Archive for the ‘Liberals’ Category

Opinion: Do the Liberals even understand what a conflict of interest is? Does a fish know it’s wet? – The Globe and Mail

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Newly elected Speaker of the House of Commons Greg Fergus is escorted into the House of Commons by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Oct. 3.Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press

Do Liberals understand the concept of conflict of interest? Do they have any coherent theory of the division between the partisan or personal interest and the public interest? Does the distinction even occur to them?

The question arises in the wake of the Greg Fergus affair. Mr. Fergus, though newly selected as Speaker of the House, is no stranger to politics. He has been a member of Parliament for eight years, and a parliamentary secretary to various cabinet ministers for most of that time. He would presumably have watched other Speakers in action, and would have some notion of what the job entails: in particular, refereeing between the contending parties in the House a job for which the first requirement is impartiality.

The Speaker must not only be fair to all sides, but must be seen to be, if he is to command the cross-party confidence needed to maintain control of the House. Since the Speaker is also an MP, elected to Parliament as a member of a particular party, the onus is on the Speaker at all times but especially on a new Speaker to show that he can put those partisan ties aside. I belabour this point not because it is new or surprising, but because it is obvious.

And yet one of his first acts as Speaker was to make a testimonial video for a partisan chum, to be shown at a partisan gathering, and to do so wearing the robes of his consummately non-partisan office.

This is hardly the most serious issue before Parliament. On its own it could be put down to an individual error of judgment. But coming on the heels of a string of similar errors by Liberal MPs and cabinet ministers, it suggests something, shall we say, systemic.

The Prime Minister alone has been responsible for at least three, from the Aga Khan trip to the WE Charity affair to SNC-Lavalin; the latter two also ensnared his finance minister, his principal adviser and the clerk of the privy council. Then there are your garden-variety ethical lapses, from the MP who hired a relative to run her constituency office to the cabinet minister who awarded contracts to a friend.

Mr. Fergus himself was previously caught in an ethics violation, as parliamentary secretary to the Prime Minister, after writing a letter to the CRTC in support of a television channel with an application before it, leading an exasperated ethics commissioner to call for mandatory training in conflict-of-interest issues for all ministers and parliamentary secretaries.

The thing about all these scandals is that they did not seem, for the most part, to stem from a desire for personal gain or a conscious intent to break the rules: Even in the matter of SNC-Lavalin, those involved seemed somehow to have persuaded themselves they were colouring within the lines.

Rather, what appears to have been at work is a kind of vast unawareness, a genuine cluelessness that anyone could find the promiscuous commingling of interests on display political, personal, business, bureaucratic objectionable. That does not make it better; if anything, it makes it worse. Crooks at least know what laws theyre breaking.

Certainly it is more intractable. It is the consequence of decades of Liberal hegemony, not only political (since 1891, the federal Liberals have won two elections in every three) but more broadly. Liberals, and liberals, are so dominant in our politics, and in the little worlds that revolve around politics the bureaucracy, the courts, the universities and, yes, the media that I think it really is difficult for them to imagine that there exists a world outside their own, except in some vague theoretical sense.

Add in the thousands of activist groups the party has taken care over the years to cultivate with public funds, or the immense archipelago of subsidies to businesses large and small across the country, the whole apparatus of Liberal clientelism, and you have a whole agreeable universe of Liberaldom, a cosmos of comity. A person could spend their whole career inside without ever encountering an unfriendly face.

Thus if they reward or are rewarded by or otherwise are too close to their friends, it is not because they are Their Friends, since as far as they can tell there is no other kind of person. To ask, do Liberals understand conflict of interest, is to ask: Does a fish know it is wet?

Take Mr. Fergus. I said he was no stranger to politics. I understated the matter. Before he was an MP, he was national director of the federal Liberal Party. Before that he was a staffer to two cabinet ministers. Before that he was president of the Young Liberals of Canada. His whole life, in short, has been spent in the company of other Liberals.

That hardly makes him unique. The most blinkered partisans on the Conservative benches are also political lifers, of which the party has more than its share. But Liberal lifers have two things their Conservative counterparts lack. One is assured access to power. Two years in three, historically, Liberals have been in government; in the third, they have been busy preparing for it.

