| Snap election would
give Ignatieff tenuous grip on power, pollster
says |
Michael
Ignatieff’s Liberals would eke out a
razor-thin minority government, winning 10
more seats than Stephen Harper’s Conservatives
if an election were held today, a new poll
suggests. MORE... |
| Thursday's Chewy
Headline Snacks |
FEATURED INK
| Ignatieff’s jab now
a match for the wiliest fighters in politics |
|
Maher: Like
a boxer in training, Liberal Leader Michael
Ignatieff has spent his summer doing roadwork,
travelling 40,000 kilometres criss-crossing
the country in a bus, giving speeches, eating
things and shaking 15,000 hands. He can now.. MORE...
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| Where is Ignatieff’s
plan to restore our democracy? |
| L.Martin: When
Stephen Harper declared the other day that “I
make the rules,”Michael Ignatieff jumped
all over him. Calm down, dictator, he said
in so many words. “Canadians make the
rules.”The Liberal Leader, coming off
a successful summer.. MORE... |
| PM finally on brink
of world-stage coup |
|
Ivison: When he became
Prime Minister, Stephen Harper said his government
would return Canada as a credible player
on the world stage after years of waning
influence. His critics contend that since
then, the Tories have squandered.. MORE...
|
| Long-gun registry
raises stakes in Ottawa |
|
Stephenson: Cut through
all the political blather over the past week
on the federal long-gun registry and you
get to one point: They will all have to choose.
Canada’s political leaders and their
party members will face a vote in the House
of.. MORE...
|
| Akin: Judges
scandal makes Quebec the problem –again –for
the federal Liberals. Just when federal Liberals
thought they’d climbed out from under
that rock named Gomery, along comes another
boulder named Bastarache. MORE... |
| Why we ignore Professor
Ignatieff |
| Sun Media: After
a summer shaking hands with the underclass
-- (did you take our advice and buy stock in
Johnson & Johnson, the makers of Purell?)
-- it would appear Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff
believes he is still walking the halls of academia. MORE... |
| HAS New Brunswick
become the home of irresponsible government? |
| CH: Voters
next door have every right to believe so as
their tightly contested provincial election
campaign enters its second week. Shawn Graham’s
governing Liberals and David Alward’s
Tories are scrambling for every swing seat
in the.. MORE... |
| The real face of
the Bloc |
| Spector: During
his cross-Canada tour earlier in the year,
Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe never tired of telling
his listeners that Canada was a great country.
He had learned this shortly after being elected
as the first sovereigntist to Parliament.. MORE... |
| Whither the Sun Sea
captain? |
|
D.Martin: The Cabinet minister
actually in charge of the controversial file
raises a good point: Why hasn't the captain
or the crew of the Tamil refugee ship been
busted for trafficking in human cargo? Surfacing
for the first time since the MV Sun Sea docked.. MORE...
|
| Juicy details of
Manitoba judge’s undoing provide grist for
myriad pundits |
|
Blatchford: There’s
a delightful tale about a Toronto Superior
Court judge who occasionally hosts groups
of high-school students visiting the courthouse
and who sometimes even takes questions from
them. “How do you become a judge?” MORE...
|
| A judge with a pristine
private life couldn’t understand the human
condition |
| Mallick: We
are all naked beneath our clothes. What a majestic
thought that is, I said to myself proudly as
I watched Madame Justice Lori Douglas’s
life made very difficult indeed on the CBC’s
The National Tuesday night. MORE... |
| Prudent steps on
MS surgery |
| TS: Canadians
with debilitating multiple sclerosis are understandably
expressing disappointment —even to the
point of bitterness —over the federal
government’s rejection of clinical trials
into the controversial new “liberation
treatment”for the debilitating disease. MORE... |
| Quebec offers lifeline
to a deadly industry |
| Ruff: Thumbing
their noses at appeals from the Canadian Cancer
Society and Quebec’s 9,500 doctors, both
the Charest and Harper governments are backing
a last-ditch, desperate effort to revive Quebec’s
deadly asbestos industry. MORE... |
| Bev Oda sees the
light on family planning |
| Payne: How
do you save the lives of mothers without talking
about family planning? For months, the Harper
government seemed determined to do just that
with its G8 initiative on maternal health,
much to the dismay of those in the field. MORE... |
| Liberty in Canada?
Don't count on it |
|
Selick: Widespread ridicule
from abroad has apparently caused the Iranian
government to back down on outlawing certain
hairstyles for men -ponytails, for instance.
