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The 2006 Federal election
There's a Federal election going on. There's plenty of issues I would like to hear candidates talk about:
Do you think I'm trying to convince you to vote for the Green Party? Let's address that subject right now. I have sent a contribution to Andrew Lewis, the Green candidate for Saanich-Gulf Islands. Andrew would be a great MP, if enough voters in Saanich-Gulf Islands choose to give him the opportunity. I'm aware of three other Green candidates who can walk and chew gum at the same time: Ariel Lade in Victoria, Silvaine Zimmermann in West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea-to-Sky Country, and Rob Hornsey in Pitt Meadows-Maple Ridge-Mission. Unfortunately, I don't live in one of these ridings. If you don't live in one of these ridings, either, ask your local Green candidate why the federal Green Party hired Don Toffaletto to do media relations for them, and let me know what sort of answer you get. Another concern is, being an MP is a job that pays $130,000/year, and the federal Green Party has selected some candidates who simply aren't qualified, in order to collect the $1.75/vote of federal election funding. Of course, the voters have the ultimate decision over who is qualified to be an MP, but I think the policy of putting up warm bodies to be candidates for the sake of having candidates in every riding is wrong. I'll put in a word for another worthy candidate, Connie Fogal, who is running in Vancouver-Kingsway. She is the leader of the Canadian Action Party, and she has proven herself to be very adept at taking up issues that other parties shy away from. Besides helping out Andrew Lewis, the extent of my involvement in this election, so far, has been to ask the local NDP candidate, Dawn Black, what her position was on another important issue, the proposed widening of the Port Mann Bridge and the freeway from Langley to East Vancouver. (Yes, there could be federal money going into this.) It took a week and a half to get an answer, but I did get the answer I wanted; yes, she is against this project. There was no need for me to quiz the Liberal candidate, Joyce Murray, about this, because she was in the provincial Cabinet when this waste of tax dollars was cooked up. Now that the subject of the Liberals has come up, it's time to start preaching. The sponsorship scandal is just the tip of the iceberg, and I'm presenting this as a fact. I'll present just two examples here, with the assumption that you already know about Martin's “flag of convenience” container ships. (If you don't, click here for a CBC story about it.)
Would replacing Martin with Stephen Harper be an improvement? No, and here's why. The Fraser Institute had a 30th anniversary dinner this past October, and Harper was a guest of honour. If you believe that your local Conservative candidate cares about what you think, he or she is worthy of your consideration, but don't think for one minute that Stephen Harper cares what you think. Like George W. Bush and Gordon Campbell, Harper has bought into an ideology, and ideologues don't care about voters. Let's take, for example, something that has been an issue in this election campaign; crime and minimum sentences for criminals. Why do criminals get light sentences? Because of lack of courtroom space and judges to hear cases, and lack of prison space to keep criminals locked up. Why do we lack these things? Because special-interest groups like the Fraser Institute and Harper's National Citizens Coalition think that people shouldn't pay taxes. Do you want less crime or do you want the GST reduced to 5%? I'm waiting for somebody to take Harper to task on this. Now, I briefly mentioned the NDP earlier. I won't tell you that an NDP MP where you live would be any more answerable to you than a Liberal or a Conservative MP. (Unless you live in Burnaby-New Westminster; I'll vouch for Peter Julian in the same way that I vouched for Andrew Lewis earlier.) I can tell you, however, that Jack Layton said that if the NDP ends up with enough seats to hold the balance of power in the next Parliament, the NDP will make proportional representation a key condition of support. This is a change that would be of benefit to almost everyone. If you are unable to decide who to vote for based on any other criteria, I've just given you, free of charge, a reason to vote NDP. Give Layton a chance to deliver on this campaign promise. And who knows? If we get proportional representation for federal elections, the NDP in British Columbia might be embarrassed enough to support proportional representation for provincial elections, too.
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RossK
Posted at 2006-01-12 11:01:23
Bob,
I would do it in a heartbeat, but I\'m in Vancouver Kingsway and I just can\'t pass up the chance to help knock off the fauxLiberal Mr. Emerson.
btw - checkout Sean Holman\'s off shore drilling expose.
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