. Look at the analogy. It’s obvious for all Canadians to see.

In the Hans Christian Anderson fable, the emperor is taken in when he is convinced (by some unscrupulous fellows) that the thread that is being woven to make the cloth that will be used for his new suit of clothes is invisible — and that the only people who CANNOT see the cloth are those who are stupid or unfit.

So, the emperor pretends he can actually see his new clothes even though he is walking around naked — and even when a young subject tells him he is naked, he ignores him.

Well, having taken a bit of a break from blogging for a week now,  I have been able to step back and see the situation in Ottawa is very similar.  If the opposition parties of the “coalition” spin thread devoid of substance, then there is nothing for anyone to see.

For example, Ignatieff and Liberal members are constantly complaining that neither the prime minister nor the finance minister consults with them. In fact, that was one of the main complaints — apart from the political funding issue — for wanting to install the coalition in the first place — back in late November, 2008.

Yet, it appears that, even after Ignatieff was appointed interim Liberal Leader, when he met with the prime minister, he did not contribute any substantive ideas towards the coming federal budget. And, that was in spite of the fact that he has been asked — repeatedly.

As if to prove that point, Janice Tibbetts wrote a piece on December 12, 2008 entitled “PM, Ignatieff hold ‘cordial’ talks on economy.” It that column she quotes Liberal spokesman Jean-Francois Del Torchio as saying: ”Mr. Ignatieff made the point that the ball is in Harper’s camp and it is up to him to present a credible economic plan.”

So, in reality it seems that the Liberals have never had any intention of sharing ideas of substance with the Conservatives. In fact, in his own voice I heard Ignatieff say yesterday on CTV that it was not his job to provide the government with budget ideas — because it was not his budget. Rather, he said his job was simply the opposition leader — to hold the government accountable by making demands about what should be in it.

Well, Ignatieff either wants the government to consult or he doesn’t — meaning he and the Liberals have to be prepared to contribute. Which is it? If he is not prepared to tell us precisely what a Liberal government would do, then he is like the emperor, his ideas are as invisible as the emperor’s new clothes.

But who is spinning the cloth for Ignatieff’s invisible clothes? Yesterday I heard that the Liberal war room will be run by none other than former Chretien loyalist and blogger, Warren Kinsella. See this CTV clip.

Kinsella is certainly a worthy foe and one I respect in spite of our differences. However,  it begs the question: Is this what the “new” Liberal party is going to look like — the same Liberal party of the sponsorship scandal but under a different leader?

Which only proves what I have been saying all along, that the federal Liberal party does not want to change from the bottom up. It simply wants power.

However, times have changed. And, part of that change is the fact that Canadians now know they have a choice. Moreover, what many Canadians are saying through this latest poll, is that while many are still unsure about the economy, they are, on balance, okay with the way the Conservatives are governing this country — contrary to all the gloom and doom the Liberals and other opposition parties like to spin.

Canadians also know they can now go to the blogosphere to hear various points of view. That even when Ignatieff and the Liberal war room are spinning for Canadians with invisible thread, most of us are not stupid and we will know that there is nothing there.

But, make no mistake, Ignatieff and Kinsella have thrown down the gauntlet and Conservative bloggers had better be ready for that challenge — which is why I have cut my holiday a bit short.

The message: we are going to have to do more than complain. We are going to have to be both reactive and proactive. The Liberals will attempt to blame Prime Minister Harper and the conservative party for all that is wrong in the current economy — which is pure hogwash. Canada is in the best position of all the G8.

The bottom line? There will be a federal election soon!

I suspect the last line is more of a wish, the Liberals are hardly in a position to run an election right now, and I doubt Mr Ignatieff wants or needs to have Jack Layton as his political saviour.
 
Without further comment:

http://crux-of-the-matter.com/ignatieffiggyisms/

IN MICHAEL IGNATIEFF’S OWN WORDS

This list of “Iggyisms” are in chronological order with the name or handle of the person who submitted it and a link to a verifiable source.  See also “Endnotes” below.

