Posted on 12/01/2008 2:43:49 PM PST by fanfan
OTTAWANDP Leader Jack Layton and Liberal Leader Stephane Dion have signed an historic accord to form a coalition government to replace Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives.
In an extraordinary scene on Parliament Hill, Dion and Layton signed a formal deal to work together through to June, 2011.
And they signed an agreement with Bloc Quebecois Gilles Duceppe that commits the separatist party to support the coalition through to June, 2010.
The opposition parties are threatening to defeat the Conservatives next week.
However their plan to assume government would require the blessing of the Governor General.
Under the deal, the Liberal caucus would be responsible for choosing the finance minister, a key role as the country faces economic storms.
The NDP would get six positions in the 24-member cabinet as well as six parliamentary secretary positions.
Layton said the coalition would move with a stimulus package that is "prompt and prudent."
That plan includes infrastructure spending, home construction, renovations and financial support for "struggling sectors" that can demonstrate a viable business plan.
He urged Harper to accept his looming defeat "gracefully" and not make moves that create "further instability and delay."
Duceppe said his party would not introduce any non-confidence motions or vote against any budgets or speeches from the throne until the agreement expires but would be free to vote as it wishes on any other legislation.
Dion will serve as leader until a Liberal leadership convention in May.
The NDP and Liberals have settled on an agreement to form a coalition government, with the support of the Bloc Quebecois.
They could defeat the Conservatives as early as next Monday.
Liberals Michael Ignatieff, Bob Rae and Dominic LeBlanc, all candidates for the party leadership, appeared together to show support for the decision.
Rae said "theres no turning back" from plans to toss Prime Minister Stephen Harpers Conservatives from power.
Liberal MP Martha Hall Findlay said the deal was done and no announcement by Harper - short of proroguing parliament, which she does not believe he will do - is going to stop the opposition parties from defeating the government next Monday.
Ignatieff told reporters that the ongoing race would not preclude any of the contenders from serving in a coalition cabinet.
Ignatieff and Leblanc said it was the prerogative of the prime minister to choose.
"The decisions on who is in cabinet are made by the prime minister of Canada, theyre not made by me, theyre not made by Dom and theyre not made by Bob," said Ignatieff.
"And thats very clear in the accord thats to say the authority and the prerogatives of the prime minister have not been compromised. Its up to Mr.Dion to make the choices that he feels are right for the country."
Leblanc responded: "Michael is always right!"
Harper got a standing ovation from Conservatives as he took his place in the Commons with two notable exceptions - Justice Minister Rob Nicholson and Trade Minister Stockwell Day.
Dion got a standing ovation from Liberal and NDP MPs as he kicked off question period with a question to the prime minister about stimulus for the countrys economy.
Lisa Raitt, a rookie Conservative minister, was among some Conservatives who put on a brave face, saying she was honoured to have served the people of her Halton riding even if it turns out to have been a short time.
The prime minister dismissed Dions shot in the Commons about playing partisan games in his economic statement.
Harper shot back that the Liberal leader was "about to play one of the biggest political games" in the countrys history.
Harper appealed to the opposition to wait until seeing the budget, scheduled for Jan. 27.
"I understand he wants to be Prime Minister. . . . I wouldnt want to be governing the economy in his position," Harper said, referring to the coalition of "socialist economic" and "separatists."
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty accused the Liberals of making a "deal with the devil" and said the NDP "dont know the first thing" about running the economy.
Sources said the deal calls for the coalition government to deliver a federal budget immediately after taking office. The budget would include a major package of stimulus measures to shore up the troubled economy.
The NDP said this morning that the deal has not been signed but the two sides are "very close."
The game of high-stakes political intrigue has set the stage for a week in which Harper's Conservatives will fight to retain power.
It appears nothing short of a fresh economic statement with measures to help Canadians cope with the recession is likely to dissuade the opposition from defeating the Conservative minority and trying to form a coalition government.
Flaherty kicked off the day yesterday with a full-scale retreat from his Nov. 27 economic statement, with a promise of economic stimulus measures in an early budget on Jan. 27.
For the first time, he hinted strongly that Ottawa would bail out Canada's struggling Big Three automakers.
