mike watkins dot ca : Entries tagged with “PC Party”

Entries tagged with “PC Party”

September 16 2008

Anything But Conservative

Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams is promoting the notion that voters should vote Anything But Conservative... its as easy as ABC.

It looks as if the ABC movement now has an official website.

http://www.anythingbutconservative.ca/

Four parties are suggested as potential alternatives to the Conservative Party:

The first three are well known. I'd like to introduce readers to the Progressive Canadian Party, the PC Party on ballots where candidates are running.

The party was founded by those who have always objected to the merger between the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada and the Canadian Alliance. I myself was a former Progressive Conservative and while I was most unhappy with the merger, I elected to come along with the new Conservative Party hoping that the influence of Progressive Conservatives would ensure the new party looked like the old.

Nothing could be further from the truth. The Conservative Party with Harper at the helm does not resemble the former federal Progressive Conservative Party, and I honestly believe that if unchecked Stephen Harper will shape Canada into a form the majority of Canadians will not want to see.

This is why Premier Williams, a Progressive Conservative premier, is promoting the Anything But Conservative movement.

I myself am supportive of any action which will deny Stephen Harper a majority. More to the point I believe it in Canada's best interest to see Harper defeated in this election. If the Conservative Party is ever to look more like the Progressive Conservative Party, while still honouring the valuable pro-democracy roots of the Reform Party which Harper has all but jettisoned, it must rid itself of Harper and his core team. This can only happen if Harper faces electoral defeat.

The right choice for progressive conservative voters, for pro-democracy reformers, is to vote Anything But Conservative. Lets do what Harper won't allow: take back the party and merge the best the Progressive Conservative and Reform parties had to offer.

Related media:

Strange bedfellows: Williams's ABC campaign heads to trenches (Sept. 16 2008, CBC)

A Newfoundland and Labrador cabinet minister campaigned door-to-door with a St. John's-area Liberal candidate Monday night, as Premier Danny Williams denied his 'anything but Conservative' campaign is intimidating provincial Tories.

Though a Progressive Conservative, Williams is encouraging Newfoundland and Labrador voters to boycott federal Conservative candidates in the Oct. 14 general election.

October 31 2007

Letters: Standing up for Federal PC voices

Given the relative obscurity under which the senate operates, it may be a surprise to learn that a small group of senators continue to sit as Progressive Conservatives, a party which no longer exists officially, rather than with Harper's crew. In the House of Commons, presumably the former PC MP, former CPC MP, now independent MP, Bill Casey, still identifies himself as a Progressive Conservative in spirit if not in name.

In an editorial last week (Federal PCs, call it a day, attached) The Globe and Mail editorialists called upon Progressive Conservative Party holdouts to give up their independence from the Conservative Party of Canada, suggesting that the CPC had a welcoming "big tent" for them to enter. My letter to the editor on the subject was published two days later, and in part I said:

It should be clear to you by now - your own paper has reported extensively on the secretive and highly controlling nature of Mr. Harper's leadership - that Mr. Harper's tent is big enough only for himself.

Canadians, including former Progressive Conservative members who support, for example, real action on the environment, or a federal government willing to take on the provinces in support of programs of national vision and scope, or an open government truly accountable to Parliament, won't find support for these notions under Mr. Harper's petite, presidential parasol.

Senators Norman Atkins (a Mulroney appointment), Elaine McCoy (Paul Martin), and Lowell Murray (Joe Clark) are the three Progressive Conservative hold-outs that have thus far refused to sit with the Conservative caucus.

Atkins in 2004 gave a speech outlining his reasons for sitting as a Progressive Conservative; in subsequent debates and speeches, including this 2006 commentary following Harper's first throne speech (PDF), Atkins continues to illustrate, as have many senators, that its possible to hear independent voices in the senate regardless of party affiliation. Contrast that to the cookie-cutter stay-in-line approach of Harper's fiefdom where most MP's are forbidden to speak to the media except under a tight leash -- or noose!

As for the big tent? Under Harper's tiny parasol, individual thinking is not permitted. Toe the party line or you will be kicked off the island.

Picking just one example to illustrate the incompatibility, the issue of senate reform, its clear that Atkins doesn't favour an elected senate. Murray has said:

The Senate provides some check on the power of Cabinet and its Commons’ majority without challenging or offending today’s democratic culture. Contrary to the working assumption of many of our critics, journalistic and otherwise, repeated studies have shown that the Senate’s work is cost effective. Its abolition would only increase the already excessive control of our governmental institutions by the Cabinet and bureaucracy.

“Triple-E” advocates, who believe that elected senators from their regions would be impervious to the call of party loyalty and could be counted on to support the perceived regional perspective instead, are not thinking realistically.

Agreed, and absent any meaningful proposal, I can not get behind either Harper's franken-senate or Layton's call for abolition.

More to the point, the elected side of parliament - the House of Commons - is far more dysfunctional than the senate has ever been. Perhaps if Harper were to clean up his own act, reduce the power of the PMO and drop his own presidential ambitions and put more power in the hands of un-whipped, elected parliamentarians - then people could take seriously his call for senate reform.