►January 18, 2009 — ON LIBERAL ENTITLEMENT:”There is fear in the land….This party will be the party of hope for all Canadians.” (Lorraine) (Link)



►January 17, 2009 — ON AN ELECTION:”I don’t think that any Canadian would disagree with Premier Campbell, that if we can avoid an election, that would be a good thing. But don’t conclude from that that I’m afraid of an election. If we have to fight an election, we will.” (Gabby in QC) (Link)



►January 15, 2009 — ON TAX CUTS: “If I see in the budget a permanent reduction in the government’s fiscal capacity to create conditions of equality for everyone, I will vote against it.” (Louise M.) (Link)(Related link in French)



►January 13, 2009 — ON HUMAN RIGHTS: “Creating strong, capable states is a more important goal than solving global warming, ending poverty or fixing the North-South divide because strong states will be able to solve these problems directly. Canada’s priority should be to assist in strengthening states rather than simply provide aid to poor countries.” (Ann) (Link)



►January 6, 2009 — ON HOCKEY: “I am a fan of the game of hockey, but not necessarily a hockey fan.” (Patricia) (Link) (Related Link)



►December 10, 2008 – ON COALITION:  ” A coalition if necessary, but not necessarily a coalition.” (Sandy) (Link)



►September 29, 2008 — ON JACK LAYTON: “Jack Layton can’t stop Stephen Harper.  Remember, Jack Layton gave us Stephen Harper.  The Harper Government is the house that Jack built.” (Alberta Girl) (Link — bottom pg 9)



►September 17, 2008 — ON 1ST LIBERAL LEADERSHIP: “Stéphane, we didn’t get it done. We didn’t get it done.” (Louise M.) (Link)



►September 29, 2008 — ON GOVERNING FROM CENTRE: “Mr. Harper wants you to believe our party has abandoned the center ground. He wants you to believe we have swung left. He’s wrong. The party I joined in 1965, the party of Mike Pearson, Pierre Trudeau, John Turner, Jean Chretien and Paul Martin is a party of the center. Always has been. Always will be.” (Louise M.) (Link)



►August 19, 2008 — ON OIL SANDS: “I haven’t seen anything more exciting or more troubling in my travels this year.“  (Rural Right)  (Link)



►August 31, 2007 – ON PUFFIN BIRD: “It’s a noble bird because it has good family values. They stay together for 30 years. They lay one egg (each year). They put their excrement in one place. They hide  their excrement.… They flap their wings very hard and they work like hell. This seems to me a symbol for what our party should be.” (Bruce) (Link)



►August 3, 2007 — ON POLITICAL LIFE: “No such mercies occur in politics. In public life language is a weapon of war. … All that matters is what you said, not what you meant. The political realm is a world of lunatic literalism. The slightest crack in your armour – between what you meant and what you said – can be pried open and the knife driven home.”(Wilson) (Link)



►September 28, 2006 – ON KYOTO: “I believe Canada must stay committed to Kyoto and must work towards the 2012 target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 6% below 1990 levels. But I’ve also said that these 2012 targets aren’t enough. We need to go far beyond Kyoto and put Canada on track now to becoming a carbon-neutral economy.” (Wilson) (Link)



►August 31, 2006 — ON LIBERALISM: “The utopian left has a view that you can engage in a kind of angelic social choice, where there’s no cost, no penalties, no losses. Well, my sense is that politics is always about choosing the lesser evil, in metaphoric terms, and sometimes the lesser evil in a very real sense…it is basically driven by a quite tragic sense of what politics is about.” (Alberta Girl) (Link)



►August 6, 2006 — ON LEBANON WAR: “This is the kind of dirty war you’re in when you have to do this and I’m not losing sleep about that.” (Lorraine) (Link)



►May 2, 2004 — ON GOING TO WAR: “To defeat evil, we may have to traffic in evils: indefinite detention of suspects, coercive interrogations, targeted assassinations, even pre-emptive war.” (Bruce) (Link)



►March 14, 2004 – ON “WE” AMERICANS: “We thought we were arguing about Iraq, but what might be best for 25 million Iraqis didn’t figure very much in the argument. As usual we were talking about ourselves: what America is and how to use its frightening power in the world.” (Rural Right) (Link)



►March 14, 2002 – ON LIVING OUTSIDE CANADA: “I loved my own country, but I believed in America in a way that Canada never allowed,” Mr. Ignatieff wrote. “I was against the war because I thought it betrayed something essential about the country. I marched because I believed in Jefferson and Lincoln.” (Alberta Girl & Sandy) (Link)



►April 2, 1998 — ON QUEBECERS: “Quebecers walk around with this fantasy of how different they are, but they are just North Americans who speak French. They take the minor differences and magnify it.” (Bruce & Sandy) (Link) (Related “Quote of the Day” left side half way down page.)



                                                *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

    Endnotes: “Isms” are phrases, sentences or paragraphs that relate to a philosophical, political or moral system. While they are not linked to individual names at this source (e.g., Marxism), they are here and in the context in which they are used on this website.

    Specifically, the “ism” suffix is used here as a play on the nickname of the new Canadian Liberal Leader, Michael Ignatieff, which is Iggy – thus Iggyisms.

