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2011年4月14日星期四

French debate stirs up question of constitution Qué.

The leaders' French-language debate sparked heated exchanges on Quebec's identity, stirred up more coalition talk and jousting over Canada's military and spending priorities as the party chiefs sparred for a second night.


"Sovereignty is not something bland and meaningless," Bloc Québécois Leader Gilles Duceppe said to his political opponents during the two-hour debate in Ottawa. "If it's good for Canada, why is it not good for Quebec?"


Conservative Leader Stephen Harper pointed to his party's move to recognize Quebec as a nation within a united Canada, but Duceppe said he sees other nations around the world getting their own countries and pointed to the fact Quebec has never signed on to the Canadian constitution of 1982.


"Each nation has the politics of its interests," Duceppe said.


But both Harper and Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff insisted the constitution was not a major issue for Quebecers.


Ignatieff argued Quebecers have different priorities now, and also have everything they need through different powers than other provinces, as well as a flourishing French language.


"I've travelled thousands of kilometres in Quebec. No one's ever brought up the constitution. They're worried about other issues," he said, pointing to daycare and climate change.


With Layton, Ignatieff and Duceppe raising their voices to speak over each other, Harper pointed to them and asked the audience to consider the three leaders trying to work together in another minority Parliament. He said while they're fighting the "same old constitutional fights," he alone is concerned about the economy — which he said was a "21st century priority."


Not surprisingly, the issue of the coalition also came up, with Ignatieff pledging not to form such an arrangement but promising to work with other parties in a minority situation.


"If Mr. Harper gets more seats than us, he'll try to form government. If I get more seats, it's me who will try to form government," Ignatieff said in an exchange with Bloc Québécois Leader Gilles Duceppe.


"Those are the rules in our constitution," he told Duceppe. "I can work with you, with Mr. Layton, but not in a coalition."


Harper had made the coalition question an issue during the first few days of a campaign, arguing Ignatieff would team up with Duceppe and NDP Leader Jack Layton if the Conservatives didn't win a majority of seats in the House of Commons.


The Liberal leader took a more aggressive stance in the second debate, at times speaking forcefully over Harper. But while both leaders are usually comfortable in their second language, neither seemed completely at ease Wednesday night.


Just minutes into the debate, Harper accused Duceppe of rewriting history to suit his needs now. Duceppe has spoken openly of 2004 talks between Harper, Duceppe and Layton to form government if the then-Liberal government lost the confidence of the House of Commons and fell — the same tactic Harper accuses the opposition of planning.


In 2004, the three leaders wrote a letter to then-Gov. Gen. Adrienne Clarkson to remind her she could ask the leader with the second-most seats — Harper — to form government.


Harper said the leaders were clear at the time that what they were proposing was not a coalition.


But Duceppe said he never said it was a coalition.


"I'll look you in the eye," Duceppe said. "What we signed didn't talk about a coalition, but did clearly state if Mr. Martin lost confidence there were other options to an election. Do you think it would have been Mr. Layton with 20 seats or me as prime minister?"


"I never said we were talking about a coalition."


During an early exchange between Layton and Duceppe, the New Democrat leader said Duceppe had "some good ideas sometimes, but you're like a hockey team made up of defencemen."


The NDP, Layton continued, is in a position to "score goals."


Harper, in turn, tried to appeal to voters in Quebec who choose the Bloc because they don't like the Liberals. He said the Bloc wants to choose who will get to govern in a minority Parliament.


"Mr. Duceppe has clearly chosen the Liberal Party and that's his choice. A vote for the Bloc is a vote for Mr. Ignatieff as prime minister," Harper said.


Asked a question from Muguette Paillé, 53-year-old unemployed woman, about creating jobs in Quebec, Layton slammed Harper for providing tax cuts for corporations and neglecting average Canadians, saying he closed his eyes to workers' situations during his tenure as prime minister.


Layton said that Harper's government, with the support of Ignatieff, has spent billions of dollars on corporate tax cuts for people "who don't need money," instead of creating jobs.


Harper countered by defending his government's record, saying the other parties are calling for tax hikes which "will destroy jobs and harm families." He also said the Conservatives' budget contained funds for senior workers but was rejected by opposition parties.


Ignatieff said he believes the government has "forgotten people" in the economic recovery and that Paillé "knows this."


The Liberal leader said Harper intends to spend billions on fighter jets, corporate tax cuts and building super-prisons, instead of regional economic development.


