Canadian PM Blasts Opposition
Three Party Alliance Has Tried To Topple Him, Citing His Handling Of The Economic Crisis
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Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper responds to critics during a House of Commons session in Ottawa, Dec.3, 2008. Theree opposition parties, which together control a majority in Parliament, signed a pact Monday agreeing to vote to oust Harper's minority government next week and setting the structure for their proposed coalition government. Harper has called the move undemocratic. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press)
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Harper pleaded his case to the nation in a taped address from Parliament on Tuesday, vowing to use "every legal means at our disposal" to stop opposition plans to bring down his minority Conservative government in a confidence vote Monday.
A cabinet minister suggested earlier Wednesday that Harper would ask Governor General Michaelle Jean to make the unprecedented move of suspending Parliament until next month. Harper's office said in a statement after his address that he will visit the Governor General on Thursday.
The embattled prime minister called the opposition move a "back room deal."
"The opposition does not have the democratic right to impose a coalition," Harper said in a taped address to the nation from his office in Parliament. "The opposition is attempting to impose this deal without your say, without your consent, and without your vote. This is no time for back room deals."
Harper's Conservative Party was re-elected Oct. 14 with a strengthened minority government, but the opposition united to topple Harper, saying he has failed to present a plan for dealing with the global economic crisis. A suspension of Parliament would give Harper time to come up with an economic stimulus package.
Opposition Liberal leader Stephane Dion said that it would only delay the inevitable.
In a letter to Jean on Wednesday, Dion urged her to reject Harper's request, arguing it would prolong a parliamentary crisis and exacerbate the country's economic difficulties.
In his address, Harper called the crisis a pivotal moment in Canada's history and slammed the Liberals and Democrats for trying to create a power-sharing coalition with the Bloc Quebecois, a separatist party from the French-speaking province of Quebec.
"At a time of global economic instability, Canada's government must stand unequivocally for keeping the country together," he said. "At a time like this, a coalition with the separatists cannot help Canada."
The opposition move against Harper was also fueled by a proposal to scrap public subsidies for political parties, something the opposition groups rely on more than the Conservatives. Analysts have called the proposal a colossal mistake that unified the opposition against him.
Although that proposal was scrapped, the opposition has continued to seek his ouster by saying he has lost the trust and confidence of Parliament.
The Liberals, New Democrats and Bloc Quebecois, which together control a majority of Parliament's 308 seats, signed a pact agreeing to vote to oust Harper's minority government and setting the structure for their proposed coalition government.
The Opposition is attempting to impose this deal without your say, without your consent, and without your vote. This is no time for backroom deals.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen HarperJean, who is the representative of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II as head of state, holds a mostly ceremonial position. But it will be her decision on whether to suspend Parliament.
The political crisis could also force the second national election in two months or lead to the opposition coalition taking power.
A governor general has never been asked to suspend Parliament to delay an ouster vote when it was clear the government didn't have the confidence of a majority of legislators.
"There is no precedent whatsoever in Canada and probably in the Commonwealth," Constitutional scholar and Queen's University political scientist Ned Franks said. "We are in uncharted territory.".
If Jean refuses Harper's request to suspend Parliament he could step down or wait to until he is defeated in Monday's confidence vote, Franks said.
Conservative Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said a suspension of Parliament until next month is the most sensible alternative available to Jean and the government.
"I'm sure most Canadians agree that a time-out for Parliament right now is probably the best thing," Kenney said
The Conservatives are pursuing a public relations campaign against the opposition that includes rallies across the country and radio ads saying power should be earned and not taken.
No Canadian government has ever been ousted in a confidence vote and replaced by an opposition coalition without an intervening election.
Jean said she had received a letter from the three opposition parties formally advising her of their plan to topple Harper and urging her to let them form a coalition government.
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- "I could see Canada becoming as unstable as Italy."
Posted by ausus at 10:18 PM : Dec 04, 2008
Hahahaha. Get serious! - Reply to this comment
- Big whoop.. The Parliament recessed 5 days early. It does not mean the government stops functioning. The majority of polled Canadians did not want their government overthrown and demanded an election to decide their government. Would a republican overthrow be welcomed here?