But the Liberals and New Democrats said the latest concessions from the Conservatives are not enough to derail the move to defeat the Tory minority and take power with a coalition cabinet. A confidence vote that could topple the government is expected on Dec. 8.
Another bitter episode was spawned when the NDP said it might pursue legal action after the Conservatives taped a private New Democrat caucus meeting Saturday and distributed the transcripts and recordings to the media yesterday.
In the meeting, NDP Leader Jack Layton tells his caucus that "moves" with respect to the Bloc Québécois "a long time ago" helped lay the groundwork for the coalition now being discussed a statement the Conservatives say suggests the fiscal update is merely an excuse for the revolt.
Yesterday, in another reversal from the economic package, Flaherty told a telephone news conference the government would remove from legislation implementing the package a bid to temporarily ban public service strikes. On Saturday, he backed down on the plan to scrap federal subsidies for political parties.
Flaherty stressed that the government has tried to stave off an economic slowdown by using lower taxes he brought in a six-year, $60 billion tax reduction program in 2007 to improve business conditions. But he said there will be further stimulus to the economy, and suggested it might include help for the auto sector.
"We're going to have to deal with the automotive issue, obviously," he added. "Will we have to help a particular sector or more than one particular sector? The answer is probably yes."
The federal and Ontario governments have asked Ford, General Motors and Chrysler thought to be collectively seeking $3 billion to $4 billion in aid to produce recovery plans by Friday.
Flaherty's statements indicate the Tories are trying to limit damage in the wake of an economic package that has raised questions about the government's credibility and political smarts.
"The stability of the government and the economy is paramount," he said. Rather than propose to scrap the federal subsidy for political parties, the Conservatives will move to freeze the payments at the current $1.95 per vote and put the issue before the public for future debate.
Flaherty sounded unusually subdued. While his future was not discussed, questions about his role as finance minister can be expected now that the economic strategy has blown up in the government's face.
Since last week, the Liberals, NDP and Bloc have been involved in closed-door talks aimed at preparing a coalition government.
There are questions whether the Liberals could act cohesively to join in an attempt to oust Harper. The main issue surrounds which Liberal would head the coalition and potentially become prime minister. It is known that Stéphane Dion, the caretaker leader, would expect to do so, despite doubts among some Liberals who blame him for the party's Oct. 14 election defeat.
In a meeting in Toronto last night, Liberal leadership contender Bob Rae tried to convince fellow contenders Michael Ignatieff and Dominic LeBlanc to show a unified front by accepting the deal with Dion as coalition leader, according to a Rae supporter. Rae argued there is no reason to change "the legitimate leadership process" that will replace Dion in May.
For the opposition, the "central issue" continues to be the Tories' lack of a package of significant new measures to address the economy, which Flaherty admits has fallen into a recession, said Liberal finance critic John McCallum.
"I still don't think anything has really changed," McCallum (Markam-Unionville) said after Flaherty's news conference.
He said there's also a growing question of credibility with the Harper government. "Here we are when they're desperate to save the government and they'll promise us the moon. But when we're promised the moon, I don't think we necessarily believe it."
Deputy NDP leader Thomas Mulcair said the provocative economic update was a "terrible miscalculation by the Conservatives."
"We're not going to give them another chance," he said. "We're structured, we're organized, we've worked very hard for the past four days and you're going to see the fruits of that labour very shortly."
Mulcair also said the covert taping of the NDP call "shows the desperation of the Conservatives."
Pierre Poilievre, Harper's parliamentary secretary, told CTV the transcript shows there were "members of the NDP who were working with the separatists who want to destroy Canada in order to take control of the country in a perilous coalition.
"All of this was hatched long ago, well before any of the controversy over the fall economic statement. That is shocking news," he said.
The recording was made by a Conservative who was able to dial into Layton's teleconference call with New Democrat MPs.
Mulcair denied his party was engaged in discussions with the Bloc before the Nov. 27 economic statement. The situation is no different from "consultations" Harper had with the NDP and the Bloc as opposition leader against the minority Liberals in 2004, Mulcair said.
He also said the NDP is looking at its legal options, saying party discussions were "illegally intercepted."
The Tories downplayed the 2004 consultations, saying there was never any intention of a coalition.
There were several signals over the weekend that the affair has damaged Harper's leadership. Several senior Conservative government members admitted they had been hearing from supporters outraged over Harper's moves.
