Friday, March 28, 2008

Liberal leader urges 'discipline'.

The Liberals are a disaster not waiting to happen but happening all the time. Dion fumes in fury at Conservative legislation and then lets it pass. Ignatieff and Rae are front row prima donnas waiting for their chance at center stage. Liberal rhetoric is so transparently driven by the state of the polls rather than anything else such as principles that it is embarassing to see politicians who are otherwise quite intelligent trying to convince the people of what is obviously false. For the life of me I can't see why more people do not vote for third parties both right and left.
Dion should bite the bullet and defeat the Conservatives before Liberal stock enters the Great Depression.



Liberal leader urges 'discipline'
TheStar.com - Canada - Liberal leader urges 'discipline'


TOM HANSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS
Liberal Leader Stephane Dion talks with reporters after the caucus meeting on March 12, 2008. "We will decide when an election shall come," he says. Dion implores detractors to curb dissent as discontent in Quebec wing threatens an election effort

March 28, 2008
Sean Gordon
Quebec Bureau Chief

MONTREAL–Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion is taking on the grumblers in his party's fractious Quebec wing, warning that open dissent risks torpedoing the Liberals' electoral chances.

Dion was in Montreal to meet with the party's Quebec executive, where roiling internal opposition broke to the surface this month, and he implored his detractors to keep their criticism in the family.

"If we are not disciplined now . . . we risk not being disciplined in an election. And in an election, an iron discipline is required to win," he said.

At a news conference, Dion ordered a conspicuous show of unity, standing with more than a dozen executive members.

"As the leader I am entitled to greater discipline," Dion said. "We have a lot of work to do, and we know that. We also know anything is possible when we work hard . . . and when we have discipline, which has been lacking lately, but it will come back, let me tell you. Isn't that right?"

"Yes," the executive members answered in chorus.

Asked by reporters whether recent disgruntlement was evidence of a greater malaise over his leadership, Dion was categorical.

"No. It's a lack of discipline," he said, adding he doesn't plan to hit dissenters with any sanctions.

Dion said his party is ready for an election, but he signalled the Liberals won't topple the minority Conservatives over proposed changes to the Immigration Act that would give the minister sweeping powers.

"It's unacceptable . . . It's something that we need to study closely, and we will use every means to ensure it will be looked at in committee," he said. "We will not strategize publicly. Mr. Harper has abandoned his power to call elections . . . I have that power and I exercise it. We will go into an election when we think it appropriate to go into an election."

Despite Dion's efforts to calm the waters, there are still evident problems in the Quebec wing. Membership numbers have dwindled, contributions are lagging, and dozens of the province's 75 ridings have yet to nominate candidates – although a Liberal official insisted more than 50 have been "identified."

Leadership rival Michael Ignatieff, the party's deputy leader, and Etobicoke-Lakeshore MP, held a fundraiser in Montreal this week to help offset debts incurred in the race, and was quoted in La Presse as telling a supporter: "Mr. Dion was a good minister, but he doesn't have the stature of a leader."

The remark set the cat among the pigeons among Liberals, and was immediately denied by Ignatieff, who released a terse statement insisting: "The statement directly attributed to me . . . is entirely false."

"No one has the right to call my loyalty into question," it continued.

But some Liberals interviewed think it was inappropriate for Ignatieff to be raising money in a province where the coffers are bare and where it will be harder for the party to tap donors if they have already committed part of their $1,000 annual limit to Ignatieff.

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