A tribute to Joe Clark that’s who: New leader will inherit a party on the rise
Joe Clark has been accused of being a man ahead of his time. Now, as he enters his final week as leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, the verdict is in – he is guilty as charged. The evidence is simply overwhelming: *Youngest Prime Minister in Canadian history (age 39). *Appointed first woman […]
Canada must act now in the Congo: It remains to be seen what Canada will do to take lead to help bring order, avoid genocide
Canada must act and act now in the Congo. For all its talk of wanting to be there when it counts, the time is now for Canada to take the lead and muster an international response to the daily killings and impending genocide in the Congo. Prime Minister Jean Chretien seemed to realize the urgency […]
Parliamentary sovereignty
Regarding “Opposition attacks Paul Martin’s use of privilege,” (The Hill Times, May 19). The issue of the Parliamentary privileges of MPs is not an issue dealing with, as the Canadian Alliance’s John Reynolds would have it, Paul Martin’s campaign to become leader of the Liberal Party. Rather, Parliamentary privilege are the rights and immunities given […]
Court judge as editor
TORONTO–Author Stephen Williams has written two books already about the infamous murderers/rapists Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka. I haven’t read either one, and have no interest in reading a book about those monsters. That having been said, however, Williams has every right to publish as many books as he wants to on Bernardo and Homolka, […]
Breaking Nunavut’s oil addiction: Environmental damage of fossil fuel use has a direct impact on Arctic ecosystem
IQALUIT, NUNVUT–The wise use of resources has long been a trademark of Inuit. Inuit hunters have always harvested animals in order to sustain their families. The meat is used for food, while by-products of the animals are used for clothing, tools, shelter, heat and light. The oil from marine mammals provided the precious fuel to […]
Silly season has come, mother
Countdown to summer…We’re just back from a week off and already the talk is turning to when the next break will beand for how long. We are now into the final stretch of the spring session, during which the Commons is scheduled to sit for five weeks until June 20, when it is scheduled to […]
MPs’ and Senators’ Birthdays
*Liberal MP Claude Drouin, 47, May 26, 1956 *Tory Sen. Pat Carney, 68, May 26, 1935 *Liberal MP Brent St-Denis, 53, May 27, 1950 *Liberal MP Andrew Telegdi, 57, May 28, 1946 *Liberal Sen. Jack Wiebe, 67, May 31, 1936 *Liberal MP Claude Drouin, 47, May 26, 1956 *Tory Sen. Pat Carney, 68, May 26, […]
The Long Goodbye…
Alberta Premier Ralph Klein is under growing pressure to announce his future plans. Some of his longest and most ardent backroom supporters are privately saying King Ralph should be preparing for abdication and should make up his mind this summer. Some of the talk is not so private. Art Smith, the former long-time head of […]
Cities say government stalled on urban agenda: Some waiting for Martin to take over for action to start
When it comes to urban issues, Canada’s mayors are keeping a close eye on candidates in the Liberal leadership race. The annual meeting of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, which will be held in Winnipeg, Man., later this week, has long been a favourite speaking venue for Cabinet ministers and opposition politicians alike. Federal Cabinet […]
McCallum’s riding top five in province on memberships
TORONTO–His appointment 365 days ago raised many eyebrows. How do you turn a successful economist into a federal Minister of Defence? Sure an economist knows how much a tank costs, but what does a former chief economist know about running an army, or a navy, or an air force? John McCallum is the economist who […]