The other is the divine rightness of their cause. Liberals have always been prone to being corrupted by power, but the current crop of Liberals are unique for being corrupted by their own virtue. The preening moral vanity that is a signature of the Trudeau Liberals the gratitude, as in the Pharisees prayer, that they are not like other men is not, alas, an act. They truly believe it, to the point that they are literally incapable of conceiving of themselves doing wrong.

It isnt only that they are surrounded by people like themselves, in other words: They are surrounded by people who think like them, and whose first thought at all times is that whatever it is they are thinking must be for the Good. If they are aware that there are other types of people or other ways of thinking, it is only as a cautionary tale like the ogres in folk stories, an example of the threats that lurk for the unwary.

So, for example, when it came to appointing someone to look into allegations that China had interfered in Canadas elections on behalf of the Liberals and that various Liberal cabinet ministers had looked the other way at it it was the most natural thing in the world for the Prime Minister to appoint, as special rapporteur, a lifelong family friend, one of 23 governing members of his family foundation, and a previous beneficiary of the same governments patronage.

A cynic would suggest the Prime Minister appointed someone he could count on to keep shtum. I think it literally didnt occur to him there was anything wrong with it. I think he thought this was a perfectly splendid appointment. As, indeed, did many others outside his immediate circle, who applauded it at the time. Some still do.

If all of this leaves the impression that the Conservatives are the victims of the piece, it shouldnt. Liberal political and cultural hegemony is as much the Conservatives doing not only for the political ineptness that has so often delivered the Liberals safely, even miraculously, into power, but for their own willingness to inhabit the stereotypes Liberals make of them.

If people in the bureaucracy, or the law, or the universities, are inclined to see the Conservatives, and conservatives, as the barbarians at the gate, it is not entirely a matter of snobbery or bias. It is also because, all too often, especially of late, they have acted like it. Tory paranoia is not entirely unwarranted, but neither is it entirely undeserved.

The long and honourable conservative tradition of skepticism of intellectuals that is, of overzealous, overweening intellectuals has congealed into a hostility to science, to expertise, even to facts. The proud conservative tradition of defending Parliament, and parliamentary prerogatives, has given way to fantasies of abolishing judicial oversight, or ignoring the division of powers, or simply defying the law. Conservatism, as such, with its bedrock insistence on rules-based orders and limited government, has increasingly been subsumed by populism, which acknowledges no such rules or limits.

None of this is the least bit necessary. It is not written in stone that the universities must always be hostile to conservatives: If conservatism is not adequately represented in the academy, the answer is to reform the academy, not to demonize it. If the courts lean left, focus on building a body of conservative legal scholarship, and conservative jurists, rather than running roughshod over judicial independence. If the media arent giving you a fair shake oh, come on: Youre in the media manipulation business. And were easily manipulated.

Would an incoming Conservative government be viewed with some suspicion by the Ottawa bureaucracy? After all that has gone before, probably. But most of them are fair-minded professionals with a job to do. A smart Conservative government would look for ways to build alliances and get things done; it would give the benefit of the doubt to those that gave it the benefit of the doubt. A dumb Conservative government would carry on with the same strategy of polarization and picking fights that got it there.

Each of the parties has its faults, in other words. Both are, in their own way, the product of Liberal hegemony what the late Richard Gwyn called one-and-a-half-party rule. If the besetting Liberal sin is arrogance, the feeling they are (literally, in some cases) born to rule, the besetting Tory sin is resentment, the sense that everyone and everything is stacked against them. Given power, then, both tend to abuse it: the Liberals, because they can, the Tories because, as they see it, they must.

There is only one cure for this, in the end: contestable politics. Only when either party, in any given election, can as readily expect to be in government as in opposition, will each be relieved of its particular historical baggage. Only then will our politics converge on decent democratic norms.

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Opinion: Do the Liberals even understand what a conflict of interest is? Does a fish know it's wet? - The Globe and Mail

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Caroleene Dobson condemns ‘liberal lunacy’ at her former university, pledges to fight it in Washington – Yellowhammer News

Caroleene Dobson is an alumna of Harvard University. She is also a Republican candidate running for Alabamas Second Congressional District.