With files from Linda Diebel
The upcoming confidence vote is on Tory economic policy which they are upset about.
Thanks for the report. I had just heard about this today and was wondering what was going on.
You might be able to use this phrase, someday:
“Selected, not elected”
It’s not really un-kosher. There are more of “them” in Parliament.
“Again this has the fingerprints of Obama all over it.”
LMAO. You think that twit is involved in international intrigue? That’s a good one.
I doubt he even cares beyond a “oh that’s nice” reaction.
from what I’ve read, it will be up to the Governor General to either call a snap election or to allow the combined left to govern. The Gov General appears to be a member of the Liberal Party, soooo...
but if snap elections do occur, there could be a furious backlash that’d result in a conservative majority.
This is a massive coup instigated on behalf of certain corporate interests within Ontario and Quebec (linked to the automotive industry and unions writ large). The rest of Canada will get shafted by the coalition’s corporate welfare platform.
The only chance for Conservatives (who bit off a lot more than they could chew since the last election - prudence has not been on the menu for the past few weeks) is to engineer an election and hope enough centrist Liberals (in just enough key ridings) vote Conservative in renunciation of the NDP and Bloc. It is not likely mind you. Not to sound defeatist, but this is not a good time to be an incumbent anywhere - even a minority government incumbent. Things do not look good no matter how they play their hand.
Still, this is a transient threat - flamesuit on, but the Liberals had been fairly benign while in power (both as the majority under Chretien, and as minority under Paul Martin) and I cannot see support for the party being sustained if they drift too far into NDP policy territory. Dion’s Green Shaft has already been publicly vilified by members of his own party (Ignatieff and Rae) and is unlikely to get traction, especially with the economy in the state it is in. I cannot see a coalition persisting for long without the Liberals going full socialist and alienating their core constituency.
I hope not.
FF I pm’ed you....could you start a thread on the rallies for your Canada list. There are more rallies coming than what I emailed you and it would be good to have them all in one thread.
Rideau Hall protest
December 4 all-day protest in front of Rideau Hall, the home of Canadas Governor-General.
Join us Thursday at Rideau Hall to show that Canadians dont want a government we didnt vote for IMPOSED on US.
We are going to camp out infront of Rideau Hall to make sure our voice is heard!
When: Thursday, December 4th, from 10 am to 11 pm.
> I hope not.
So do I. We need adults in charge somewhere.
This will destroy the Liberal Party.
It won’t be pretty, but it is necessary.
Whattcha'll expect? The president of the world needs every nation to fall into line with his "New World Order" and their fascist agenda.
They just had one like 2 months ago
Isn't the Governor General the official representative of the British Monarchy within the Canadian government? If so, then the Queen Elizabeth II's representative can interfere with the Canadian government. I wonder how the Canadians would react to such interference.
The GG is Canadian born and has been since, what, 1952? They have been largely anti-monarchy of late. So I doubt she would do anything.
...their plan to assume government would require the blessing of the Governor General. Under the deal, the Liberal caucus would be responsible for choosing the finance minister, a key role as the country faces economic storms. The NDP would get six positions in the 24-member cabinet as well as six parliamentary secretary positions.Thanks fanfan.
Is the Governor General only symbolic or does she have any substantive powers? If it’s only symbolic, why have a symbol of the British Government within the Canadian Government?
“If Conservatives had tried a similar tack against a leftist govt, we damn well know what the media would call it.”
Uhhh.....Harper actually proposed much the same when he was in Opposition. How is this appreciably different?
“Why cant Harper call a snap election?”
Because the decision isn’t his to make. He can go to the GG but she’s entirely within her purview to ask the other parties to form the government. I mean they’ve already demonstrated a willingness to step up to the plate so there’s nothing much he can do except maybe prorogue Parliament and pray that he can pull his keister out of the fire. My money says Caesar didn’t face so many knives waiting to be unsheathed.
“Let me get this straight:
Canada held a legal election in which the conservatives won”
Short answer, no; they didn’t win. They got a larger minority vote but still a minority government. They needed the support of another party to govern and they lost the support of that party.
Yeah, that’s what I meant. But since the Conservatives have the largest block of seats, won’t they still command some influence? Or can they be completely shut out if the opposition parties pull together a sufficient coalition?
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