Did the Conservatives declare mutiny on Stephen Harper?


Julian Wolfe
April 26th, 2011


mutiny
The Liberal party was given a present by the Tories today, a 500 page book of Harper’s most controversial quotes from the 80s to present. The document is organized in alphabetical order by subject matter and covers everything from abortion to western alienation. The fact that the Tories felt compelled to research and expose their own leader is an indication that the party isn’t stable and that something is seriously wrong. Harper refused to tell reporters what would happen to his career if he didn’t win a majority government, but based on this kind of betrayal, his time as leader of the party must be on a short leash.

The quotes include those that we know of already and when it comes to the abortion debate, Harper had this to say when he was a leadership candidate in 2002: “I’m not ashamed to say that, in caucus, I have more pro-life MPs supporting me than supporting Stockwell Day.”

In 1995, Harper said that “providing for he poor is a provincial, not a federal responsibility.”

In 1999, Harper said that Quebec’s language law was created by the Parti Quebecois “to suppress the basic freedoms of English-speaking Quebecors and to to ghettoize the French-speaking majority into an ethnic state.”

It is remarkably unusual that a party would dig up dirt on its own leader as it is usually the other parties that dig it up for them.

In Tom Flanagan’s book Harper’s Team, he wrote, “When I became chief of staff in 2003, one of the first things I did was organize a ‘Harper research’ program to collect everything he had ever written or said in public.” He refused to comment on how the binder got obtained by the Liberals.

A Tory source who was familiar with Flanagan’s project told CBC that the binder was genuine and that it included all of the up-to-date installments of their research which started in 2003.

Harper may have problems defending his healthcare stances now that they are all in the opposition’s hands.

A cover note on the 2004 installment said, “that [the quotes] have the potential to be the most problematic are the quotations dealing with health care.”

Below are two quotes that haven’t been dug up by the opposition concerning Harper’s stance on healthcare – both of which from 2002.

“The private provision of publicly insured services should be permitted. The monopoly of provision of services s not a value that, in and of itself, is worth preserving.”

The Canada Health Act “rules out private, public-delivery options, It rules out co-payment and all kinds of options that are frankly going to have to be looked at if we’re going to deal with the challenges that the system faces.”

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   Categories: Conservative, Election, Harper, Healthcare, Liberal

On Monday, the longest campaign in modern history will come to a close and if current polls are any indication, Canada may be seeing a change in government after 9 years of Conservative rule under the leadership of Stephen Harper. Accountability was his calling card in 2006 and today, accountability may very well be one of the defining reasons for his departure.

In its length, in its cost and in its debate schedule, this election is unusual. The first and possibly only real debate of the campaign ended and here are the highlights of what happened.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper left Rideau Hall this morning with Governor General David Johnston’s approval to drop the writ and Canadians are now officially headed to the polls on October 19. For the first time since fixed election date legislation was brought in by the Conservative government, a fixed election date has been followed.

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