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The Canadian Press gets the ,soldes louboutin, such as it is,chaussure christian louboutin pas cher, from the Afghan detainee document review.
The committee — made up of Conservative, Liberal and Bloc Quebecois MPs — has been poring over documents since early July.?But a three-member panel of independent arbiters has yet to authorize public disclosure of any information…
Bryon Wilfert,louboutin pas cher, one of two Liberal MPs on the committee,chaussures christian louboutin pas cher, says there’s no indication the panel will become an obstacle to the eventual release of documents.?”Just say that it’s a work in progress,louboutin solde,” he said. “Although it’s not as fast as maybe we would like,chaussures louboutin pas cher, it’s working well.?There’s good faith all around, both with all the members of the ad hoc committee and with the arbiters.”
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Plaudits to a plucky Slovak. As you may recall,chaussure christian louboutin, Florida Panthers forward Richard Zednik was one night when his teammate Olli Jokinen took a cartwheel-style header and caught Zed in the neck with the blade of his skate. Remember that uproariously funny manoeuvre in Blades of Glory? Well,louboutin, this was the genuine article. It was pretty far from funny.
But Zed? at Panthers camp this month—with a kevlar neck protector. And it’s great to see him. He won’t ever be mistaken for Alex Ovechkin. But he’s a rugged,solde louboutin 2013, hard-working little guy who can go on a decent scoring streak now and then. Plus,chaussures louboutin pas cher, he’s got this great Eurotrash-dissident thing going. You could imagine him climbing a tank during the Prague Spring.
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The Scene. In case anyone on the government side had forgotten, the leader of the opposition stood to recall where proceedings had left off a week ago and what else had arisen in the interim.
“Mr. Speaker, the government faces two RCMP investigations at once, one of them about Bruce Carson’s influence peddling right in the Prime Minister’s Office, and four members of the Prime Minister’s inner circle face accusations of election fraud that could result in jail time,vente louboutin pas cher,” Mr. Ignatieff reported. “As if that was not enough, a committee of this House has found the government in contempt of Parliament.”
The government side chuckled at this last bit.
Democracy is,louboutin solde, of course, a funny thing. An unruly, chaotic, competitive thing, compelled by unwritten rules and collective will, as much theoretical as it is practical and inherent. Ours is formally practiced in ancient dignity: “Mr. Speaker” this and “honourable member” that. A quirk that renders the proceedings both hallowed and peculiar, grounded and remote.
And from that do we arrive now at a finding—or at least a formal to that effect—of contempt.
It seems to be the government side’s feeling that this is not anything to be taken seriously. That this is all only to do with the fact that a majority of seats in the House of Commons are presently occupied by MPs who have pledged themselves to parties other than the Conservative side,christian louboutin.
That may well be true. But to argue as much is, it seems, to question the entire legitimacy of our parliamentary system, from the power and purpose of the elected MP to the function of the political party to the role and representation of the voter in our democracy. By week’s end, this government may be the first in this nation’s history—the Liberal side claims this extends to the history of all other commonwealth governments—to be found in contempt of Parliament.
“This is an unprecedented cascade of abuse. The issue here is one of trust,” Mr. Ignatieff continued. “How can Canadians remain trusting of a government guilty of such flagrant abuse of power?”
The government side sent up John Baird to reassure the home audience.?”Mr. Speaker, it will not come as any surprise to the leader of the Liberal Party that I completely reject all of the misleading premises in his question,chaussure louboutin solde,” Mr. Baird said, though it was unclear whether he meant here to dispute facts or meaning.
“There is no member of the government who is under investigation for a criminal offence,” he continued, previewing the Conservative side’s new election slogan.
Here, then, the government House leader moved to delight the crowd with a delicate three-step.
First, a lament for the previous Liberal administration: “Let me be very clear, this government is the government that acted very expeditiously to bring in the Federal Accountability Act, to clean up the ethical mess that we inherited from the previous Liberal government.”
Second, a gratuitous swipe at Mr. Ignatieff’s previous residency: “He was not in Canada to know exactly how bad the Liberal ethics policies were.”
And third, a salute to the man for whom the Government of Canada is now named: “Maybe he should look at the Federal Accountability Act and look at the great changes, especially, that this Prime Minister has ushered in.”
Unpersuaded, Mr. Ignatieff restated his thesis en fran?ais. Mr. Baird was now positively besmirched. “Mr. Speaker, I guess the Liberal leader believes we do not need to have police to conduct an investigation,” he sighed, apparently in reference to the questions surrounding Mr. Carson. “We do not need to have a court system. He will simply assign guilt as he sees it on the floor of the House of Commons.”