    Sometimes isms can be funny, such as the notorious Chretienism — “The proof is the proof and when you have a good proof it’s proven.” However, in former Prime Minister Jean Chretien’s case, he was having fun with the media and they knew it. But, in Ignatieff’s case, most are strange, contradictory, run-on or simply incomprehensible statements. See also this google source for Ignatieff quotes.
 
Ignatieff subject of glowing New York Times profile, PC

WASHINGTON -- Michael Ignatieff has caught the attention of the New York Times,
serving as the subject of a largely fawning profile Sunday that described the Liberal
leader as a keen intellect waiting in the wings to assume power.

"His ascendancy puts his country on the cusp of an unusual moment, in some ways
a throwback to the era of the dashing Pierre Trudeau, another smart-set intellectual
who served as prime minister," the Times' Eric Konigsberg wrote.

The Toronto-placelined piece, under the headline "Running on Charm and Book Sense,"
delves into Ignatieff's unconventional upbringing and his rise in power just three years
after entering politics. "Mr. Ignatieff's life story is positively novelistic in its detail,"
Konigsberg writes. "His father, George Ignatieff, was a Canadian diplomat, and his
grandfather and great-grandfather were both Russian counts who served as cabinet
ministers in the czarist government. His mother's brother, George Grant, was a famous
political philosopher."

The piece, on the front of the paper's Fashion and Style section, was picked up by the
Manhattan media blog Gawker, which asked: "Is Michael Ignatieff Canada's Barack Obama?"
under the subhead "Canadawesome."

"All hail Iggy!" read the post.

In addition to his intellectual background and his writing acumen, Gawker pointed out
that just like the new American president, Ignatieff has heartily embraced modern
technology to reach out to his supporters. He's joined Twitter, a micro-blogging site
that features short status updates by its users. The Liberal leader's latest tweet was
from Jan. 28, when he wrote he was putting Prime Minister Stephen Harper "on probation."

The 61-year-old Ignatieff is also on Facebook, his page regularly updated with statements,
news, video and Flickr photos.

Nonetheless, comparisons to Obama make the Liberal leader uncomfortable. "There's only
one Obama," Ignatieff has said. Privately, he disdains such parallels, saying any politician
perceived as trying to emulate the popular president makes himself a target of mockery.

Book explores relationship with U.S.

And in fact, Ignatieff has adopted many of Harper's tactics -- not Obama's -- in terms of
message discipline and rebuilding his party. He has instructed his caucus that they are to
speak publicly with one voice: his.

In the eight weeks since he was acclaimed Liberal leader, Ignatieff has also installed his
own people on the party's executive, dismissed loyalists to Stephane Dion in the opposition
leader's office and cleaned house in the Liberal Research Bureau.

Politically, the Times piece suggests Ignatieff has taken some stances that are diametrically
opposed to Obama's. It recalls, for example, the Liberal leader's onetime support of the U.S.
invasion of Iraq and his public defence of torture. "He has openly acknowledged, without
much self-censorship, regret over his initial support of the Iraq war and has movingly --
if painfully -- wrung his hands in print, most notably in the New York Times Magazine, over
both the decision and his ensuing volte-face," Konigsberg wrote.

The article mentions that Ignatieff's next book, "True Patriot Love: Four Generations in Search
of Canada," will be published in late April. The Liberal leader told the Times that the book
explores a common preoccupation in Canada -- its relationship with the United States, the
country he called home for five years.

"Every generation, they are all obsessed with the idea of how to maintain a Canadian empire
in the face of America, this behemoth right next door," Ignatieff said.
 
Running on Book Sense and Charm, NY Times

01igna.xlarge1.jpg

CEREBRAL TACTICS Some see Michael Ignatieff, the opposition Liberal Party leader,
as a throwback to Pierre Trudeau.

IN the last few years, Michael Ignatieff’s friends in the United States and England
began receiving self-deprecating e-mail messages from him lamenting how dull
and low-profile his life had suddenly become.

He had spent most of the preceding four decades making a name for himself in
both countries — writing essays on the world’s war zones for The New Yorker,
The New Republic and The New York Review of Books; writing novels and screenplays;
enjoying popularity as a television-show host in Britain and a regular at the Groucho
Club; and teaching at Harvard and Cambridge universities.

Now, he joked, he was stuck in the pedestrian life of a freshman civil servant — in Canada
no less. Mr. Ignatieff shocked friends and colleagues three years ago by chucking the life of
the mind for the hurly-burly of politics and returning, after a long exile, to his native country
to win a seat in Parliament. And if he was bored, it wasn’t for long. Last December, after a
tumultuous fortnight of machinations in parliament, Mr. Ignatieff, 61, became the leader of
the opposition Liberal Party, which has been called Canada’s “natural ruling party” and has
been in power for much of the last century.

