Today in Ontario
Don’t be fooled by their bullshit: the Ontario PCs and NDP want to have an election.
They’d better be careful what they wish for. They just might get it.
Don’t be fooled by their bullshit: the Ontario PCs and NDP want to have an election.
They’d better be careful what they wish for. They just might get it.
And when you learn that some officials on Ms. Smith’s campaign started contacting reporters about the tweet and providing information about Ms. Wilkie’s role in Ms. Redford’s office you become even more suspicious about Wildrose’s motivations. They wanted a story. And when no media bit, Ms. Smith sent out a news release the next day.
It instantly created sympathy for Ms. Smith and made the Redford camp look mean and heartless. Ms. Redford’s call to Ms. Smith to apologize shortly after the release went out was unquestionably sincere, but by then the damage had been done.
On Sunday, Wildrose didn’t want to talk about the issue. And perhaps it shouldn’t. The sooner this incident is forgotten, the better.
Spoke to a friend this morning who has known, and worked with, many Trudeaus:
“I knew he’d win. Those guys never do anything unless they know in advance that they’ll win.”
The importance of the change to Old Age Security (OAS) cannot be overstated. The Stephen Harper regime has decided — without an election mandate, and without any consultation whatsoever — to fundamentally remake the way in which Canadians approach their retirement years.
It’s breathtakingly brave, or breathtakingly stupid, depending on your political affiliation: Harper’s Conservatives have chosen to deny Canadians access to old age benefits until age 67 — and not age 65, as they have been paying for, and expecting, for a half-century. It is, fundamentally, a reordering of the social contract between citizens and government. It is an undeniably historic move. And all that remains to be seen is whether Canadian senior citizens, and those approaching retirement years, will let Harper get away with it.
Of course. Just like the other guy who got crushed in an election, and the guy who is headed in the same direction.
Let’s not listen to anyone who actually wins elections, okay? Wouldn’t want to do that. Let’s keeping listening to the guys who lose elections.
He’s a little man, with a little man’s perpetual sense of grievance. So when he practically invites credit agencies to downgrade Canada’s largest economy, and when he takes potshots at Dalton McGuinty and Dwight Duncan, as he did again today, it’s only because he still possesses a little man’s rage that he has been beaten – every time – by men who were smarter and better than him.
Conservatives keep hoping he’ll come back to Toronto to take over the wreck that is the Ontario PCs. I hope he will, too, and not just because of the endless entertainment it’ll provide.
Flaherty won’t ever slink back, however, because he knows we’ll grind his face in the dirt, just like we did every time before.