Bonne fete, petit gars!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY to Canada’s greatest-ever Prime Minister! Sincerely, @kinsellawarren @lisakinsella pic.twitter.com/YfwAr0LTNy
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 11, 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
My first book in the X Gang series, Recipe For Hate, is up for another award this year – the White Pine Award – and I’m honoured to be considered with so many amazing authors and books.
Also amazing: the kids at Sir John A. Macdonald Secondary in the Hammer did a display depicting scenes from Recipe For Hate, and it is totally awesome. Their tweet is here and some photos of their work are below. (Another book, Black Chuck, also provided inspiration.)
The White Pine Award gets decided in May. Win or lose, it is so cool to see something you write get interpreted in this way by others.
Some of the reviews of Recipe For Hate are here.

From my newest, New Dark Ages, from Dundurn Press. The media may seem to detest Donald Trump – but they remain utterly captivated by him.

Getting ready to launch another legal action against the extremists behind that neo-Nazi rag. (Oh, and here’s a useful article I just spotted about James Sears – who Judge Dan Moore let off the hook – and how he confessed guilt to sexual assault.)
Stay tuned.
As the new school year begins, I was wondering where I was a decade ago this week.
For one thing, I was getting ready to square off in court against a far-Right former diplomat who had sued the CBC and me for libel. We – assisted by the amazing Scott Hutchinson – won at trial, we won at appeal, and we won all the way up to the Supreme Court of Canada.
But I was also starting to work for Michael Ignatieff as an outside advisor (but not for long). And one of the things we were doing, ten years ago, was making full and frequent use of the Interweebs – in a way that the Conservatives simply weren’t.
Here’s one such effort, posted under our GritGirl moniker. Wonder if this sort of message could be reprised in 2019?
The average human attention span was 12 seconds in 2000 and eight seconds in 2013. A drop of about 33 per cent.
Trump doesn’t merely understand this. He is this.
@realDonaldTrump is such a moron, such an unmitigated disaster in so many ways, it is easy to forget that he is the smartest guy around in one respect: he knows, better than anyone, that voters have an attention span of about six minutes. They move on. #USPolitics
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) January 6, 2019