Blue Martin puts on a pink dress
Rachel Marsden
National Post
June 29, 2005
Paul Martin has gone from being longtime rival Jean Chretien's right-leaning counterpart to indulging in political cross-dressing with his new socialist comrades in the Bloc Quebecois and NDP. There is only one explanation for this slide to socialism: a desperate power grab.
In the run-up to the last federal election, there was concern within the Conservative party that Martin would shift the Liberals further to the right than they were under Chretien, eliminating any perceived need for a Conservative opposition.
But if you need proof of who's really running things now, just check out the latest NDP press release entitled, "Commons passes historic NDP budget," which quotes New Democrat leader Jack Layton as saying "when you elect New Democrats, you get better government," and "we were able to do with 19 MPs what the Official Opposition wouldn't do with 98."
This may come as a bit of a shock to you, Mr. Layton, but we didn't actually elect you to govern. Hand these socialists 16% of the popular vote, and they'll take the crushing defeat as a mandate to run the place.
But Martin hasn't discouraged them any. Having to rely on a coalition to stay in power, he has adopted a radical leftist agenda that bears little resemblance to what Canadians really want. And the numbers prove it.
As Ipsos-Reid president Darrell Bricker pointed out to me this week, "only about a quarter of Canadians think that same-sex marriage is a great idea." But the Martin Liberals took the extraordinary measure of extending Parliament in order to ram through this legislation.
In the absence of a Supreme Court ruling declaring the traditional definition of marriage unconstitutional, or any strong public opinion on the issue, the Martin Liberals pressed ahead with their activist agenda -- effectively turning our country into a social science Petri dish.
Martin has declared that we won't have two-tier health care in this country, even in light of an Ipsos-Reid poll from earlier this month indicating that 70% of Canadians feel they should be able to buy private health care services if they want to.
The Prime Minister wants to proceed with the decriminalization of marijuana, despite having once referred -- in front of a group of kids -- to the "tremendous harm marijuana causes." Clearly, Martin is a man of principles -- with a more varied selection to choose from than the linen department at Wal-Mart.
According to an Ipsos-Reid poll from last November, 51% of Canadians agreed with the statement that decriminalization of pot is "a sound idea as many people will no longer have to suffer a criminal record for a relatively minor offence."
Notice the torque? If they're going to load a poll question like that, they may as well just say that if pot isn't decriminalized, Baby Jesus will bawl his eyes out.
In a conversation with me earlier this year, Mark Souder, a Republican member of the U.S. House Committee on Homeland Security, pointed out the less hyped flipside -- the part that Canadians were never asked to consider in the Ipsos survey: "Canada has a right to pass whatever they do. But if you don't have harmonization of drug laws, and there is a disconnect, then we will have a right in the United States to re-evaluate our border strategy."
Try working that into the poll question and see what happens to that 1% pro-pot majority.
On ballistic missile defence (BMD), Martin might have been in sync with majority opinion -- but a real leader would have recognized the amount of misinformation the public was relying upon, and sought to change Canadians' minds. While a COMPAS poll reported earlier this year in the National Post found that 54% of Canadians were against participating in America's BMD program, "results suggest Canadians could easily be persuaded to back the missile shield."
As liberal as some Canadians may appear to be, they didn't vote for an NDP-Bloc far-left agenda. As Bricker says, "Most Canadians tend to be pretty squishy in the middle." Translation: Canadians are an apathetic bunch -- unless they catch Paul Martin lying to rock stars like Bob Geldof or Bono.
U.S. President Ronald Reagan won a landslide re-election in 1984 due, in large part, to the "mushy middle" working-class Democrats waking up and realizing that their party no longer represented their views -- only those of a very narrow segment of society.
It's no coincidence that Reagan was also known as "The Great Communicator." Hey, Stephen Harper, communicate this: Canadians are getting the exact government they never wanted. And if they don't wisen up soon, they'll wake up one day and wonder what the heck happened to their country.
National Post
Martin's head is so far up his ass he can see daylight. All those years of fiscal restraint and sacrifice are for naught now that the NDP have control of the nation's purse strings. Dandelion fluff in the wind is more stable than he is. But then again, the old saying that the NDP is just a Liberal in a hurry comes to mind.
Not a pink dress but will this do?

DerbyX @ Thu Jun 30, 2005 7:36 am
$1:
Martin's head is so far up his ass he can see daylight. All those years of fiscal restraint and sacrifice are for naught now that the NDP have control of the nation's purse strings. Dandelion fluff in the wind is more stable than he is. But then again, the old saying that the NDP is just a Liberal in a hurry comes to mind.