Should his party win control of the government, something it came close to doing last week
and still hopes to in the coming months, he would become the next prime minister of Canada.

Among the circles in which Mr. Ignatieff once traveled, there might be a sense that anybody
capable of writing a novel (“Scar Tissue”) that becomes short-listed for the Booker Prize —
anybody, for that matter, who had the writer Martin Amis and Michael Palin of Monty Python
as guests at his wedding — could figure out a way to jump the queue of Canadian politics.

Even so, his ascendancy puts his country on the cusp of an unusual moment, in some ways
a throwback to the era of the dashing Pierre Trudeau, another smart-set intellectual who
served as prime minister. “He was brought in to reinvigorate the liberal brand, to go for the
big game right away,” said Nelson Wiseman, a political scientist at the University of Toronto.
“I think a lot of the party thought, ‘We need someone who has the intellectual gravitas of
Pierre Trudeau.’ Like Trudeau, he came in as a fresh figure, but he also had a reputation
abroad that Trudeau didn’t.”

Mr. Ignatieff has proven savvy enough in his own country. Although his opposition coalition
split apart and backed down last week from its efforts to defeat the Conservative government
led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, political watchers say that Mr. Ignatieff is probably just
biding his time. “He wants the crown in his own right — not through a coalition but via an election,
which most of the pundits think we’ll have later this year,” Mr. Wiseman said. “He also wants
the Harper administration to have to wear the recession for a while.”

Mr. Ignatieff’s rise in Parliament happened fast, he said in an interview in late January. He said
that he gave up a lot by leaving behind the private contentment of a serious writer’s life to run
for office. “But I’m in here to be serious,” he said, and added: “This is the only place where I can
be a participant, not a spectator. I’ve been a spectator, and now I’m in the boat fishing. That part
of it, from a spiritual point of view, it feels good.”

A FEW years ago, a survey conducted by Foreign Policy magazine and Prospect, a British journal,
ranked Mr. Ignatieff as the 37th-most influential “public intellectual” in the world (the Nigerian
writer Chinua Achebe was 38th). Although the clauses “for a Canadian” or, now, “for a politician”
are often attached, people almost always describe Mr. Ignatieff as glamorous. Maclean’s magazine
once named him Canada’s “Sexiest Cerebral Man.” He was famous in London during the 1980s and
1990s when he was the host of a television talk show devoted to books and ideas. He was a sort of
Anglophone version of Bernard-Henri Lévy, but with a pedigree and without the money or aversion
to shirt-buttoning.

Mr. Ignatieff’s big-time ambition is so much a part of his public identity that he often scores points
by making fun of it himself. At a recent address to a group of 700 business leaders, he opened with
a shout-out to a member of the audience who, he kindly noted, had run against him for his parliamentary
seat. “And I beat him,” Mr. Ignatieff said, after a nicely timed comedic pause. The crowd laughed heartily.
...

Mr. Ignatieff held the captainship of his boarding-school soccer team, produced a Harvard dissertation
that involved spending nights watching over state prison inmates in Massachusetts and has written
more than a dozen books: political tracts, three novels, a family history, a biography of his former mentor
Isaiah Berlin, and — mobilized by what he saw in the Balkans — several books about human rights and
intervention.

In 2004, when he was serving as the director of Harvard’s Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Mr. Ignatieff
was visited by three strategists from Canada’s Liberal wing who were leading an effort to infuse a party
weakened by scandal with new blood. “It was a bolt from the blue,” he recalled, when during dinner
they asked him to consider coming back to run for office. “The chance to be in the arena was pretty
irresistible,” he said.

It was simultaneously of a piece with his background and somewhat incongruous. “My dad worked for
four prime ministers,” he said. “I grew up in a house where public service was something you ought
to do. But elected public service my father thought of with horror, because he knew how brutal it was.”

In seeking his party’s leadership position in 2006 and 2008, Mr. Ignatieff ran both times against Bob Rae,
a longtime politician who happened to be one of his best friends; they had been roommates at the
University of Toronto. “It was difficult running against Bob — we are old, old friends, and our dads were
in the foreign service together, ” Mr. Ignatieff said.

In 2006, neither was elected leader, but in 2008, Mr. Rae bowed out of the contest at the last minute
to throw his support to Mr. Ignatieff. “We had some very emotional conversations,” Mr. Rae said in an
interview in Toronto. “My feeling was that Michael had the support of the small and influential group
of party officials who were voting — these were special, last-minute circumstances — but that if it had
been a broader election throughout the party, I’d have won.” To this, Mr. Ignatieff said, “We’ll never know,
because Bob pulled out of the race, because he made a very fine gesture.”

