I attribute this to getting bitten by a rabies-infected coati in Mexico
https://twitter.com/kinsellawarren/status/1086790729089863681?s=21
https://twitter.com/kinsellawarren/status/1086790729089863681?s=21
And this is the part where I’m actually calm.
Justin Trudeau said he’d support indigenous leaders.
He didn’t.
Justin Trudeau said he’s a feminist.
He isn’t.
Justin Trudeau is a terrific actor, however. There he was, after his latest cabinet shuffle, and butter wouldn’t melt in his mouth. He almost sounded offended.
Demoting a competent, smart, inspiring indigenous woman like Jody Wilson-Raybould – as the Liberal leader had literally done, just minutes before inside Rideau Hall – wasn’t a demotion at all, he huffed. There can be no greater honour than working with Canada’s veterans, he insisted.
And if some other Prime Minister had said it, it’d be partly true: it is an honour assisting the men and women in the Canadian Armed Forces. But under Trudeau, it was a lie. Under him, Veteran’s Affairs has become a political landfill. Under him, veterans have been disregarded, disrespected, and litigated against in the courts.
So, everyone recognized Trudeau’s claim for what it was, which was unadulterated bullshit.
So:
And that’s just this week.
Meanwhile, the commentariat wonder why some of us are thinking about voting Green. Wonder no more, etc.
A Canadian being sentenced to death by China is more important. But this is astonishing.
Demoting the most competent indigenous cabinet minister in Canadian history: that’s the legacy of this farcical cabinet shuffle. A total disgrace. #cdnpoli
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 14, 2019
@janephilpott, the most competent minister on indigenous files in years, and @Puglaas, the most competent justice minister in years, both disrespected/demoted by @JustinTrudeau and the solipsistic McGill boy’s club. A bad day for women and indigenous leaders in Canada. #cdnpoli
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 14, 2019
I keep trying to come up with some clever way to justify @BetoORourke’s decision to put his teeth cleaning on social media, and I keep coming up with blanks. #USPolitics pic.twitter.com/X64jkCXLHG
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 12, 2019
HAPPY BIRTHDAY to Canada’s greatest-ever Prime Minister! Sincerely, @kinsellawarren @lisakinsella pic.twitter.com/YfwAr0LTNy
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 11, 2019
The puzzle that is Jagmeet Singh: what are we to do with you, Jagmeet?
Andrew Coyne has a typically thoughtful piece in today’s National Post about the erstwhile New Democratic leader. Mr. Coyne:
It is safe to say Singh has not proved quite the rock star New Democrats hoped when they elected him leader in October 2017. Undertaker would be closer to the mark. While the party trundles along at a little under 17 per cent in the polls, about its historic average, Singh himself is in single digits, slightly behind Elizabeth May as Canadians’ choice for prime minister.
Singh’s trajectory is a cautionary tale on the importance of experience in politics. With just six years in the Ontario legislature, Singh was barely ready for the job of provincial leader, still less the much sharper scrutiny to which federal leaders are subject. It has showed.
He appears frequently to be poorly briefed, on one memorable occasion having to ask a member of caucus, in full view of the cameras, what the party position was on a particular issue. He badly mishandled what should have been a softball question on where he stood on Sikh terrorism, and alienated many in the party with his knee-jerk expulsion of Saskatchewan MP Erin Weir for what appeared to be no worse a crime than standing too close to women at parties.
I write about him in next week’s Hill Times, too. This what I say:
Jagmeet Singh is the worst federal party leader since Stockwell Day. He has led his party to historic lows in public opinion. And his political instincts – as seen in his caucus relations, his policy stands, and his byzantine approach to securing seat in the House of Commons – are non-existent.
So, we’re all agreed on one point: Jagmeet Singh has been a disaster.
Another point of agreement: the Conservatives tend to win when the NDP do better than they’re doing under Singh’s reign of error. Conversely, the Liberals tend to win when the NDP do what they’re doing now, which is dropping like a proverbial stone. That’s a Canadian political truism.
Anyway, those are the points of agreement. Where I diverge with Professor Coyne is here: I divine no logic – none – in the way the parties are treating the Burnaby South by-election. Unlike the learned Coyne, I cannot observe the outlines of any brilliant strategy at work, here. To wit:
None of it makes any sense to me. It’s all stupid. Unlike Mr. Coyne, I can attribute no grand strategic vision to any of this. It’s a shambles, for all the parties. And it recalls the very first Kinsellian Political Rule™:
Never discount the possibility they did it because they’re just, you know, stupid.
@realDonaldTrump address, live: https://t.co/xZefivSuZu #uspolitics #potus pic.twitter.com/oQiooKk9n7
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 9, 2019
#USPolitics pic.twitter.com/2gnmHVMPFF
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 9, 2019
This is like Politics 101 on how not to influence people. #TrumpAddress #USPolitics
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 9, 2019