Archive for June, 2017

Liberals’ citizenship bill to proceed with some Senate amendments – CBC.ca

The Liberal government is prepared to adopt some of the Senate's proposed amendments to its citizenship bill, Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen said Friday.

Bill C-6 is designed to repeal many of the previous Conservative government's changes to how people become citizens and how they can lose that status.

Among other things, the legislation would repeal a provision that strips dual citizens of their Canadian status if convicted of terrorism, treason or espionage. It has been applied to one person: Zakaria Amara, convicted for his role in a 2006 terror plot in Toronto.

Far more people lose their citizenship because it was obtained fraudulently, and the Senate wants to amend the bill in order to give those people a chance at a court hearing before their status is stripped away.

Hussen said the government will accept that proposal, albeit with some modifications of its own, including giving the minister the authority to make decisions when an individual requests it.

Hussen's hand was partially forced by a recent Federal Court decision that said people have a right to challenge the revocation of their citizenship, although predecessor John McCallum had earlier suggested he would support the amendment.

"This amendment recognizes the government's commitment to enhancing the citizenship revocation process to strengthen procedural fairness, while ensuring that the integrity of our citizenship program is maintained," Hussen said in a statement.

The government will also accept a Senate recommendation that would make it easier for children to obtain citizenship without a Canadian parent.

But they are rejecting efforts to raise the upper age for citizenship language and knowledge requirements from 54 to 59, saying it's out of step with the goal of making citizenship easier to obtain. The current law requires those between the ages of 14 to 64 to pass those tests; the Liberals want it changed to 18 to 54.

Hussen thanked the Senate for its work making the bill "even stronger and for providing an example of productive collaboration on strengthening important legislation."

The Senate has the choice of accepting the government's decision, rejecting it, or proposing further amendments of its own, which could further delay the legislation.

The bill was originally introduced by former immigration minister John McCallum in 2016 as a follow-through to a Liberal campaign promise to repeal elements of the Conservative law, which in their view created two tiers of citizenship.

The government is also seeking to shorten the length of time someone must be physically present in Canada to qualify for citizenship, and to allow time spent in Canada prior to becoming a permanent resident to count towards that requirement.

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Liberals' citizenship bill to proceed with some Senate amendments - CBC.ca

MacDougall: No matter how much Trudeau and Liberals yammer on, they can’t solve Trump – Ottawa Citizen

Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland is congratulated by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and party members after delivering a speech in the House of Commons on Canada's Foreign Policy in Ottawa on Tuesday. Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Having been a teacher, Justin Trudeau knows that when a student has little to say they take twice as long to say it, hoping verbosity will cover their lack of substance.

Politicians are the same. And so it is for Trudeaus government, which, short of significant legislative successes, has been speaking at considerable length this week about its views, values and plans.

Weve had the prime minister and his environment minister up on climate change, the global affairs minister up to talk Canadas role in the world, the defence minister reviewing defence plans, and the justice minister announcing plans to clean up the Criminal Code.

With so much talk, you can be sure nothing has actually happened in Ottawa. A quick check of the Parliamentary register confirms as much.

Were now into month twenty of Liberal majority government and, to date, there have been only 19 bills passed, despite closure being invoked 23 times. This is Parliamentary peanuts, even if a few more sneak into the basket of Royal Assent before the House breaks for the summer.

And so, the endless blah blah from the government.

Why are the Liberals doing this? There are two possibly complementary reasons: Liberal MPs need something to say on the summer BBQ circuit; and the decks are being cleared for the Parliamentary enema called prorogation.

Coming back to a clean slate and maybe even a rebuilt Cabinet (gender-balanced surely) would give the Liberals a chance to recapture the imagination of Canadians. Were only two years out from the next election; it wont be long until voters start looking at what Trudeau has actually accomplished with his governments time in office.

The what it all means speechifying also gives the Parliamentary pundits something to chew on before they embark on their own vacations. Hacks live for this stuff in a way normal Canadians beavering away at their jobs dont.

