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Sadly, the Liberals know not what they do (Canada - great analysis!)
Ottawa Citizen - Canada ^ | Friday, December 08, 2006 | John Robson

Posted on 12/08/2006 2:42:28 PM PST by GMMAC

Sadly, the Liberals know not what they do

John Robson, The Ottawa Citizen
Published: Friday, December 08, 2006


Based on the record, Stephane Dion's victory at the Liberal convention is not surprising. But it is troubling. And yes, I predicted it on the radio beforehand; any fool can be wise after the fact.

First, the federal Liberals have not won an electoral majority with an anglophone leader since 1945: before steel-belted radials, TVs in homes, or the birth of any of the eight convention leadership contenders. Liberals' blithe self-image as the Natural Governing Party may obscure their vision of this awkward reality. But they must feel it in their guts. And Mr. Dion was the only francophone.

Second, the party leadership alternates between francophone winners and anglophone chumps. Yes, Paul Martin represented a Montreal riding and spoke very good French. But he was as anglo as white socks on a first date. Again, advantage, Mr. Dion.

Third, the federal Liberal party hasn't picked a leader without federal cabinet experience since Edward Blake in 1880, their only leader who never reached 24 Sussex. Only Mr. Dion among the four front-runners had been a federal minister.

Fourth, Mr. Dion was the only real insider among the front-runners in a party that values loyalty. Bob Rae and Michael Ignatieff entered trailing parachutes. Former provincial Liberal Gerard Kennedy might one day earn insider status, including federal cabinet experience. But not yet.

So much for his victory. Now the implications. Mr. Dion was both the logical choice for the Liberals and a problematic one, and his party and our country are in more trouble as a result than you've probably read in newspapers.

I know, I know. He's good at being underestimated, a political skill itself frequently underestimated. And I don't believe the cliches about him being disliked in Quebec; the Quebecois tribe prefers its own to anglos any day. Mr. Dion's problem is the exact opposite. He's liable to strike Westerners and rural Ontarians as embodying all that's wrong with this country.

Consider his rocky start regarding his dual French citizenship. It wouldn't be a big deal if he'd just said: My Paris-born maman got it for me, I never voted there or held a passport, and now that I'm running for prime minister I'm renouncing it because I love Canada so darn much. Instead (life lesson: It's usually not the mistake that hurts you, it's the denial) he haughtily rejected the notion that a man can't aspire to lead one country while having a membership card in a more sophisticated one in his back pocket in case the rubes don't perceive his qualities. In the non-post-modern parts of the country, loyalty is not a comical concept. And Mr. Dion's narrow cosmopolitanism is a potentially huge cultural problem there.

Especially given his determination to implement Kyoto. I strongly advise him to keep in his office one of those late- Trudeau-era bumper stickers: "Let the Eastern [bad word] freeze in the dark." Alberta is bigger, wealthier, more confident and more fed up than it's ever been, and anything resembling a second National Energy Program, if it tips the provincial economy into recession, could tear the country apart.

I don't mean figuratively. Stephane Dion was exactly the right man to humble Quebec separatists with his elegant Cartesian letters, and exactly the wrong man to grasp that if the West ever gets serious about separation, they'll print the ballots, vote and go while Joe Clark is still telling CBC it's nothing to get excited about. And if you wanted a man whose attitudes as well as policies could make them get serious, central casting would send Dr. Stephane Dion with his PhD from the Institut d'etudes politiques in Paris and his fractured English.

Sure, Jean Chretien's English was awful. But so was his French. And his "little-guy" image made his second language problem inoffensive. Whereas Mr. Dion is an ostentatiously brilliant intellectual who easily could have acquired flawless English living in Montreal. He just didn't bother. Such a vulgar tongue. Such vulgar people. In isolation it might not matter much. But consider Western Standard publisher Ezra Levant's point that every 2006 Liberal leadership candidate supported the Canadian Wheat Board monopoly, and not one came from a province whose farmers are subject to it. It's less a policy than an attitude, and a dangerous one.

Dead in the West since 1958, without a majority of Quebec seats since 1980, basically confined to three big cities, it now takes all the Liberals' strength just to hold their existing support, leaving neither time nor energy for genuine renewal. Yet one more win the old way could fracture the country.

Does Mr. Dion see any of this? In the mirror? Tradition says no, and makes his selection both unsurprising and highly problematic.

John Robson's column appears weekly.

© The Ottawa Citizen 2006


TOPICS: Canada; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: alberta; quebec; stephanedion; stephenharper
IMHO, excellent, breaking away from the media herd, conservative punditry !!!

In somewhat related news, Liberals blink: Commons accepts amended accountability act
Although note typical 'don't get it' arrogance within linked article's 3rd from last paragraph:
"Liberal MP Stephen Owen said the bill still contains what he called serious flaws that need
to be corrected should the Liberals return to power."

