Archive for the ‘Liberals’ Category

Molly Shannon Spoofs Maggie Haberman Soothing Liberals With Trump Trial ASMR: Can You Hear Him Getting Fingerprinted? (Video) – Yahoo Entertainment

Saturday Night Live might know its audience a little too well. Speculating in a mock commercial on Saturday that the Manhattan D.A.s case against Donald Trump isnt as airtight as it could be, the long-running sketch comedy series on NBC leveled with its viewers, joking that theres a new meditation news app for people whose entire personality is hating Donald Trump. Its called CNZen.

Host Molly Shannon even suited up as renowned New York Times reporter, CNN analyst and Trump critic Maggie Haberman to provide indictment-inspired ASMR for total relaxation through trying times.

These days, its hard not to feel stressed out and overwhelmed. Sure, Trump got indicted. But now everyone says the case against him is weak and that hell never serve any jail time. As someone whose entire personality is hating Donald Trump, you need more, the commercial began with cast member Ego Nwodim as narrator. You need to feel calm and reassured. You need the newest meditation app: CNZen.

Also Read:SNL Questions Fairness of Trump Trial: Even Courtroom Sketch Artist Drew Him Like the Mud Monster From Scooby-Doo (Video)

Cast members Bowen Yang, Heidi Gardner and Andrew Dismukes were paired with the audio, shown stressfully doom-scrolling the days headlines, unable to find peace of mind.

The bit continued, offering them a breath of fresh air: You want an app that suits even the most militant liberals with sensual details from Trumps arrest, featuring your favorite CNN anchors and correspondents.

SNL cast members were then rolled out playing CNNs most prominent news personalities, including Michael Longfellow as Anderson Cooper, Devon Walker as Van Jones, Chloe Fineman as Dana Bash and, hilariously, Sarah Sherman in drag as Wolf Blitzer.

Donald was all alone, no family or friends to support him. I shouldnt say this as a journalist, but what a loser, Sherman quipped, looking directly to camera.

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Also Read:SNL': James Austin Johnsons Trump Compares Himself to Jesus of Azkaban for Easter (Video)

Thats when Shannons impersonation of Haberman came in for the apps sleep-soothe mode.

This is his worst nightmare, she cooed. Hes really freaking out because now he knows there are consequences consequences consequences

Later in the commercial, Nwodim introduces the fictional apps ASMR feature: Trumps next court appearance wont be until at least December, she said. Thats why CNZen has a whole section of Trump indictment ASMR.

Can you hear him getting fingerprinted? Shannon whispered, again spoofing Haberman. Im a D.A. opening his big, leather briefcase. Ohhh and the little gavel from the judge. I wonder if youll even hear handcuffs.

Also Read:SNL Alum Jim Belushi Blazed a Trail Outside His Comfort Zone to Farm Cannabis

Elsewhere in the skit are James Austin Johnson as Lindsey Graham and Kenan Thompson as Manhattan D.A. Alvin Bragg and it even goes on to satirically introduce the apps audio erotica feature.

CNZen: because you waited seven years for this indictment, and you want every delicious detail, the commercial concludes. In your mind, hes already in jail.

Watch the full SNL segment in the video above.

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Molly Shannon Spoofs Maggie Haberman Soothing Liberals With Trump Trial ASMR: Can You Hear Him Getting Fingerprinted? (Video) - Yahoo Entertainment

Hal Perry takes over as interim leader of P.E.I. Liberals – CBC.ca

Hal Perry has been named the new interim leader for P.E.I.'s Liberal Party.

The District 27: Tignish-Palmer Road MLA was one of three Liberal candidates re-elected to the P.E.I. Legislature in the April 3 provincial election, along with Robert Henderson and Gord McNeilly.

Perry will bereplacingSharon Cameron, who resigned after failing to win a seatin the election. He saidhe's not interested in running for the permanent leadership of the party.

Perry hasrepresented western P.E.I.since 2011, when he was elected as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party. In 2013, he crossed the floor and joined the then-governing Liberals.He was re-elected in 2015, 2019 and 2023.

