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Hudak’s Cons: for their cronies, against tougher rules for consultants
This is being handed out at the Leg as I type this. Among other things, it represents a huge, huge strategic error by the Hudak Hillbillies – it shows that, despite all their braying and screeching about accountability, they have voted against rules to get tougher on lobbyists and consultants. They voted against all that. (The NDP voted for it.)
We’re going to tattoo this one on Timmy’s forehead, now. It’s a huge fumble. And it’s amazing, frankly.
***
For Immediate Release
Hudak’s Conservatives Vote Against Tougher Rules
for Lobbyists and Consultants
(Queen’s Park) – Tim Hudak and the Ontario Conservatives put the interests of their high-priced Conservative lobbyist friends over taxpayers today, voting against a ban on taxpayer dollars being used to hire lobbyists to ask for more government money.
“Tim Hudak has a lot of antics, but his actions speak louder. He’s putting the interest of high-priced Conservative lobbyists ahead of taxpayers. That’s the Conservative way,” said Liberal MPP Dwight Duncan.
The Conservatives have tried to block accountability and transparency at every turn. Conservatives opposed:
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- Banning taxpayer funded lobbyists: they voted against stopping taxpayer dollars from being wasted on lobbyists asking for more taxpayer dollars
- Increasing transparency and accountability: they voted against requiring expenses to be posted online for Ministers, their staff, and the executives at public agencies like hospitals, hydro companies, and local health integration networks
- Banning partisan advertising: they wasted $250 million of taxpayer money on partisan self-promotion, and voted against legislation to stop it
- Independent auditing of the books before an election: after hiding a $5.6 Billion deficit from Ontarians, they voted against requiring the Auditor to sign off on the books before an election
Conservatives have a long record of trying to reward their friends and then trying to hide it. In 1999, the Harris-Hudak Conservatives removed agencies like Hydro One from freedom of information requirements, and then funnelled millions of taxpayer dollars through untendered contracts to Conservative insiders like Tom Long, Leslie Noble and Jamie Watt.
“Tim Hudak just doesn’t get it. He should be standing up for hard-working families instead of protecting his friends at the trough,” said Duncan.
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Popular, Premiers, Polls
What’s it mean? Well, after the HST and other tough decisions, it means I’m pretty surprised – and pleased. “Down slightly” from a year ago is pretty darn good, frankly, given our economic circumstances.
McGuinty [full disclosure: whose caucus I’ve given comms advice], like Chretien, is an asset. And we got a third majority term with Chretien, too, as I recall.
How the Americans see us
Canada (left) poses with the United States for official diplomatic portrait.
I was amused by this story from the New York Times last night. It fronted their web edition – which is significant, because I can’t remember the last time Canada figured near the front of any section in the Times.
This was my favourite part:
You can debate the merits (and we will), but what I found simultaneously hilarious and terrifying was that the our largest trading partner and ally learns about us by…watching television programs.
Television! The mind boggles. On the upside, however, this means that my three sons have a fruitful career in the diplomatic service ahead of them.
Here we go again
I always said the federal campaign would come before the Ontario one (that’s my fervent hope, too).
So, is this the thing that’ll trigger it?
Who knows. I thought Justin Bieber would never catch on, so what do I know.
Una voce
Your by-election roundup, showing total unanimity by the punditocracy:
- Hebert: A Conservative majority is imminent, the Liberals and the NDP are screwed.
- Macdonald: The Liberals did way better than expected, the Conservatives are fine, the NDP is screwed.
- Yaffe: The Conservatives should be happy, the Liberals should be nervous, the NDP is screwed.
- Simpson: Don’t read too much into any of this stuff, but the NDP are screwed.
- Ivison: The Liberals had a good day, the Conservatives had a better day, the NDP are screwed.
- The Star: Nothing to see here, move on. But, incidentally, the NDP are screwed.
- The Free Press: The Conservatives and Liberals shouldn’t claim victory, the candidates should. The NDP is screwed.
- The Herald: The Conservatives should be happy, but sort-of shouldn’t be. The NDP are screwed.
- The Chronicle Herald: The Liberals and Conservatives shouldn’t claim credit! The NDP is screwed.
- The Globe: We’re not sure what it means. We’re not even sure if the NDP is screwed.
I hope I die before I get old
Don Martin
My former Calgary Herald colleague, Don Martin, has left the National Post – and, I presume, the Herald – to become the new host of Power Play.
That’s good news for CTV, but not so great for Postmedia. The Post’s John Ivison is a gifted writer with an acerbic wit, but – last time I checked – John was one person. He can’t cover the entire Hill, as a columnist, all on his own. I think Postmedia will need to sign up someone else for North of the Queensway columnar duties, but what do I know.
In any event, big congrats to Don. I miss sparring with Powers on CTV’s news channel, but he’ll be Prime Minister of Newfoundland in a few weeks’ time, so that’s that.
Media cautionary tale, part two (updated)
The Citizen’s editors responded quickly and effectively to my complaint. That was that.
This afternoon, nearly a month later, Lee Greenberg tried again. A few folks contacted me – through this web site and Facebook – to let me know that Greenberg had re-published his bullshit. The Post has published it, too, under Greenberg’s byline.
This time, I copied my lawyer on my emailed request that the Citizen refrain from letting Greenberg from publishing made-up stuff. They have removed said B.S. from the web edition of the paper, and I’ve been assured it won’t show up in the print edition, either. Last time I checked, however, it was still on the Post web site, so a libel notice will be winging its way to them tomorrow afternoon.
Anyway. How can this happen twice? Beats me. Maybe the desk isn’t checking Greenberg’s stuff enough. Or, perhaps someone thought it was a way to take a shot at someone who writes for a competitor. (I hope not, but who knows.)
In any event, my advice still stands: if you work in politics, and Lee Greenberg calls you…
Hang up.
UPDATE: The Post has deleted the false part.
Blogging Tories ITOW – latest
- About Gwynne Dyer: “He is very high on the list of those whose corpses should be plowed into a ditch after a short ride in the back of a truck holding other condemned traitors for their mandatory bullet in the head.”
- “Indeed. ‘The Bible is the story of a people’s journey out of barbarism. The Koran is the story of a people’s embrace of it.'”
- Michelle Obama, “bowser voodoo queen”
- “Look at Bloomberg, a money-loving Jew who has sold his soul for the arabs’ dirty money.”
Messrs. Harper and Hudak should reconsider their association with these lunatics.
But they won’t.