Andrea Horwath’s NDP: say one thing, do another

They’re just like the Tim Hudak’s Ontario PCs – they say one thing, and they do another.  Whiplash-inducing reversals don’t begin to describe either of them.

Hudak said he’d “stop the HST in its tracks,” quote unquote.  Now he has admitted he will keep it, in the unlikely event he is ever elected.

Horwath, meanwhile, is just as bad.  Remember her web site, www.unfairtaxgrab.com, which she promoted all over the place, including in slick commercials, and which was accompanied by a petition and whatnot?

Well, as the screen grab below shows, it’s now gone. It’s been airbrushed out of existence.  So, too, her previous opposition to the HST, which she said she’d “cancel,” quote unquote.  Now she’s all for keeping it.

 


Why Hudak and Horwath are doomed

A very smart friend just remarked:

“The Ontario PCs and NDP are trying to offer status quo and change at the same time. Politically, that won’t work.

“People don’t like everything you guys have done. But they know that the things that matter are heading in the right direction. I think you’re going to win.”


Federal Liberal leader job description

I’m no Bob Rae bestie, and vice-versa.  But it seems to me his job description is pretty straightforward:

  1. Show a pulse.
  2. Get noticed in the media as much as you can.
  3. Be ready for opportunity when it comes.

And that’s it.

Free advice for Grits from pollsters and pundits is worth what you pay for it: nothing.  Stick to the three points above; they’re simple and do-able.

Rae’s doing what he needs to do.


Quote unquote: Ontario PC numbers “fail”

“…the Liberals have raised some important questions about how a Hudak government can deliver gain without pain…Surprisingly, the Tories count on private sector forecasts to show an extra $500 million windfall from higher annual tax revenues by 2017. Who knew that the PCs had such confidence in the Liberal fiscal plan for economic recovery?  The Tories also fail to account for key campaign promises, the Liberals claim: 200,000 new apprenticeship spaces would cost an extra $200 million annually; improved student aid would add another $40 million; tax credits for language training could cost $60 million.  Then there is a Tory plan to cut 2 per cent annually from everything except health and education. That adds up to $600 million in their first year in power, reaching $2.3 billion in cuts by their fourth year, which the Liberals keep warning will be painful — especially if the cuts stray into health and education…In their hastily convened counter-briefing yesterday, the Tories tried to explain everything. And while they offered a few clarifications on spending timelines, they had a hard time justifying the removal of the DRC from hydro bills (acknowledging that the debt is still there)…The auditor is expected to release his verdict later this month on the Liberals’ latest budget. If he finds the government’s cost constraints are tight, it will only increase the skepticism about how a future PC government would do it any better.”


Robert Kroetsch, R.I.P.

I am so sad to read this:

Canadian novelist and poet Robert Kroetsch has died in a car accident near Drumheller, Alta. He was 83.

Kroetsch died Tuesday while returning to his home in Leduc, Alta., from the Artspeak Festival in Canmore, according his publisher University of Alberta Press.

What an extraordinary man he was!  I know, because Kroetsch taught me in 1980, in my first year at the University of Calgary.  Without getting into too much detail, I was leading a pretty rock’n’roll lifestyle in those days, and doing all kinds of things I shouldn’t have done.  I missed a lot of classes and assignments, and I had rock-bottom grades to show for it.

One day, I got back an essay I had written for Kroetsch’s English class.  I don’t remember the grade, but I certainly remember every word of what he wrote:

YOU ARE DESTROYING A GREAT TALENT.  ROBERT KROETSCH.

I remember reading those words like they were written yesterday.  They had the desired effect, too.  I resolved to get my act together – so I quit what I was doing, transferred to another university, and ended up graduating in a lot better shape.

You know those teachers who change your life?  Dave Beatty was one, and Father O’Brien, and George Roseme.

And Robert Kroetsch, who I will miss, and whose words I took to heart.