The bushy-bearded MLA is known for serving as a New Year's Eve designated driver for his constituents in West Prince.

He has served as ministerof education, the vice-chair of the Council of Ministers of Canada, and was deputy Speaker for the last four years.

Among the issues he has raised in the legislature on behalf of West Prince are lengthy response times for coronerservicesand a lack of school counsellors in rural schools.

Perry will now have three jobs: MLA, interim party leaderand Official Opposition Leader.The threeelected Liberal MLAs pick the Opposition leader, while the party's executive chooses the interim leader.

"It's a bit overwhelming at first because there's a lot of responsibility that comes with these positions," hesaid.

Perry said he plans tointends to focus his efforts on preparing for the upcoming legislative session and continuing the Liberal rebuild at the grassroots level and reconnecting with Island voters.

The Liberals replaced the Green Party as the Official Opposition to the PCs, who won a majority government on April 3. The Greens went from eight seats to two.

Green Leader Peter Bevan-Bakerdefeated Cameron in theDistrict 17: New Haven-Rocky Point race.

While overall support for the Liberals was down in the April election, Perry said the "silver lining" was that they get to form the Official Opposition.

"That gives us the opportunity to be more present, to hold government to account within the sessions of the legislature and outside the sessions," he said.

"It gives us an opportunity to get out to the districts to do a post-mortem, to find out what happened in the past that brought us to this point."

Liberal Party president Katie Morello said there are no immediate plans to look for a permanent leader.

"The districts are really where the strength of the party comes from," she said.

"Working to strengthen those districts, making sure they have an executive, they have a little bit of money in the bank, and they have been engaging in their own districts to find out what issues are pressing, that's our priority right now."

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So long BC Liberals, hello BC United: B.C.s opposition party unveils new name – Global News

Goodbye BC Liberals, hello BC United.

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British Columbias Official Opposition officially unveiled its new name and branding Wednesday evening.

The name change was approved last fall, with 80 per cent of members voting in favour of the rebrand.

I said from the beginning, when I ran to be leader of this party that I wasnt going to do it unless the party was prepared to undergo really big renewal, party leader Kevin Falcon told Global News in an interview.

Really its all about making sure that everything we do going forwards is speaking about the bold public policies that we want to do, making sure this is a really big tent that people feel welcome under.

Along with the new name, the party has adopted a new logo and new colours pink and teal.

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Falcon said he felt the new colour scheme was a little bit of a nod to the partys history, in the form of an updated version of the red and blue traditionally associated with liberal and conservative parties.

But to me its more important that they dont represent any of the established political parties, because Ive always said 96 per cent of the public are not members of political parties, they dont ID with political parties, theyre just normal people trying to raise their families and meet their family budgets.

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The name change comes after the partys defeat in two consecutive elections to the BC NDP, following 16 years in power under the BC Liberal name.

BC NDP Premier David Eby, speaking at one of multiple government media events staged Wednesday, took a shot at the opposition over the rebranding.

For the priorities of the BC Liberals, their priority right now is to change their name, I definitely understand why, Eby said.

I dont think it will change their legacy in the province. For us, were focused on housing, public safety, making sure that health care is there for people and that we have a strong economy that works for everybody.

University of the Fraser Valley political science professor Hamish Telford said the rebrand comes with potential political opportunities for Falcon and BC United, but will be a difficult balancing act.

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The BC Liberals have traditionally relied on a coalition of free-enterprise supporting Liberal and Conservative supporters, who Telford said come with different values and expectations.

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Dropping the Liberal moniker will likely appeal to the partys base in rural and Interior B.C., where voters tend to back federal Conservatives and may have been uncomfortable voting for a party with Liberal in the name.

That upside may be further increased, he said, given current Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus slide in popularity.

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Dropping the Liberal name however, could come at a risk with more progressive, urban voters, however, who he said Falcon will need to appeal directly to.

The way he has to do that is to put forward good policies, but also a commitment to certain progressive values, such as LGBTQ rights and taking the environment and climate change seriously, Telford said.