Mr. Ignatieff’s friend Leon Wieseltier, the literary editor of The New Republic, described him as “a
genuinely introspective individual,” but said that in the more than two decades he has been editing
him, he had never heard mention of an interest in running for office. “He is, in spirit, a humanist,
not a politician,” he said.

Mr. Wieseltier added: “When I would see Michael, he and I would stroll arm in arm around Covent
Garden singing — poorly, of course — some of the great quintet in the first act of ‘Così Fan Tutte.’
There was in him a hunger for intellectual authority and for a certain degree of social recognition,
but it was never about power."

While Mr. Ignatieff is blessed with many attributes that an elected official is supposed to possess —
poise, focus and an instinct for self-preservation — he has a number of other traits that probably
wouldn’t play on an American stage. He has openly acknowledged, without much self-censorship,
regret over his initial support of the Iraq war and has movingly — if painfully — wrung his hands
in print, most notably in The New York Times Magazine, over both the decision and his ensuing
volte-face.

In Canada, he has faced criticism for his stance on the war, not simply because of all the agonizing,
but because, as Andrew Potter wrote in a 2006 issue of Maclean’s, “his arguments reek of the
necessary compromises you need to make as a liberal in the U.S.”

In fact, over the years, Mr. Ignatieff has been very plain about his affinity for a country not his own.
In 2002, writing in Granta, a literary magazine, he discussed his youthful opposition to the Vietnam
War: “I loved my own country, but I believed in America in a way that Canada never allowed. I was
against the war because I thought it betrayed something essential about the country. I marched
because I believed in Jefferson and Lincoln.” Considering those words now over tea and biscuits
in Toronto, Mr. Ignatieff said, “There are moments when I’ve identified passionately with America,
and there are moments of total recoil.” (The invasion of Iraq, he said, came to encompass both feelings.)

“I think I’ve always felt passionately and proudly Canadian, and the way I prove that is that I’ve never
sought another passport,” he said, then smiled as he added that he keeps a statue of Thomas Jefferson
in his study. Charges of carpetbagging — Mr. Ignatieff and his second wife, Zsuzsanna Zshoar, moved
into a condominium in an area of Toronto that he doesn’t represent — and impatience to rise to the
top have also provided red meat to conservatives and Canadian tabloids.

David Rieff, an American friend and author, said: “Canada, like a lot of culturally small countries, has
an ambivalent relationship with countrymen who leave and make it big in the United States or in Europe.
He’s considered a celebrity at home, and they’re very proud of him, but there’s also some graceless
carping. It’s tall-poppy syndrome.”

MR. IGNATIEFF’S next book, “True Patriot Love: Four Generations in Search of Canada,” will be
published in late April, on the eve of a possible federal election. He described it as an exploration of
Canadian identity — his, as well as those of his grandfather, father and children (he has two).

“Every generation, they are all obsessed with the idea of how to maintain a Canadian empire in the face
of America, this behemoth right next door.”

 
Not sure if this is the right place, so MODS move as needed.


How nice of you Iggy  ::) didn't know we had to act like the Borg

Ignatieff allows N.L. MPs 'one-time' protest vote against budget
Last Updated: Tuesday, February 3, 2009 | 12:56 PM ET CBC News


Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff says he will allow four of his MPs from Newfoundland and Labrador to break party ranks and have a one-time-only protest vote against the budget on Tuesday night.

Liberal MPs Scott Andrews, Siobhan Coady, Judy Foote and Scott Simms have argued that they cannot support the budget because it singles out their province and robs it of an estimated $1.6 billion in federal transfer payments.

"I decided to permit them in the budget vote tonight a one-time vote of protest to signal their displeasure and my displeasure at these unilateral actions which, in my view, weaken our federation, cause strains in our federation at a time when Canadians should be pulling together."

The MPs' position puts them at odds with Ignatieff, who has said the party would vote with the government if the Conservatives backed an amendment requiring regular reports to Parliament on the budget’s implementation and costs.

On Monday night, that amendment, with Tory support, passed.

Ignatieff said that the "radical unprecedented" cut to transfer payments by Prime Minister Stephen Harper was made unilaterally, a move Ignatieff said weakens the federation.

Ignatieff said he met with Harper on Monday and asked him to "pause" the cut until they can come up with a reasonable solution. He said the prime minister said no.

The NDP and Bloc Québécois have said they will vote against the budget. The Conservatives need the support of the Liberals to ensure the budget passes.

A defeat would topple the minority Tory government and possibly lead to some kind of coalition government or another election.

Ignatieff defended his decision when asked by reporters why he won't allow Quebec MPs to vote against the budget. The province has also expressed frustration over changes to the equalization payments.