Which isnt to say some of it hasnt been interesting. How the world copes post-Trump withdrawal from the Paris agreement on climate change is a huge question. Fortunately, the rest of the world, and the vast majority of businesses too, have decided the answer is to keep calm and carry on.

The broader question of global leadership is also worth a good chin wag. The world needs to agree to a plan to cope while the United States is temporarily held hostage by the vulgar tweeting toddler with skin so thin its amazing hes not a pestilent puddle under the Oval Office desk. The stakes are high: Canada will undoubtedly bear the brunt of Trumps ignorance, insolence and insouciance, sitting as we do right on top of him, dominating him with our virtue and universally loved leader. This weeks bromance revival between Trudeau and Barack Obama in Montreal was but the cherry on top.

(And, while were at it, yes, Canada should spend more on its armed forces, too. )

But heres the thing: All of the jaw-jaw wont matter without an engaged United States on board when the time comes to fight the war-war, whether thats on trade, peace and security or, to a lesser extent, climate. The world wont be as the West wishes it without an engaged United States of America. There isnt a speech that can fix the current mess to our south, or the time for a new global architecture to be built from scratch, Bretton Woods-style.

The Trudeau government knows this, which is why its doing the critically important work of reaching out to sub-national U.S. governments and maintaining strong relationships in Congress. This is what, if anything, will shield us from the worst of Trump; our relationship needs to be kept alive until the cancer is rooted out. And its also important that Trudeau move in lock-step with leaders such as Angela Merkel, who lives in an even more complicated and dangerous neighbourhood that Canada without the American umbrella. The upcoming G20 in Germany is sure to be a riot, what with Trump likely to be suffering from fresh tales of Russian woe.

(You see how the Liberal gambit works? I could talk about this all day.)

Returning home, this weeks speeches buy time but they dont obviate the need for answers. The Liberals will undoubtedly work on solutions, but they will not be as solid as those of the last 70 years.

A smart move/cunning ploy would be for Liberals to socialize the Trump problem and publicly draft in the Conservatives to suggest answers. Here, the Liberals could draw on existing Conservative networks, both in Congress and outside. For example, Stephen Harper met this week with former U.S. president George W. Bush, and Rona Ambrose is set to take up a role in Washington, D.C., with the Wilson Center.

This isnt the time for classroom tricks. Canadians will be grading on deeds, not words.

Andrew MacDougall is a London-based communications consultant and was director of communications to former prime minister Stephen Harper.

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MacDougall: No matter how much Trudeau and Liberals yammer on, they can't solve Trump - Ottawa Citizen

Liberals launch feminist-focused foreign aid policy – CBC.ca

The Liberal government is launching an international assistance policy that aims to position Canada as a gender equality leader on the world stage.

The plan, called the Feminist International Assistance Policy, will invest $150 million over five years to help local organizations in developing countries that are working to promote women's rights. The money is part of the existing budget.

By 2021-22, at least 80 per centof Canada's international assistance will target the advancement of gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls.

Bibeau said the government's vision is to reduce global poverty through the lens of measures that empower women and girls.

"We will not break the back of poverty if we leave half of humanity at the sidelines," she said during a news conference in Ottawa. "We will not break the vicious cycle of poverty and violence without stepping up efforts to give women and girls a voice, and the opportunities to choose their own future and fully contribute to their community."

The plan will promote better education and training, social inclusion, access to financing, inclusive governance, improved nutrition, and access to contraception and safe abortion for women and girls.

Bibeau said that right now, too many countries have laws and cultural practices that discriminate against women.

The policy was first announced by Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland on Tuesday during her foreign policy speech in the House of Commons.

It comes after a review that included 300 consultations in 65 countries.

The government's aid plan will direct at least 50 per centof bilateral assistance to sub-Saharan African countries.

Friday's announcement was welcomed by several development organizations.

In a statement, Michael Messenger, President and CEO of World Vision Canada called it an "ambitious new agenda."

"It will help make the world a better place to live for everyone, everywhere," he said."Empowering women and girls is in Canada's best interest, and ensuring equal opportunity is much more than a bold commitment to feminism. It's about basic human rights and basic common sense."