This week, Dobson publicly called for the immediate firing of the colleges president after she approved calls for Jewish genocide during testimony in a congressional committee on the grounds of free speech.

The moment that Claudine Gay sat before Congress, endorsed antisemitism, and approved calls for the genocide of the Jewish people, Harvard University should have fired her for cause and pointed her toward the unemployment line, Dobson said in a statement. Instead, they turn a blind eye and a deaf ear to her offensive testimony and offer a free pass to a darling of woke liberals.

The extremists who control Harvard are entirely intolerant of Judeo-Christian faith and cheer violence against Jews by Palestinian Hamas terrorists, Dobson continued. I accepted the opportunity to attend Harvard when offered, but as a lifelong conservative Republican, I witnessed firsthand that free speech on that campus applies only to those with the most extreme leftist beliefs, and incidents like this illustrate why.

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Harvard University officials announced on Tuesday that they will ignore the pleas of Jewish Americans and will allow Gay to remain as president. Gay made national headlines with her refusal to say, Yes, when New York Republican CongresswomanElise Stefanikasked if calls by students for Jewish genocide violated the colleges policies.

There is a reason that last weeks hearing the university presidents of Harvard, Penn, and MIT made history as the most watched congressional testimony in history with over one billion views, Rep. Stefanik said afterwards. And thats because their testimony was the most morally bankrupt testimony in the history of the United States Congress.

When asked the very specific question, Does calling for the genocide of Jews violate your code of conduct on bullying and harassment? the world watched, and the world heard their answers in horror, Stefanik continued. As the President of Harvard, the President, now former, of Penn, and the President of MIT equivocated, dehumanized, and failed to answer Yes. Anyone with a sliver of decency, humanity, and morality knows that the answer to that question is Yes.

Since the October 7 attacks on the people of Israel by Hamas terrorists, the Harvard campus has proven to be a boiling hotbed of anti-Jewish sentiment and pro-Hamas support coming from Muslim students and their Progressive allies on campus, but neither Gay nor other officials have taken steps to quell the unrest.

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We have a saying in the South about not letting the door hit you in the behind on the way out, and thats what Harvard should have told Claudine Gay, Dobson said. The woke elements in our society demand strict deference to every group they consider disenfranchised, but if you believe in the Bible, pray to God, and embrace conservative values, those same leftists attack you with hate, violence, and vitriol, often with the full support of the liberal mainstream media.

If elected to Congress Dobson pledged to battle liberal policies and leftist indoctrination.

As congresswoman, I will go toe-to-toe against the liberal lunacy and woke virtue signaling espoused by Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, Ilhan Omar, and other extremists like them, Dobson said. In order to win the culture war, Republicans must elect those who are willing to fight.

Dobson is a real estate attorney, wife, mother, and serves on both the Alabama Forestry Commission and the Southeastern Livestock Exposition Board. She grew up on a cattle farm near Beatrice. In high school she excelled both academically and in rodeo. In addition to her Harvard undergraduate degree, she has a law degree from Baylor University Law School.

Dobson faces several other Republican opponents in the March 5 Republican primary for Congressional District 2.

To connect with the author of this story or to comment, email[emailprotected]

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Caroleene Dobson condemns 'liberal lunacy' at her former university, pledges to fight it in Washington - Yellowhammer News

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Tying Poilievre to Trump could pay dividends for Liberals but only if comparison sticks: strategists – iPolitics.ca

The federal Liberals are increasingly attempting to link Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre to polarizing former U.S. president Donald Trump and his scorched-earth, conspiratorial political agenda, suggesting they may be rolling out a more aggressive campaign to knock down the ascendant Tories, say strategists.

However, some politicos warn that there are significant risks in banking heavily on this comparison, with some saying Poilievre doesnt fit the bill as a Trump-like demagogue, and others cautioning that the populist Republican may not even be a factor by the time Canadians head to the polls.