The Liberal leader said the situation is different because Quebec was informed last year about the changes and that those changes affect the whole federation. Ignatieff said the cuts announced in the budget single out Newfoundland and Labrador.
 
NFLD Sapper said:
...in my view, weaken our federation, cause strains in our federation...

And precisely, how does climbing into bed with the Bloc strengthen our federation?  ::)
 
"One Time Only" coupons and the new Liberal leadership:

http://stevejanke.com/archives/282333.php

Now that Michael Ignatieff has formerly recognized the principle of a one-use only coupon to be cashed in by MPs to vote contrary to the Liberal Party line, I have some questions regarding how this coupon works.

Liberal Party leader Michael Ignatieff has created a new dynamic within the Liberal Party - the one-time opportunity for any Liberal MP to vote against the party line.  Not everyone thinks it's a good idea:

Rather than showing unity with their party, the MPs who broke ranks and voted against the budget have followed the lead of their premier, which calls into question Ignatieff's authority over his caucus, said CTV's Ottawa Bureau Chief Robert Fife.

"They've done a grave disservice to Mr. Ignatieff," Fife said Wednesday on CTV Newsnet. "They've hurt his leadership right off the get-go on his first test as leader. Basically they said 'we are going to march to the drumbeat of Danny Williams. We are not going to listen to the leader of our party, our leader is Danny Williams.'"

According to Fife, Ignatieff has opened the door for other MPs to be allowed to break party ranks and do the bidding of their respective premiers.

"The fact of the matter is, they're going to say, 'you did it for Newfoundland, we want our one-time coupon to cash it in,'" Fife said. "This is a problem. He's opened a Pandora's box here."

I think Robert Fife is being premature in his criticism (as perhaps I have been).  We don't know what the conditions and limitations are for this coupon.  Done right, it could add a whole new element to parliamentary strategy in Canada:

Is the coupon per-province or per-MP?  I get the impression it is by province, but without a copy of the coupon, it's hard to know for sure.  I'm going to assume it's per province until we learn otherwise.

Are the coupons transferable?  If the premier of Saskatchewan decides that the budget is good for the province, can the Liberal Saskatchewan caucus (exactly one MP, Ralph Goodale), lend his coupon to the Newfoundland and Labrador MPs so they can vote against the budget twice?
There are no Liberal MPs in Alberta.  Who gets that coupon?  Will it be raffled off?

Are new coupons issued with each Throne Speech?  Are unused coupons voided, or can they be saved from one session of parliament to the next so that Liberal MPs can ignore Michael Ignatieff on more than one occasion within the same session?
Does officially bilingual New Brunswick get two coupons - one for French and one for English?
Does Quebec get any coupons, or does Quebec get as many coupons as it likes?
Who issues the coupon?  The party whip or each provincial premier? 
Will special interest groups linked closely to the Liberal Party be given coupons that they can use to signal their displeasure with a voting decision by Michael Ignatieff?  These groups would cash in the coupon to the party whip who would then assign a certain number of MPs the job of voting counter to Michael Ignatieff's wishes.  An obvious recipient of such a coupon would be Elizabeth May and the Green Party.  Will these MPs hold up signs to effect "This breakaway vote is brought to you by The Green Party of Canada" or whatever?

Is there a size limit per use?  No more than so many MPs can ride on a single coupon, for example, or the use of a coupon can't alter the result of a vote.  Who has the backbone to say "No!" to the use of a coupon?
Maybe the Liberals can form a commission to chart formal rules with regards to ignoring the pleas from Michael Ignatieff to show party unity.

Without rules about when to take Michael Ignatieff seriously, the Liberal Party could fall into chaos.
 
New leader, same old trough:

http://billtieleman.blogspot.com/2009/02/is-michael-ignatieff-giving-federal.html

Is Michael Ignatieff giving federal Liberal Party control to Paul Martin-Stephane Dion forces? Why is Bruce Clark running big donor Laurier Club?

Some federal Liberal Party activists are wondering if and why new interim leader Michael Ignatieff is giving back power to key players who backed Paul Martin in the internally bitter and divisive leadership battle with Jean Chretien to become Prime Minister.

And they are asking questions, quietly and privately, about why controversial Liberal Bruce Clark is chairing the high dollar donor Laurier Club in BC, among other roles in fundraising for the party.

The Laurier Club is made up of Liberal Party members who give $1100 per year in a single donation or through monthly installments.

And according to federal Liberal sources, the Laurier Club's paid administrator is Forrest Parlee, a senior associate at the Burrard Group, the communications and strategy firm run by Mark Marissen, Martin's former BC lieutenant and then National Campaign Manager in former federal Liberal leader Stephane Dion's surprise successful 2006 leadership campaign and National Campaign Co-Chair for the devastating October 2008 federal election.