Blame the conservatives. They could have worked with the liberals and gotten some conscessions from the liberals and worked to truely screw the bloc. Martin had little choice but to work with the NDP. Thats how a minority government works. The liberals got most of what they wanted and the NDP was able to wield power that they ordinarily would not have. Had the conservatives not been so preoccupied with "bring down the liberals" they could have formed a power bloc government consisting of the ruling party & opposition controlling enough seats to do what they wanted.
DerbyX DerbyX:
$1:
Martin's head is so far up his ass he can see daylight. All those years of fiscal restraint and sacrifice are for naught now that the NDP have control of the nation's purse strings. Dandelion fluff in the wind is more stable than he is. But then again, the old saying that the NDP is just a Liberal in a hurry comes to mind.
Blame the conservatives. They could have worked with the liberals and gotten some conscessions from the liberals and worked to truely screw the bloc. Martin had little choice but to work with the NDP. Thats how a minority government works. The liberals got most of what they wanted and the NDP was able to wield power that they ordinarily would not have. Had the conservatives not been so preoccupied with "bring down the liberals" they could have formed a power bloc government consisting of the ruling party & opposition controlling enough seats to do what they wanted.
$1:
"bring down the liberals"
Hahah I guess the conservatives bought BS too, Martini did that. He will do anything to keep power simple as that, He is going pay for everything he's done.
Here a little something from FD it's very good and does peak the truth.
Ladies and gentlemen, there have been a lot of media fluff stories that I have to be more personable, more friendly - so Canadians will like me.
With all due respect, that is a perfect example of media attempts to ignore Liberal corruption, change the topic; then smear the Conservative agenda.
The fact is that not one person you know has sat down for coffee with Paul Martin. Paul Martin is not like us; he is a multi-millionaire. Paul Martin claims Conservatives will destroy medicare yet Paul Martin has a private doctor while the rest of us know people who suffer or die because of our health care system.
Paul Martin does not pay taxes like us - he created a tax loophole to avoid the taxes that you, I and every other Canadian is forced to pay. Paul Martin has twisted the system to financially benefit his friends, family and political connections.
The fact is that I am very personable, I am very friendly. Just ask my wife and any of those who have known me over the years. But with 30 million Canadians, it is physically impossible for me to sit down for coffee with every one of them. So it is easy for the Liberal friendly media to lie about my personality.
But let us be realistic; you do not want me to be your new friend; you want me to be a leader...
A leader who will improve medicare; a leader who improve our armed forces and security for Canadians. You want me to cut waste in government - then re-allocate that money to programs that will help you and your loved ones.
You want me to implement laws that will protect our children from sexual predators unlike the Liberals and NDP who support adults having sex with 14 year olds. You want me to set up a sex offender registry to monitor convicted criminals NOT a gun registry that monitors duck hunters.
You want me to change the laws then allocate resources so that law abiding citizens feel safe on the streets - and criminals are afraid. For some strange reason, under 12 years of Paul Martin - it is the criminals who feel safer on the streets after dark.
Let us be honest with each other. You do not care if I kiss a baby - so long as I create a Canada where that child can grow up in a safe environment, get a great education and a good job, have clean air and good drinking water while protecting our environment for future generations.
You need someone who uses the same health care system you do; you need someone who has vision for Canada not someone who only cares about power; you need a Prime Minister with morals, values and integrity; you need a leader not a ditherer.
My name is Stephen Harper. We may never be friends; we may never have a photograph of me kissing your baby. But I guarantee you that if you get me elected Prime Minister of Canada, you will be bragging forever of the Canada we build together.
[
freedominion
DerbyX @ Thu Jun 30, 2005 8:07 am
It's too bad that us Canadians just won't vote people who's main agenda is to instill their personal beliefs into law. Its too bad us Candians won't vote people who believe that a segment of our population do not deserve the same freedom as all others. Its too bad us Canadians won't vote a party that has at its core, a group of people who believe that granting marriage rights to another group infringes on theirs because they don't personally believe it. If it weren't for the fact that us Canadians consistently value certain personal freedoms more dearly then some fiscal concerns the conservatives might have actually won. Stephen Harper should know this. If they weren't against gay marriage, opossed almost solely on religious grounds then theyu would have won. I think its good every once in awhile to have a government thats is for tax breaks & restrait on some social spending but I WILL NEVER VOTE A PARTY THAT WILL MAKE RELIGIOUS BELIEFS PART OF LAW. Do you know what? The majority of Canadians agree with me. Until your Stephen Harper understands this he will never win. Period.
