Cartoons

Cartoons

New Environics poll suggests Canadians, including newcomers, are more “progressive” than conservative. There are two ways to become a former Conservative in Canada these days. You can get tossed out, like senators Mike Duffy, Pamela Wallin and Patrick Brazeau.

The government was hounded Friday over allegations the Prime Minister’s Office steered key Tories on a secretive Senate committee to doctor a report into the Mike Duffy spending firestorm.

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There is no easy fix for the Senate on the horizon

Chantal Hébert — Patience with the Senate has run out on Parliament Hill and beyond. With the exception of the Liberals who have been arguing that the main problem with the upper house is that Justin Trudeau is not appointing its members, every party agrees that business…

Wall, PM at odds over Senate

Murray Mandryk — It’s not surprising that Premier Brad Wall seemed so eager Friday to distance himself from Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s raging Senate mess.  The Harper-created Senate crisis is not only real – it’s radioactive. Short of those few who might still harbour dreams of being called…

The wheels of the bus go round and round

Stephen Maher — On May 9, the day the Senate released the audits of three senators who had received tens of thousands of dollars in entitlements to which they were not entitled, Senator Marjory LeBreton, the leader of the government in the Senate, read a statement to reporters.

The road to the Senate is paved with warped intentions

Don Martin — The Prime Minister’s top senator describes an Ottawa populated by media lickspittles fawning over Liberals while relishing Conservative misfortunes. It’s nonsense, of course. But at the risk of being labeled one…

Senate and robocall scandals different versions of same pathology

Tom Walkom — Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Conservatives play on the edge when their interests are at risk. They are the extreme fighters of the political world. We know this from the parliamentary spending scandal, where a $90,000 intervention by top Harper…

Senate scandal is a symptom, not the source, of Harper’s woes

Carol Goar — Nigel Wright is the third chief of staff to resign from Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s office in five years. At the same point in his tenure, Jean Chrétien still had his first one. Brian Mulroney was on his second. Parliamentary pundits have written off Wright, a Harvard…

The robocall ruling: Have we hit bottom yet?

Tasha Kheiriddin — Is there any integrity left in the Conservative party? If so, it’s getting harder and harder to find. Just as the Senate spending scandal was cresting in Ottawa and the prime minister was AWOL in South America, the Federal Court delivered a legal bombshell that…  

Tories plead for ‘benefit of doubt’ on ethics lapses

David Akin — It has been a week without parallel in modern Canadian political history when it comes to the ethics of our political class — and while the Conservatives are reeling the most, reporters in the nation’s capital have been busy tracking ethically questionable behaviour in other parties.

Sun Media — There’s only one Canadian politician who had a worse week than Stephen Harper who, like embattled Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, saw his right-hand man depart and faces a firestorm from the media that smells blood.  

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Conrad Black — In this column last week, I urged an end to the harassment of Nigel Wright, then Prime Minister Harper’s chief of staff, and Senator Mike Duffy. Not since I urged the election of Sarah Thomson as mayor of Toronto, bestowing my prophetic wisdom on the…  

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Rick Salutin — There’s something to be said for the value of embarrassment. (There’d better be, considering how often it visits us.) I’m thinking especially of the civic value of embarrassment, in the Rob Ford context. This week it came at us from Jon Stewart on The Daily Showand…  

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