Not, of course, that the government wasn’t entirely committed to seeing the guilty held to account. “Let me be very clear, this is the government that brought in tough penalties for people who break the law,” Mr. Baird said. “Anyone convicted of breaking the law will face the full force of Canadian law.”
Up to and including, one assumes, those four Conservatives charged with violating election law.
Mr. Ignatieff was now compelled to go all figurative on his opponent. “Mr. Speaker, the Conservatives cannot deny the RCMP is crawling all over the government at the moment,” he said.
The Liberal leader switched then to a more fiduciary concern ahead of tomorrow’s budget. “Conservatives also expect us to vote tomorrow for a budget without telling Canadians what their waste is going to cost, waste on corporate tax giveaways,louboutins, waste on prisons, waste on jets which they do not have accurate costing on for Canadians,” he declared. “Instead of telling Canadians the truth,chaussure louboutin pas cher, they went out last week and spent millions of taxpayer dollars on government partisan advertising.”
Mr. Ignatieff had but a simple request. “When,” he begged, “is the government going to show some respect for taxpayers and a little respect for democracy?”
Some? A little? Here was an obvious attempt at compromise.
Mr. Baird was not ready to negotiate. “Mr. Speaker,” he demurred, “I do not agree with the leader of the opposition at all.”
Indeed, Mr. Baird was now apparently quite hurt. “The Liberal Party can try to attack the government with political smears,” he sighed. “It has become very good at it.”
Now it was the Liberal side’s turn to engage in theatric guffaws.
The Stats. Ethics, 19 questions. Infrastructure and taxation, four questions each. Libya, government contracts, employment and the economy, two questions each. Libya and Rights & Democracy, one question each.
John Baird, 12 answers. Rona Ambrose and Jim Flaherty, four answers each. Rob Merrifield, three answers. Christian Paradis, Peter MacKay, Stockwell Day, Diane Finley and Vic Toews, two answers each. Diane Ablonczy, John Duncan, Daniel Petit, Lawrence Cannon and Tony Clement, one answer each.
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About :
It’s certainly another broken promise, which if memory serves was to appoint only elected senators. But the Liberals are hardly in a position to complain since a) they’d have done the same thing, and have for decades, and b) they’re opposed to electing senators, at least under the current setup. ?
There is an extra unseemliness in light of the prorogation of Parliament. He is still in law the Prime Minister of Canada, but his legitimacy is under something of a cloud, having prorogued rather than face a confidence vote (although it’s worth speculating whether he would in fact have been defeated in that vote — I suspect the Liberals might well have gotten cold feet on the day,louboutin pas cher, in light of the pasting they were taking in the polls).?His spokesman seems to admit as much: they’re making the appointments now rather than wait for the government to be defeated and let the coalition do it. The problem with that explanation: the coalition is not going to defeat them, because the coalition is dead. I think they’re using the coalition threat to justify what they were planning to do anyway. See,chaussures christian louboutin pas cher, for example, in the November 24 National Post — days before the fiscal update.
But it is a prime ministerial prerogative to appoint Senators, and there is no tradition in this country of appointing them on anything but a strictly partisan basis.?It’s the Senate, in other words,solde louboutin, that’s the scandal.
I’d judge these particular appointments by two criteria: the quality of the appointees, and whether they move the Senate closer to reform or not. On the latter, it’s been reported that Harper will make the appointments conditional on a pledge to support the government’s proposed?Senate reforms?– stalled for months in the Senate, and dead with prorogation –?when these are reintroduced in the Upper House. These would limit Senate terms to eight years and require Senators to be elected to be eligible for appointment; the new appointees would be expected not only to vote for these principles, but to apply them to themselves. ?I’d support that, and I don’t agree with my colleage Andrew Potter that . If the Prime Minister can insist that they vote with the Conservatives generally as a condition of appointment, he can surely insist they vote with the Conservatives on a particular bill.
So I’m willing to cut Harper a little slack, here. His?bona fides as a Senate reformer are not in doubt — indeed, he’s taken considerable flak for it, both in Parliament and in the media.?He has appointed only two Senators since he came to power, one of whom was elected (Alberta’s Bert Brown). He’d have appointed more elected Senators, it is fair to assume,solde christian louboutin, had his reform bill passed the Senate. Still,louboutin femme pas cher, it looks odd: appointing Senators in order to elect them,christian louboutin pas cher, patronage in the service of reform.
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