Nevertheless, Iranians have been subject
to grooming and dress codes for decades. MORE...
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- Harper uses Bloc stand on parks to hammer opposition 'coalition'
Prime Minister Stephen Harper used a transit-funding announcement in Southwestern Ontario on Thursday to remind Canadians about the perils of voting for a "coalition" of opposition parties who are threatening to take down his minority Conservative government.
|
- Harper
tests Quebec stump speech
Stephen
Harper says he's in no hurry to hit the
trail for another federal election, but
just in case one comes sooner than later,
he has a Quebec stump speech primed for
delivery.
|
- Que.
group launches right-wing movement
Founding members hope U.S. Tea idea will catch on in
Quebec. A small group of Quebec right-wing activists
and politicians hopes to create a grassroots political
movement in the province.
|
- Fourth
Byelection Likely This Fall
Pundits'
Guide: Liberal Leader Michael
Ignatieff will be able to test his new
approach and the majoritarian reach of
his "big red tent" in up to
four different by-election ridings this
fall, but there could be one less vote
for the long-gun registry on September
22. Here's why.
|
- MPs
spend less under minority governments
The recent series of minority governments may have
cost taxpayers nearly $1 billion in elections expenses,
but they have also kept parliamentary spending to a
minimum by forcing MPs to stay close to Ottawa.
|
- Quebecor
wants Sun TV News on cable, satellite
Quebecor
has asked the federal broadcast regulator
to oblige cable and satellite networks
to make its proposed all-news channel
Sun TV News available to subscribers
if the channel is approved
|
- Americans
want a say in what's on your TV
A far left-wing American lobby group funded by U.S.
billionaire George Soros wants you to be scared, very
scared. There might soon be more competition in the
world of TV news.
|
- CBC
wants greater satellite access
The CBC is asking the federal television regulator
to force satellite carriers Bell and Shaw to offer
all its French and English-language stations to their
customers.
|
- B.C.
got details of Ontario HST deal before
provincial vote
Weeks
before the British Columbia election
campaign began last year, senior officials
in the B.C. Finance Ministry were given
confidential details of Ontario's harmonized
sales tax agreement with Ottawa –information
that B.C.'s Finance Minister Colin Hansen
maintains he knew nothing about until
after the polls had closed.
|
- B.C.
spent $780,000 on scrapped HST mailer
Distribution would have violated Recall and Initiative
Act.The B.C. Liberal government spent $780,000 to create
and print an HST pamphlet it planned to mail to each
house in the province, but has since scrapped.
|
- Alberta
premier wants truth about toxins
While Alberta's premier is calling for a meeting of
scientific minds in coming weeks to discuss differences
in data about toxins in the Athabasca River, one of
the key scientists in the debate isn't convinced such
a meeting will achieve anything.
|
- Blowing
up F-35 deal would cause collateral
damage, Tories say
The
economic and diplomatic strings attached
to Ottawa’s multi-billion dollar
deal to buy the F-35 stealth fighters
would make it extremely painful —if
not impossible —for a future government
to unravel or cut, senior Conservatives
insisted Wednesday.
|
- Ottawa
won’t fund MS trials, but others
could
A federal decision not to fund clinical trials for
an experimental multiple sclerosis treatment cannot
stop Saskatchewan from going ahead, but the province
would have other scientific and ethical hoops to jump
through first.
|
- Report
links Ottawa ring to Taliban
The Pakistani Taliban, which claimed responsibility
for May's failed Times Square bombing, is now implicated
in the alleged jihadist scheme to bomb Ottawa.
|
- Extremist
groups under watch: Toews
The alleged Ottawa terrorist cell dismantled last week
by police is just one of several homegrown extremist
groups currently under investigation, Public Safety
Minister Vic Toews said yesterday.
|
- Generic
drug shortage hits patients, MDs
nationwide
Shortages of a variety of prescription medications
across Canada have left doctors and pharmacists scrambling
to find replacement drugs, and forced many patients
to switch from treatments they have used successfully
for years, health professionals say.
|
- Bellemare's
targets will respond, Liberal lawyer
says
Marc
Bellemare was granted the status of full
participant at the Bastarache commission
into the appointment of Quebec judges
yesterday. The change, from witness status,
will allow the ex-justice minister to
better fend off the attacks his foes
are promising in the weeks ahead.
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