DerbyX DerbyX:
It's too bad that us Canadians just won't vote people who's main agenda is to instill their personal beliefs into law. Its too bad us Candians won't vote people who believe that a segment of our population do not deserve the same freedom as all others. Its too bad us Canadians won't vote a party that has at its core, a group of people who believe that granting marriage rights to another group infringes on theirs because they don't personally believe it. If it weren't for the fact that us Canadians consistently value certain personal freedoms more dearly then some fiscal concerns the conservatives might have actually won. Stephen Harper should know this. If they weren't against gay marriage, opossed almost solely on religious grounds then theyu would have won. I think its good every once in awhile to have a government thats is for tax breaks & restrait on some social spending but I WILL NEVER VOTE A PARTY THAT WILL MAKE RELIGIOUS BELIEFS PART OF LAW. Do you know what? The majority of Canadians agree with me. Until your Stephen Harper understands this he will never win. Period.
Stop with your BS already, 70% disagreed with the ruling on Tuesday. if it was such a slam dunk why did Martini not allow his cabinet (Free Vote) vote they way their constituents wanted them to, I'll tell you cause he would have looked like a fool and it wouldn’t have passed, same as the NDP, so spare me your crap cause I’m sick of reading it.
I’m sure they will pay for going against what the people wanted; I know 100% the Liberal here will not get back in.
DerbyX @ Thu Jun 30, 2005 8:25 am
$1:
Stop with your BS already, 70% disagreed with the ruling on Tuesday. if it was such a slam dunk why did Martini not allow his cabinet (Free Vote) vote they way their constituents wanted them to, I'll tell you cause he would have looked like a fool and it wouldn’t have passed, same as the NDP, so spare me your crap cause I’m sick of reading it.
I’m sure they will pay for going against what the people wanted; I know 100% the Liberal here will not get back in.
Spare me your bullshit. Most MP's voted how their constituents wanted. Some bloc voted against it and it was part of their platform. Quit your incessant anti-liberal, anti-Canadian bellyaching. Canada is a free country, and all the more freerer today. Keep on bitchin though as the liberals continually beat the conservatives.
DerbyX DerbyX:
$1:
Stop with your BS already, 70% disagreed with the ruling on Tuesday. if it was such a slam dunk why did Martini not allow his cabinet (Free Vote) vote they way their constituents wanted them to, I'll tell you cause he would have looked like a fool and it wouldn’t have passed, same as the NDP, so spare me your crap cause I’m sick of reading it.
I’m sure they will pay for going against what the people wanted; I know 100% the Liberal here will not get back in.
Spare me your bullshit. Most MP's voted how their constituents wanted. Some bloc voted against it and it was part of their platform. Quit your incessant anti-liberal, anti-Canadian bellyaching. Canada is a free country, and all the more freerer today. Keep on bitchin though as the liberals continually beat the conservatives.
![Canada Flag [flag]](./images/smilies/smilie_flag.gif)
Most really,
NDP were told you have to support it, you did see what happened to the one that didn't right.
“NDP MP Bev Desjarlais was booted to the back row and stripped of her critic's duties as punishment for violating
orders from Leader Jack Layton to support the bill. “
The Liberals (cabinet) were told you have to support it, you did see what happened to the one that didn't right.
“Minister of State Joe Comuzzi quit cabinet earlier in the day so he could vote against the government's bill. He was among 32 Liberals who voted against the government. “
Can you say that the NDP and the Liberals are Stalinize?
DerbyX @ Thu Jun 30, 2005 8:46 am
The People wanted it. The People got it. End of story wackjob.
DerbyX DerbyX:
The People wanted it. The People got it. End of story wackjob.
Bullshit You'll see, Have fun cause it's coming to a end.
DerbyX @ Thu Jun 30, 2005 8:53 am
Lets poll every single Canadian. The Majority would support it. Give it up.

lily lily:
hwacker hwacker:
The Liberals (cabinet) were told you have to support it, you did see what happened to the one that didn't right.
“Minister of State Joe Comuzzi quit cabinet earlier in the day so he could vote against the government's bill. He was among 32 Liberals who voted against the government. “
Which is it? One.... or 32?
My MP is Conservative, and he didn't check with his constituents before voting, so I assume he toed the party line too.
Lily you didn't follow it i guess, Martini told his cabinet they had to vote yes or he would remove them. Comuzzi was in the cabinet he quit so he could vote what his people wanted. The others will pay when the election comes around.
There is a difference between the cabinet and the backbenchers
http://www.liberal.ca/cabinet_e.aspx
Notice how they deleted Comuzzi already.
DerbyX DerbyX:
Lets poll every single Canadian. The Majority would support it. Give it up.

yeah lets.
like this maybe
ctv poll