The change in tone from the Liberal camp in recent weeks has become increasingly obvious. In light of the Conservatives voting against a revised free trade deal with Ukraine and the partys nearly two-day-long filibuster, the Liberals have ramped up their comparisons with Trump, accusing the Tories of trying to importing MAGA or Republican politics north of the border.

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Tying Poilievre to Trump could pay dividends for Liberals but only if comparison sticks: strategists - iPolitics.ca

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Justin Trudeau should box again: How the Liberals Retake Their Lead as Digital Campaigners – iPolitics.ca

Subscribe to On Background on Apple and Spotify.

We go On Background with Dave Sommer, Associate Creative Director at Creative Currency and VP at Enterprise Canada, former Deputy Director of Communications, Digital, for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and former Head of Politics and Government at Instagram. Dave played a major role in Liberals 2015 majority winning campaign, where the partys digital strategy was well ahead of their opponents. He and Fred discuss why Trudeau should return to the authenticity of his earlier campaigns to counter Poilievres populist appeal.

Fred DeLorey is a political strategist with over two decades of experience in campaign war rooms, advising prime ministers, premiers, and mayors.He recently served as National Campaign Manager for the Conservative Party during the 2021 Federal Election.Notable roles also include serving as Director of Field Operations for Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and Director of Political Operations and National Spokesperson for former Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Fred can be found making weekly guest appearances on national news shows as a commentator, and as a columnist on iPolitics.ca.

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Justin Trudeau should box again: How the Liberals Retake Their Lead as Digital Campaigners - iPolitics.ca

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Liberals to revive war-time housing blueprints in bid to speed up builds – Global News

LATEST UPDATE: The details of this announcement were made on Dec. 12, 2023. To read the latest information on this program,click here.

Nearly 80 years after it was first brought in, Global News has learned the federal government is reviving a Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) program to provide standardized housing blueprints to builders, according to a senior government source.

Housing Minister Sean Fraser announced Tuesday the Liberal government will hold consultations on how the relaunched program will function. The senior government source tells Global News blueprints of various building types and sizes will be made available by the end of 2024.

Pre-approved housing plans are anticipated to cut down on the building timeline by having projects move through the municipal zoning and permitting process more quickly.

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Mike Moffatt, senior director of policy and innovation at the Smart Prosperity Institute, proposed this idea directly to the federal cabinet during meetings in Charlottetown this summer, and believes it could cut as much as 12 months off construction times.

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I think builders and developers would be quite interested in this, particularly if it helps track through the approvals process, Moffatt told Global News.

Moffatt notes that for the program to be effective, it will require a wide catalogue of blueprints.

They certainly need to have, you know, a fairly extensive catalogue of designs so people arent sort of forced to choose between, you know, one or two designs or nothing, Moffatt said.

The program is a throwback to the CMHCs work from the 1940s to late 1970s, where hundreds of thousands of homes were built from thousands of plans approved by the federal housing agency.

Many of these homes, dubbed strawberry box houses or victory homes, were built for returning Second World War veterans, and are still standing in many Canadian neighbourhoods.

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Builders using standardized designs should lead to more favourable terms from lenders and insurance companies, Moffatt believes.

Imagine if you wanted car insurance and you were trying to go to your insurer on a type of car that they had never seen before, that youd put together yourself, he said. They would have a lot of trouble pricing that insurance.

The potential for quicker build times and reduced expenses has companies like Calgary-based 720 Modular excited for the program.

Currently how we build, every building is a snowflake, 720 Modular project manager Craig Mitchell told Global News.

If we can move to a standardized framework, all of a sudden now we have a fighting chance to accelerate housing pace because were not having to redesign every time we go and build a building.

Standardized plans particularly benefit companies like Mitchells, who build their homes inside a warehouse, and then deliver them in shipping container-sized portions to the location of the home.

That process is known as modular or prefabricated building, which Mitchell describes as faster, cheaper and greener compared to traditional building techniques.

If the internal guts of the building itself structurally and the layouts are all similar, now we can really move forward and start industrializing construction, by moving some of that work offsite for example, he said.

2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Liberals to revive war-time housing blueprints in bid to speed up builds - Global News

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