Hypocrisy, thy name is Benedict Baldy
He just had a little stunt at Queen’s Park. Few noticed, no one cared.
What still interests me, however, is how BB can reverse himself on virtually any issue – even the ones he claims are closest to his heart.
During the mayoralty, he claimed to be incensed by the intolerant statements of Rob Ford. Now, when Tim Hudak is the one doling out the xenophobia, he’s a-okay with that.
To wit, this:
Toronto Life: “He made the right friends, married the right woman, and stabbed the right backs”
The story leaves you with a creepy-crawly feeling about Tea Party Tim – particularly the revelation that he and his brain trust (oxymoron alert! – ed.) were on the lookout for some pretext to go anti-immigrant months before the Ontario Liberal platform launch.
But the best part, hands down, is the cover. Ouch.
David Suzuki on Dalton McGuinty
Belleville Intelligencer: Tea Party Tim campaign “idiotic,” “circus,” a “weak, flea-bitten glue pile”
…and that’s just the nice stuff he says!
Where is Hudak campaign going?
The Belleville Intelligencer
Sat Sep 17 2011
Page: A7
Section: Editorial/Opinion
Byline: JAMES PHIEFFER
Column: Sand In The Shorts
As we pass the one week mark of the provincial election, I’m taking a moment to say I’m sorry to be proven right (so far). Tim Hudak’s Liberal-Lite campaign has resulted in the Liberals erasing a
10-point PC lead in the last month.
Why? Because Hudak has given Ontarians no reason whatsoever to vote Progressive Conservative rather than Liberal.
Locally, the PCs have a strong candidate in Todd Smith, although he is up against Leona Dombrowsky, a skilled campaigner and someone who has a strong base in Belleville.
But he is being wasted as the PC deep thinkers allow themselves to be distracted by the insignificant story of the week. Add to that the “foreign workers” idiocy of week one, and the question has to be asked — who’s running this circus?
This is still a winnable election, and as the old saw goes, “There’s only one poll that counts”.
But for Oct. 6 to be a good day for the PCs, and for the province as a whole, there has to be a change in how the Hudak campaign is run.
“A horse. A horse, my kingdom for a horse…”
The weak, flea-bitten glue piles that Hudak has tried to ride to victory thus far now need to be put down for good…Tim Hudak and his great minds in Toronto need to get ahead of the game…
James Phieffer ran for city council in the last election. Read his blogs at www.jamesphieffer.comor thewobblypuck.ca or follow him at www.twitter.com/jamesphieffer
Hebert on the alternation thing
Does it exist? Beats me. There are exceptions to every rule (cf. the Lopinski Theorem). But one thing’s for sure: the “hat trick” call was dumb, dumb, dumb. It started Tea Party Tim on a slide from which he really hasn’t recovered.
Hebert:
From deep inside the Randall “Randy” Denley bunker
He used to be my editor. He was a good editor. He should have stuck to that.
To wit:
So the riding could go either way, but the impression is that Chiarelli is gaining traction
Tea Party Tim: aspiring actor, or chicken
Though he didn’t answer, he told me to set up an interview with his media liaison behind him.
So I made arrangements, and emailed the next day. But, alas, no interview. Just like in the film.
Tea Party Tim’s party are still calling people “foreigners”
I know that a lot of reports are suggesting that Fratboy Tim has dropped the anti-“foreigner” garbage because he’s slipping in various polls. It seemed that way to me, too.
But the fact is he he hasn’t, as this and this and this make clear. He and his team of xenophobes are now just trying to do it in a way that you won’t notice.
Either way, all of us know what it for what it is. Like Dan Gardner wrote, this afternoon, ”[Hudak] drags up hatreds and waves them for all to see, hoping that ugly emotions will serve his political purposes.”
So, if I was updating this for a new edition, I’d be including a few passages about the shameful politics practiced by Tim Hudak and his party in the Fall of 2011.
Cartoon in today’s Star
For those of you outside Toronto, that’s Rob Ford behind the wheel of the car. He should have had Stephen Harper in the passenger seat.