Clark will presumably be front and centre on Tuesday February 10, when - as reported by my 24 hours colleague Sean Holman of Public Eye Online - federal Liberal Party presidential candidate Alfred Apps visits Vancouver for an exclusive breakfast with members of the Laurier Club at the law offices of Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP, as well as a grip and grin at the Labatt Beer Institute on Monday February 9.

Apps, a Toronto partner of the firm, is running against Ontario party president Mike Crawley for the position. Crawley is also CEO of a private Ontario-based wind power firm, AIM Power Generation.

Bruce Clark has an interesting past, including a major connection with the BC Legislature Raid and the corruption charges trial of three former BC Liberal provincial government aides - David Basi, Bob Virk and Aneal Basi, a role as the major Paul Martin fundraiser in BC when the former Finance Minister moved up to Prime Minister, as well as serving on the executive of the federal Liberal party's B.C. wing, a stint lobbying against anti-smoking regulations and a job as CEO of money-losing Canada Payphone Corporation.

In the BC Legislature Raid case, Clark is alleged by police in Information To Obtain search warrant applications to have received government documents from Basi pertaining to a second BC Rail privatization, the proposed sale of BC Rail's Roberts Bank spur line for up to $100 million.

According to a police search warrant ITO sworn by RCMP Corporal Andrew Cowan, the residence of Bruce Clark -- then a federal B.C. Liberal executive -- was searched because:

"I believe that CLARK received documents pertaining to a Request for Proposal and presentations regarding Roberts Bank. I believe that CLARK has had meeting with BASI. I believe the items sought will be found at..." then giving Bruce Clark's Vancouver home address, the ITO concludes.

It should be stressed that the ITO contains unproven allegations that have never been tested in court.

B.C. Transportation Minister Kevin Falcon cancelled that sale in March 2004 after being told by the RCMP that the process had been compromised by the leak of confidential information to a bidder.

Clark's home was searched by police in December 2003, along with the BC Legislature, the home of David Basi, and the home of Erik Bornmann - the provincial lobbyist for OmniTRAX - the losing BC Rail bidder - who is now the Crown's key witness against Basi, Virk and Aneal Basi. The offices of Bornmann's now-defunct firm, Pilothouse Public Affairs, were also searched by police.

Bornmann's partners at Pilothouse were Brian Kieran, the former Province political columnist turned lobbyist - another key Crown witness, and Jamie Elmhirst - a past federal Liberal Party of Canada BC branch president and former aide to BC Liberal Premier Gordon Campbell and former BC Liberal cabinet minister turned federal Liberal MP Joyce Murray.

And Clark's sister is former BC Liberal Deputy Premier and Education Minister Christy Clark, while his brother-in-law is Mark Marissen.

David Basi was a key Paul Martin organizer in BC, blamed personally by former Chretien federal cabinet minister Herb Dhaliwal for organizing the takeover of his then Vancouver South riding association in one of the nasty battles of the war between the party's titans.

It should, of course, be pointed out that neither Bruce Clark nor anyone else mentioned here save Basi, Virk and Basi face any charges in regard to the BC Legislature Raid case, though it is highly likely Clark will be a witness in the trial.

Interestingly, many of the group of federal Liberal Party activists who strongly backed Paul Martin in his successful efforts to force Jean Chretien out of the Prime Minister's office and later backed Stephane Dion's leadership bid after Martin resigned are now said to be moving into position of influence during Ignatieff's early days as interim leader.

Will Ignatieff put his own stamp on the BC Liberal Party of Canada organization? Or will the activists who have controlled the party since the early 2000s continue to run the show?

Interestingly, the Liberal Party's BC branch website still features photos of now-resigned leader Stephane Dion and promotes the discredited "Green Shift" carbon tax that helped sewer the Liberal campaign. It's a mistake the federal party website doesn't make.

Ignatieff's decision will have long-term repercussions either way, but count on the federal Conservative Party to target controversial Liberal Party connections in the next election if they are in positions of power.

For example, in January 2007 senior Tory John Reynolds slammed the federal Liberal Party for the "embarrassing" failure to remove its B.C. branch president Jamie Elmhirst after he was subpoenaed to testify in the breach of trust case against former provincial government aides David Basi and Bob Virk. Elmhirst was under subpoena to testify in the trial for three months before he resigned as president.

If the federal Conservatives are looking for a target of opportunity, Bruce Clark certainly provides lots to work with.

At last report, Clark is currently Vice-President of Green Island Energy Corporation, a firm that planned to convert garbage into energy in Gold River on Vancouver Island and sell it to BC Hydro. Originally pop singer Jewel was involved but she is no longer an investor.