1 posted on 12/08/2006 2:42:32 PM PST by GMMAC
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To: fanfan; Pikamax; Former Proud Canadian; Great Dane; Alberta's Child; headsonpikes; Ryle; ...

PING!
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

2 posted on 12/08/2006 2:43:56 PM PST by GMMAC (Discover Canada governed by Conservatives: www.CanadianAlly.com)
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To: GMMAC

LOL, I don't think liberals *ever* knew or know what they're doing.


3 posted on 12/08/2006 2:44:52 PM PST by farlander (Strategery - sure beats liberalism!)
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To: GMMAC

BTTT!


4 posted on 12/08/2006 2:45:10 PM PST by fanfan ("We don't start fights my friends, but we finish them, and never leave until our work is done."PMSH)
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To: GMMAC

Of all the things that may be wrong with Dion, I don't know why they bother with his dual citizenship. There are many MPs with dual citizenship. The issue is a non-starter. Concentrate instead upon his bow-ties and weeping.


5 posted on 12/08/2006 2:47:10 PM PST by Weep-o-crat Hunter
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To: GMMAC
Excellent article.

I don't mean to impugn Canada's parliamentary system, but it does make me all the more determined that we never lose the electoral college down here.

Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver have decided Canada's direction for too long by their sheer numbers. If we went to a popular vote to choose our president, New York, Chicago and Los Angeles would ruin us -- and the Dems know it.

6 posted on 12/08/2006 5:43:34 PM PST by BfloGuy (It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we can expect . . .)
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To: GMMAC

"What is a Democrat? Start with a Republican, then take away, reason and accountability!"

Bumper Sticker/T-Shirt
http://www.cafepress.com/titillatingtees.71785105


7 posted on 12/08/2006 5:45:41 PM PST by xuberalles (Anti-Liberal Novelties, Titillating Tees! http://www.cafepress.com/titillatingtees)
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To: BfloGuy

I am American but I have also heard that the Liberals are having problems in the Martime provinces now (and that they alost takes them (seats) for granted..I have heard that if the Conservatives rally and recruit a few good grass-roots campaigners there then they might pick up quite a few..

What do you say is this true, or just "hear say"..?


8 posted on 12/08/2006 6:14:21 PM PST by JSDude1 (www.pence08.com)
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To: GMMAC
Dion will have the Habitants banging their WAR DRUMS in Laval, while he double teams with Les Provincials from his federal seat, seeking to divide the nation and gain office as Prime Minister. To do that he has to scare the heck out of Canadians with some kind of zFLQ fiasco, like Trudeau did in Oct. 1970, and "Save The Nation." so that Francophones will rule Canada by disunifying it, for another forty years of liberal socialist totalitarian policies.

May Harper turn out to be Canada's Abe Lincoln, and tell Dion and his Quebecois running dogs that they will have to bleed in a civil war to separate, if they could win it, which they cannot.

9 posted on 12/08/2006 6:47:47 PM PST by Candor7 (Into Liberal flatulance goes the best hope of the West, and who wants to be a smart feller?)
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To: BfloGuy; JSDude1; fanfan
"I don't mean to impugn Canada's parliamentary system, but it does make me all the more determined that we never lose the electoral college down here."

Check my home page & you'll find you're 'preaching to the choir'.
To me, aside from being arguably the most moral & magnificent document ever constructed in the English language, the U.S. Constitution lays out a near perfect national structure.
At least until you get beyond the Bill of Rights, what could any decent person possibly quibble with?

It may interest you that, during the Rats' attempted coup d'etat in 2000, I wrote Katherine Harris saying all true friends of America beyond her borders appreciated she was properly defending your Constitution and urging her not to falter.
About the time of W's inauguration, I received back a nice thank you letter on her then Florida Secretary of State stationary which I consider a real treasure.

Off the top of my head, other than moving the date of your Thanksgiving to coincide with ours and increasing the depth of NFL end zones & eliminating the touch back, I can't think of any other American institutions I'd favor changing.
10 posted on 12/08/2006 8:44:51 PM PST by GMMAC (Discover Canada governed by Conservatives: www.CanadianAlly.com)
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To: farlander
LOL, I don't think liberals *ever* knew or know what they're doing.

I disagree. They know exactly what they are doing in Canada. However, good governance is not on their radar becasue they are good at the worst of political life

11 posted on 12/09/2006 5:33:05 AM PST by doc30 (Democrats are to morals what an Etch-A-Sketch is to Art.)
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To: farlander

"I don't think liberals *ever* knew or know what they're doing."

That applies in spades to our liberal twits down here in the 'states: Since the infamous election, most of them act as if they've just won a junior high school football game, but now that it's time to get around to that victory kiss, none of them can even figure out how to pucker properly.


12 posted on 12/09/2006 2:11:05 PM PST by Unrepentant VN Vet (Merry Christmas. (Refer complaints about being offended to your Chaplain...or whatever.))
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