Those are the things that he has been doing in all honesty that will help him reconnect with the voters the party he has lost.

British Columbians are next scheduled to go to the polls in October 2024, which Telford suggested should give the party plenty of time to conduct outreach and promote the new name.

Falcon, for his part, said he was confident the new branding would connect with voters come election day.

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Six months ago if you went around to Vancouver residents and said, Have you heard about ABC? Nobody would know what you are talking about, he said.

But yet what did they do? Ken Sim and his team, they disrupted all the traditional political parties, through them out of office, and won a massive majority.

© 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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So long BC Liberals, hello BC United: B.C.s opposition party unveils new name - Global News

Opinion: ‘These stories are based on unnamed sources,’ and other … – The Globe and Mail

This Dec. 5, 2017, photo shows flags of Canada and China in Beijing.Fred Dufour/The Associated Press

On Sept. 29, 1972, a story appeared on the front page of The Washington Post that began as follows: John N. Mitchell, while serving as U.S. Attorney General, personally controlled a secret Republican fund that was used to gather information about the Democrats, according to sources involved in the Watergate investigation.

Not allegedly. Not reputedly. The story flat out accuses the chief law enforcement officer of the United States government of running a political espionage operation on the side, with the obvious implication that this might have included the Watergate break-in.

Whose authority did the story cite for this explosive accusation, potentially ruining Mr. Mitchells career and reputation? Sources involved in the Watergate investigation. The story goes on to report Mr. Mitchell personally approved withdrawals from the fund. Who says? Several reliable sources.

The story, of course, was by the team of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. It was hardly unique in its reliance on unnamed sources, or in its willingness to make specific charges of wrongdoing about specific people on that basis.

Heres another one, from Oct. 10, 1972: The Watergate bugging incident stemmed from a massive campaign of political spying and sabotage conducted on behalf of President Nixons re-election and directed by officials of the White House and the Committee for the Re-election of the President.

No room for ambiguity there. A sweeping, potentially criminal indictment. The source? FBI agents. Unnamed or, as some prefer, anonymous (theyre not anonymous to the reporters) sources. Indeed the whole Woodward and Bernstein oeuvre depended on it: not only the particular sources of each story, but lurking over all, the famous Deep Throat, identified decades later as the then-associate director of the FBI, Mark Felt.

Would the story I mean the larger story, Watergate, the cover-up, the whole shebang have come out anyway, without Mr. Woodward and Mr. Bernsteins scoops? Possibly. But their sources, and Mr. Felt in particular, evidently were concerned that it might not. So they placed their trust in the reporters.

The Woodstein team and their editors in turn decided to trust their sources, and asked the public to trust their judgment. Not everyone did. They were denounced, notably by the White House press secretary, Ron Ziegler, as traffickers in hearsay, innuendo, and guilt by association repeatedly, over many months. Other media were slow to pick up the story. Public opinion largely sided with Mr. Nixon, who was re-elected in a landslide a month after the massive campaign of political spying story appeared.

Worse, they got some things wrong: famously, in the case of whether a White House aide-turned-whistleblower, Hugh Sloan, had made a particular allegation before a grand jury or not. But in the broad strokes they were right. Did they rely on unnamed sources? Did they accuse people of wrongdoing? Yes, but what they reported was true. That, in the end, is what mattered.

Why am I going over all of this ancient history? Because something similar is under way now, on another story of political malfeasance: Chinas attempts to interfere with our elections, what help it might have received from domestic enablers, and what the Trudeau government did or did not know about it. I dont mean its as big a story (although its big enough). And we dont know yet what all the facts are.

But in the basics reporters alleging wrongdoing by public officials, based on evidence provided by unnamed sources, who feared the story might otherwise be suppressed it raises many of the same issues. Only this time its not only the flop-sweating spokespeople for the accused who are denouncing the reporters for their use of unnamed sources. Its much of the Canadian establishment.

That the Liberals have been actively encouraging this sentiment poke through the agonized online cries of my God what is this country coming to and this has all the earmarks of a coup, and you find a heavy concentration of Liberal partisans is undoubted. But it also has other, less cynical adherents.