Green Island Energy announced last year it was partnering with Covanta Energy, a major US firm involved in energy from waste projects. Interestingly, Public Eye Online reports that former BC Liberal Party President Andrew Wilkinson - also a former Deputy Minister to Premier Gordon Campbell - has registered as a lobbyist for Covanta in BC. And who was once a Vice-President at Covanta? None other than BC Ferries CEO David Hahn.
Clark's role as a lobbyist for the Lower Mainland Hospitality Industry Group drew fire from anti-tobacco groups, including AirSpace, because it vigorously fought a proposed Vancouver bylaw restricting smoking in the workplace in 1995.

The Lower Mainland Hospitality Industry Group, according to anti-smoking groups and the Vancouver Richmond Health Board, was funded by the tobacco industry.

The earlier Canada Payphone role also brought some interesting connections together around Bruce Clark.

As I wrote in a column for the Georgia Straight in 2004:

"Clark was CEO of a money-losing telecommunications company called Canada Payphone Corporation between late 1998 and late 2000, earning up to $115,000 a year.

Patrick Kinsella, the influential cochair of the 2001 B.C. Liberal election campaign along with Christy Clark, was a director of Canada Payphone from 1995 to 2001, as well as buying a private placement and having share options, according to Stockwatch.

The Progressive Group, Kinsella's consulting firm, also bought a private placement in Canada Payphone in 1996 and received shares for debt in 1999. Kinsella and his firm have given more than $50,000 to the B.C. Liberals since 1996.

Bornman was Canada Payphone's communications director in 2000 and 2001.

The Earnscliffe Strategy Group, a powerful Ottawa-based public- and government-relations and research firm, became "consultants" to Canada Payphone in 1995.

Earnscliffe was a "virtual parallel finance department" when Paul Martin was minister, according to the Globe and Mail, with the firm winning $1.6 million in communications contracts from the finance department from September 1993 until July 2002.

Earnscliffe partners David Herle and Scott Reid are both senior Martin political advisers who hold enormous influence with the new prime minister.

Canaccord Capital, whose CEO, Peter Brown, is a major supporter of Gordon Campbell, helped Canada Payphone with a brokered private placement of two million units, with shares valued at $1.40 each. Those shares are currently worth just nine cents apiece. Canada Payphone losses for financial year 2003 were $1.8 million while those reported for financial year 2002 were $5 million.

Canaccord donated more than $191,000 to the B.C. Liberal Party between 1996 and 2002.

Darcy Rezac, executive director of the Vancouver Board of Trade and B.C. Liberal political supporter, was another investor in Canada Payphone.

The Neighbourhood Pub Owners' Association of BC chose Canada Payphone as its official payphone supplier in December 1998. The executive director of the association was then Brenda Locke, now Liberal MLA for Surrey­-Green Timbers."

Ignatieff faces some difficult choices in BC - but that's what being leader of a federal party and wanting to prove you can be prime minister is all about.
 
Wow, talk about getting "all eyes" on Ignatieff. Getting a picture with the POTUS and payig to have it displayed on electronic billboards in Times Square and (apparently) Las Vegas? Hardly the act of a self confident individual who is setting his own agenda...

http://searchingforliberty.blogspot.com/2009/02/michael-ignatieff-embarasses-himself.html

Michael Ignatieff Embarasses Himself and the Liberal Party

Well. I'm scratching my head over this one. After this blog actually supported the Ignatieff leadership bid, seeing him as perhaps the only thinking, and somewhat sober, Liberal of the bunch, he goes and does this.

I have to say, as much as I have some respect for some of Michael Ignatieff's thoughts and opinions as expressed in his past writings, I am dumfounded with how, well, juvenile and to coin a phrase, "small town cheap" this act was.

It has to be said that getting some personalized golf-balls, and handing them about to associates and friends is much less crass than actually paying to put your face on a billboard at Times square.

I mean - what is the point, exactly? "Look at me, I have my picture with the President". Such a move only emphasizes the point that he wasn't, in fact, in any significant contact with the President, and, as well, suggests just how insecure Ignatieff truly is - seeking to vainly try and publish a brief moment between the two of them.

Prime Minister Harper meets with President Obama, fields questions and arrive at some common understandings about significant global and domestic issues, emerging from the event looking like the leader that he is.

Ignatieff pays to have his picture on a billboard, and comes off looking like a tourist.

As much as I believe it will assist the Conservatives, the move is an embarrasment to Canada, let alone the Liberal Party and Michael Ignatieff himself.

Oh.. in a related story, Floyd McMurtry, from Franklin County, Ohio, also has posted his picture with President Obama, here:
 
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