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- ausus: I agree that the last thing we need is instability in government and right now, thanks to the Conservative leader''s advice to the Governor General, we have NO government. The nasty precedent that has been set, is that now, any minority government facing a non-confidence vote will simply avoid the vote by proroguing parliament. This has never occurred anywhere in the Commonwealth and effectively silences all opposition. Regardless of what Harper may say about the coalition, as leader of a minority government, it was his responsibility to consult with the opposition so as to maintain confidence in the House as functioning body. Rather, he chose to change the rules of parliamentary democracy, avoiding the non-confidence motion and stating that he was, in effect, calling an unsanctioned election where the electorate would have no opportunity to cast a vote. This election is to be decided by POLLING NUMBERS. (Time to dust off the "Dewey beats Truman" references.) We now have the added feature of an energized separatist movement in Quebec AND the West. Tell me...does it get any more unstable than this?!
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- hockeybub,
Even if you disagree with the economic policies of the current government, it would set a nasty precedent to actually throw out a government so soon after it actually gained seats in an election. I could see Canada becoming as unstable as Italy. - Reply to this comment
- ausus: Interesting piece from Gene Smiley. Thank you for that. I would conclude that it was the reaction to, rather than the actual New Deal policy itself that really created the problem. I would agree that the AAA was a mistake. I''ve always been puzzled as to why FDR, being against Hoover''s tarrif policy, would not use, rather than reduce, the productive capacity of the US. Still, considering the era, I am not convinced that it was the policies of the New Deal which slowed recovery, but rather the response of industry and the business community. Understandable though. It appears that the idea of FDR as "anti-business" had the same result as we see now as governments trying to deal with our crisis.
My dispute with the federal Conservatives is not over actions they''ve taken. This is not a "made in Canada" recession. The Conservatives did inheirit a strong economy. They were the trustees of healthy surpluses. The Conservatives failed to take measures to restrain the rapid growth which led to inflated labour, housing,general operational costs. We have oil sitting at $44/bbl. When first proposed, oil sands projects anticipated profits at $35/bbl. Had the economy been properly managed, costs of operation in manufacturing and resource development would have been maintained. It is hard to justify buying $75B in mortgages and providing nothing in the way of government investment in the manufacturing sector. It''s not what the Conservatives did, it''s what they didn''t do. - Reply to this comment
- hockeybub,
Try this one for a start. There are many more. It attributes the blame both to Hoover and FDR.
http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/GreatDepression.html
Are you saying about the current government is that it inherited a Canadian economy in such great shape that even with no or the wrong policies it was unable in two to bring the country into recession, despite nearly every other country being in that state? It seems a pretty fantastic claim to me.
Do you think Dion''s plans to raise taxes and utility prices will be good for Canada''s economy? - Reply to this comment
- ausus: How does one become a student of history without listening to what they are told? I''m not one for "right wing/left wing" rhetoric, but the history of this country clearly shows that the economy has faired better under Liberal leadership. A portion of that might be a attributed to "good timing", but I guess you do make your own good luck as well. Canada''s economy is fairing better than most of the G20 at the moment, but please bear in mind that those economic successes are to the credit of the Liberal government and the efforts of then finance minister Paul Martin. As stated, the government''s own budget office reports that it is Conservative policy that has left our economy in its current precarious position after taking control of an economy which was producing record surpluses.
Regarding banking legislation, again, the stability of our financial institutions can be credited to the Liberal governments of King and St Laurent. Please look to the economic record of Mulroney, Clark, Stanfield...back to Bennett. All failed to deal effectively with recession, and in the case of Bennett, depression. Regarding FDR, I am admittedly, an admirer and having recently completed both the Edwards and the Goodwin biographies, find no evidence to support the notion that New Deal policies that attributed to a deepening of the depression. I would be interested to see an opposing view if you might recommend a credible one. - Reply to this comment
- Let us look at this right-wing left-wing thing.
Europe''s highly regulated economies are ALL in worse shape than Canada''s - why?
For years Australia was governed by a conservative coalition and had surpluses. This followed disastrous deficits of the former Labor government. Now the Labor party is back and is working toward a deficit.
If you were a genuine student of history and did not follow what you were told, you might have discovered that many of FDR''s policies actually made the Depression worse.
I reiterate that right now Canada is one of only two major economies not in recession and it has the strongest banking system in the world (better than any in Europe). Why change it? - Reply to this comment
- The move by the opposition parties to form a government without the will of the people is similar to a military coup,but without using the military.
This sure isnt democracy,send it back to the people and let them decide in an election - Reply to this comment
- This right-wing plague on American democracy is moving through the Western Hemisphere like Typhoid Mary.
Posted by prometheus41 at 11:12 PM
Totally agreed. - Reply to this comment
President Obama's 