It all sounds terribly well-meaning, until you stop to ask: What exactly are they saying? Let us suppose for the moment that the stories are true. It is plainly in the public interest to know by what means China attempted to tilt our elections, for what reasons, with what success, and with what assistance witting or unwitting, by commission or omission from domestic sources.

So their position cant possibly be that this sort of thing just shouldnt be reported even if true. Is it, then, that a reporter who is given evidence of this should refuse to report it unless their sources publicly identify themselves? But that, in the circumstances, amounts to saying it should not be reported: It is not just career-ending but illegal for intelligence officials to leak classified information. Unnamed sources are a critical part of investigative reporting, and were long before Watergate.

That does expose reporters to greater risk risk that their sources have it wrong, risk that they are getting played, risk that they have misinterpreted their sources. And the risks are especially great where the story involves accusations of wrongdoing, where not only the reputation and livelihood of the subject of the story are on the line so, potentially, are the reporters.

But that is a risk for the reporters and their editors to assess. It does not and cannot automatically mean the story should not be reported. The test, in the end, is not does this story rely on unnamed sources or does it injure someones reputation, but is it true? Or at least since perfect certainty is not given to us on this Earth has every reasonable effort been made to verify it is true?

Thats the legal standard, but if the reporter has it wrong he will pay the price regardless of how diligent he was. And if he has it right? Then all the bluster about unnamed sources and damaged reputations will be so much wasted breath. If the stories are true, reputations deserve to be damaged.

So: Lets find out, shall we? Rather than instantly accept or unquestioningly dismiss the allegations, as some have done, why dont we focus on weighing them against the evidence? In the particular case of the allegations against Ontario MP Han Dong, the truth or falsehood of them may soon be tested in court. As to the rest, that is the work of the various inquiries now under way to which a public inquiry is an essential addition none of which would have been launched had the stories never been reported.

The only purpose served by these operatic swoons that such things could even be reported is to fit a broader Liberal narrative of victimhood at the hands of the notoriously Liberal-hating media in which any and all allegations can be depicted, not as a sign that something is amiss with Liberal ethics, but that the press are out to get us.

Thus legitimate concerns about whether the independent special rapporteur on the China interference matter, David Johnston, was in a conflict of interest, by virtue of his long personal and professional association with the Prime Minister, are converted into these vicious attacks on that good man.

And thus the mounting questions about the management and directors of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation are dismissed, as were previous concerns about the management of the WE Charity organization, as attempts to destroy these wonderful charities. The truth or falsehood of the allegations is, apparently, immaterial: only their effect on Liberal amour propre.

These are magnificent deflections. In the case of the Johnston appointment one of several in quick succession to have raised conflict-of-interest issues his unimpeachable integrity, as I have written before, is irrelevant. There is no exemption in the conflict-of-interest rules for people of good character. The rule is not: Avoid conflicts of interest, unless you are a very good man. The rule is: Avoid conflicts of interest.

As for the Trudeau Foundation, earlier concerns over its acceptance, in 2016, of a $200,000 donation from a Chinese billionaire later reported by The Globe and Mail to have been reimbursed by the Chinese government have been supplemented by concerns over what it did with it afterward, after the sudden resignation this week of eight members of the current board, along with four members of senior management and six mentors. (Disclosure: My cousin once removed, the daughter of Pierre Trudeau, is one of those now-resigned board members.)

According to a story in La Presse, board members belatedly discovered that the money had not been returned, as had been promised after the story broke, apparently because the cheque that was to return the funds was made out to a different name than that of the real donor. Directors who had been on the board at the time of the donation were apparently asked to recuse themselves from any investigation, and allegedly refused.

An independent investigation, one director said, would have determined who the donor was, if there were conditions attached to these sums, and the relationships behind all this. As it is, said another, we have lost confidence in the organizations ability to handle this file with transparency, integrity and accountability.

Thats not the jackal press talking. Thats not the scandal-happy opposition. Those are (former) members of the board of the foundation itself. Perhaps they have their own agenda. Maybe they have their own questions to answer. Again, thats what an investigation is for.