The MATCH International Women's Fund and Nobel Women's Initiative said the investment in women's organizations makes Canada a global leader in empowering women.

"This is a game changer," Nobel laureate Leymah Gbowee said in a news release. "From Syria and Yemen to Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan, it is the grassroots women's groups that are doing the heavy lifting to help communities respond to crisis, build peace and bring about gender equality."

ButONE Campaign, the international organization co-founded by U2 lead singer Bono, expressed disappointment the policy shift did not come with more money attached.

Stuart Hickox, ONE's Canada director, praised the commitment to gender equality but said the policy moves money around without increasing the overall spending envelope.

"The juxtaposition of a recommended 70-per-cent increase to [Canada's] defence budget with a recommended 0 per cent increase to the development budget is simply stunning," Hickox said in a statement.

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Liberals launch feminist-focused foreign aid policy - CBC.ca

A new generation of Democrats isn’t waiting for the party to tell it … – Los Angeles Times

The women darting through the statehouse here alongside mentoring lawmakers have what Democrats need: sterling resumes, grit and anger at President Trump so deep that they are overlooking misgivings about establishment politics to run under the party banner.

I woke up the day after the election and said, I have got to do something to try to fix things, said Jessica Way, a 29-year-old teacher and labor organizer. She was now completing six months of intensive training provided by California-based Emerge America, which recruits women nationwide to become Democratic candidates. Applications to the program are soaring.

Thanks largely to Trumps election, Democratic leaders are blessed with an unprecedented outpouring of interest in running for seats held by Republicans. Whether the party can leverage that enthusiasm remains an open question.

The surge of interest comes as Democrats are scrambling to rebuild a tattered party infrastructure. State organizations are depleted from neglect. Party stalwarts in Washington are bickering over what message wins in the age of Trump and what districts are winnable.

The kind of top-down, laser-focused recruitment operations that Democratic congressional leaders built before their 2006 House takeover and that their Republican counterparts duplicated four years later have yet to emerge, and may not.

What is happening instead is that thousands of potential candidates are overwhelming recruitment operations like Emerge, pro-choice behemoth Emilys List and Our Revolution, built by alumni from Bernie Sanders presidential campaign.

They reflect a national disaffection with Trump and the Republican agenda that could propel a wave of victories. But only if party leaders can figure out how to channel it.

There is so much going on that it is kind of amazing to watch, said Thomas Mills, a North Carolina Democratic strategist and blogger who blames power brokers in Washington for long writing off regions that could be winnable, leaving Democrats with historically little control over all levels of government.

It is hard to figure out how much is actual traction, and how much is just spinning wheels. Some days I wake up optimistic and think they are finally figuring this out. Other days, it just feels like the same old, same old.

A party that for the past several years clung to a strategy of cautiously choosing where to compete based on the kind data and algorithms that failed Hillary Clinton is rushing to reacquaint itself with its own grassroots.

At the same time it must avoid further alienating defectors who voted for Trump in hardscrabble Rust Belt towns and fast-growing Sun Belt suburbs.

Its all making for a busy but challenging recruiting season.

The urgency facing Democrats was renewed after their recent loss in the Montana special congressional to a GOP candidate who physically assaulted a reporter asking questions about healthcare.

Obama campaign mastermind David Axelrod suggested that if Democrats hadnt run a genial troubadour nominee Rob Quist was a country singer with no political experience the rural Republican stronghold might have been within reach.

Candidate recruitment matters, Axelrod tweeted.

Democratic operatives pushed back, saying Quist did much better than anticipated in winning 44% of the vote, and the GOP was forced to spend heavily to hold a seat it should have easily won. But the outcome nonetheless fueled charges that Democratic kingmakers in Washington, for all their talk about expanding the map and implementing a 50-state strategy, are reluctant to send the cavalry outside the same old battlegrounds.

Just before the election, Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, a Democrat, had been in Washington warning that the party high command was out of touch with opportunities in states like his.

Democrats need to do a better job showing up, making an argument even in places where people are likely to disagree, Bullock said last month at a Center for American Progress conference attended by some of the partys top stars and biggest donors. Bullock said if he had used the national partys campaign blueprint in his 2016 race, he would have lost.

We dont have the presence in the states anymore, said Howard Dean, who was the Democratic Party chairman during the wave election of 2006. It will be hard to rebuild that in the next few months. Dean expects Democrats to notch big gains in the 2018 midterms, but not because of efforts by the national party.

Most of the candidates emerging from the grass roots have little use for heavy party involvement, Dean said, and that may be fine: This generation can organize themselves better than we can organize them, and frankly they dont like institutions very much.

He is working with Clinton on an effort to nurture the many new progressive groups cropping up to lure millennials to run for office, helping them tap the expertise and financial resources that have traditionally flowed toward established Washington institutions.

We have to empower them, but not tell them what to do, Dean said. We have to make a really big adjustment on the Democratic side of the aisle. This group [of candidates] is not interested in top-down, command-central politics. I dont think this is resonating in Washington yet. Washington is always the last place to change.

Others warn that Deans approach, which focuses on tapping into outrage over Trump, is misguided.

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who had his own role as a mastermind of the 2006 takeover and is a critic of Deans 50-state approach, has been arguing that it is moderates in the suburbs who are ripe to move the balance of power in Congress. Anger and resistance, he warns, will be less potent than offering solutions for economic anxiety.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is struggling to strike a balance, dusting off the playbook from when Emanuel was chairman while also trying to rebuild bridges to the long neglected grass roots. It has already trained about 2,900 fledgling political operatives through its DCCC University program and sent staff all over the country in an effort to establish local roots for some of its operations.

The campaign committee moved its California command center out of Washington and into the heart of Orange County, where Democrats are eager to unseat several Republicans who won in districts where Trump lost.

Thats a first for the campaign committee, according to executive director Dan Sena, who says outside operatives have too often misread the states electorate.

Its important to me that we get California culturally correct, he said.

Activists arent waiting for direction from on high. More than 14,000 women have deluged Emilys List by signing up for its boot camp sessions on how to run for office. There were only 920 applicants for the entire previous election cycle.

This is absolutely unprecedented, said Stephanie Schriock, the groups president. The grass-roots energy is there. Now we need the connective tissue to the Democratic Party.

Run for Something, a fledgling progressive group seeking to recruit smart, driven millennials who are unlikely to make it on the radar of the party machine, had anticipated hearing from as many as 100 potential candidates. It has been deluged with nearly 10,000 inquiries.

We are working with a candidate in Virginia in a district the Democrats have not contested in the last three cycles, which I think is b.s., said Amanda Litman, a Clinton operative who started the group. She described it as a frenemy of the Democratic establishment eager to help, but on its own terms.

Recruitment needs to stop happening in back rooms, behind the scenes, where the insiders doing it are finding people just like them to run, perpetuating the cycle, she said.

Back in Harrisburg, some in the class of 23 women who graduated recently from the Emerge program had not yet picked which office to run for. But they are all committed to running for something. The organization is adding chapters in states it hadnt imagined possible before, including Louisiana and Alabama.

Among its Pennsylvania graduates was Natasha Taylor-Smith, an attorney who was a teenager when her son was born. She had soured on Democratic politics after running unsuccessfully for a judgeship in 2015 in a race where she saw little enthusiasm among the party machine for reaching out to voters from backgrounds like hers.

There were constituencies I wanted to reach out to, and the party was like, Dont bother, Taylor-Smith said. They took them for granted.

Now Taylor-Smith is back in the game, determined to help the party broaden its outreach. After the election, I felt like I had an obligation to run, she said.

evan.halper@latimes.com

Follow me: @evanhalper

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A new generation of Democrats isn't waiting for the party to tell it ... - Los Angeles Times

As Democrats Regroup, Spotlight Turns to New Jersey Governor’s Race – New York Times


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As Democrats Regroup, Spotlight Turns to New Jersey Governor's Race - New York Times