But its a bit much to present the directors mass resignation, as the foundation attempted to do in the immediate aftermath, as a response to the politicization of its work (a bunch of lies, one of the departed directors told La Presse), or to dismiss the whole controversy, as the Prime Minister did on Tuesday, as merely a reflection of the level of toxicity and political polarization in the air these days.

That sort of response wont wash any more, or shouldnt. Sooner or later, the truth will out. Its time to stop deflecting, and start answering.

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Opinion: 'These stories are based on unnamed sources,' and other ... - The Globe and Mail

Globe editorial: The Liberals’ many ethics gaffes cast a long shadow – The Globe and Mail

In better times, there likely would have been little reaction to the announcement in late March that an experienced investigator in the office of the federal Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner who also happens to be the sister-in-law of a senior Liberal cabinet minister would serve as interim ethics commissioner for six months.

In those better times, the opposition parties and the public would have been apt to accept Martine Richard as an honest broker who would act impartially and recuse herself from cases should the need arise.

After all, shes done so in the past, notably in 2018 when her brother-in-law, Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc, was investigated and found to have broken the Conflict of Interest Act by taking part in a decision to award a fisheries licence to a group linked to his wifes cousin.

That her original appointment to the ethics office happened a decade ago under a Conservative prime minister is also a signal that she is non-partisan. And given the number of times the ethics commissioner has busted the Liberals for violations since Ms. Richards hiring, there is little call to question her professionalism, or that of the broader office.

Except that these are not ordinary times, and Ms. Richard is another person, after David Johnston, whose credibility has been tainted by their association with a Liberal government known for its serial conflicts of interest.

These are the same Liberals that Mario Dion, the former ethics commissioner whose early retirement in February created the need for an interim replacement, found to be so oblivious to even the most straightforward conflicts of interest that he suggested on his way out the door that the Trudeau government send its ministers and parliamentary secretaries to his office for training.

And with good reason. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and two of his current and former senior ministers Mr. Leblanc and Bill Morneau have all violated the Conflict of Interest Act in an impressive variety of ways.

Lesser cabinet members have done it, too. Trade Minister Mary Ng and Housing Minister Ahmed Hussen were both caught giving lucrative government contracts to close friends and family members.

And just this year, Mr. Trudeaus parliamentary secretary, Greg Fergus, was caught violating the act by improperly intervening on behalf of a television station seeking a broadcast licence from the CRTC.

We wrote at the time of Mr. Dions announced departure that he had identified the real problem: a culture in the Liberal Party that starts at the top, and in which too many caucus members are indifferent to the conflict-of-interest rules governing MPs.

That toxic culture has created a party that appears to have lost interest in basic ethics, and it is rubbing off on much of what the Liberal government touches.

That includes Mr. Johnston, a man Mr. Trudeau calls a family friend. His appointment last month as the governments special rapporteur investigating foreign election interference might have gone over better had, prior to that, the Prime Minister demonstrated the faintest interest in avoiding conflicts of interest.

Instead, Mr. Trudeau himself violated the Conflict of Interest Act on two different occasions, his former finance minister did it once, two of his junior ministers were unaware that the public purse is not a bank account to be used for the benefit of best buddies and immediate family, and his parliamentary secretary missed the memo regarding his obligation not to interfere with a quasi-judicial tribunal.

And so any potential calculation that Mr. Johnstons well-earned reputation as an honest broker would bolster the Trudeau government has backfired. It has instead had the opposite effect and indelibly tainted the credibility of the special rapporteur process.

Mr. Trudeau breaks the rules that preserve the publics faith in the integrity of government, then he or his government appoints family friends and relatives to positions that oversee government, and he expects the public and the opposition to accept this at face value.

Like we said, maybe a prime minister who played by the rules would have the credibility to pull off the kinds of appointments Mr. Trudeau has overseen lately.

But then again, that kind of prime minister would never permit such appointments in the first place.

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Globe editorial: The Liberals' many ethics gaffes cast a long shadow - The Globe and Mail