Duceppe also accused Harper of taking $17.5 billion out of the Employment Insurance fund in his proposed budget.


"In other words, at the expense of companies and workers," Duceppe said.


"That EI Fund will be used for other purposes rather than what it was intended for which is to help those who lost their jobs," the Bloc leader said.


But Harper denied the charge.


"The EI fund is now in deficit. The legislation we passed ensures that the government cannot can never again take money from the EI fund," Harper said.


Layton and Duceppe faced off over a question about social issues, but the NDP leader said the two parties actually agree on several measures.


Layton instead said it's the NDP that can oust the Harper government and help implement social change.


"We have no action. We have to change things because families continue to suffer," Layton said. "We have to replace this government. It's not enough to oppose Mr. Harper. We have to replace him and that's what the NDP can do."


But Duceppe shot back that only the Bloc can keep the Conservatives in check.


"Mr. Layton, you know as well as I do, that I'm not going to become prime minister, and neither will you," he said. "If you want to defeat the Conservatives in Quebec, there is only one party to prevent the conservative majority and we've proved that. We're not telling people stories."


A viewer's question about the need to spend billions on the Canadian military for a relatively small population of 30 million people prompted debate over the controversial purchase of F-35 jets.


Harper said Canadian planes were flying missions in Libya to protect citizens from Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi.


Duceppe pushed Harper on the various reports that put the price of the jets higher than was stated by the Conservatives, asking him to reveal the true cost of the jet contract.


"I'm the only leader on this platform, on this set, who is defending the role of our Canadian and Quebec aerospace sector in the purchasing of airplanes," Harper said in his defence.


But Ignatieff shot back that even the U.S., which is building the planes, can't estimate the costs.


"Even President Obama doesn’t know how much it will cost the United States. That's the first problem," Ignatieff said. "And you have no real idea what the plane will cost you becaue they're still developing this plane. So we don’t know how much it will cost. And as a potential prime minister I can't accept a plane, the cost of which is increasing."


Tuesday night's English debate saw all four leaders trade rhetorical barbs on a variety of issues, including corporate taxes, health care and the auditor general's leaked draft report into spending at the G8/G20 summit.


This debate shifted some of the spotlight onto Duceppe, who holds 47 seats of Quebec's 75. The other party leaders were seeking to siphon off some of the Bloc's support and to cut into its grip on the majority of Quebec's seats.


The Liberals currently hold 14 seats, followed by the Tories with 11, the NDP with one seat, with one Independent and one vacant.


The French-language leaders' debate, which was co-moderated by Radio-Canada's Anne-Marie Dussault and TVA's Paul Larocque, was supposed to have been held on Thursday, but it was rescheduled to avoid splitting the audience with the Montreal Canadiens in the team's first game in the NHL playoffs.


Following the debate, Ignatieff told reporters that he wasn't trying to minimize the constitution as an issue but that it's not a primary concern for Quebekers.


"In my opinion, Canada works well. But you have to prove that every day," Ignatieff said.


Harper also emphasized this if he were to win a majority government, the focus would be on the economy, not constitutional debates.


"I don't believe Canadians' priority is the constitution...we're trying to improve the country without changing the constitution," he told reporters


But Duceppe said there are consequences to Quebec having never signed the constitution, listing losses in business and industry where he feels the province was owed more.


"I think it is a question which is there and it is not solved and there's two options. And those options are represented by people like me in the House of Commons," he said.

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2011年4月13日星期三

Canadian PM fends attacks in debate - San Jose Mercury News

Print email police resizeBy does ROB GILLIES associated with PressPosted: 12/04/2011 06: 45: 51 PM PDTUpdated: 12/04/2011 07: 46: 38 PM PDT
Click on photo to enlarge Prime Minister Stephen Harper, left, shakes hands with the leader of the Bloc Québécois Gilles Duceppe, right, as Jack Layton, leader of the new Democratic Party, left, and and Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff, look at suite he English-language federal election debate in OttawaCanada Tuesday, April 12, 2011. TORONTO - the leaders of four political parties of the Canada clashed in the first debate Tuesday before a federal election next month, with Prime Minister Stephen Harper repel attacks and asking Canadians to a majority government.

Analysts say Michael Ignatieff, Liberal leader of the main opposition needed a strong showing for a chance in the election on May 2. Ignatieff did not shake Harper and he stumbled on its lines prepared.

Polls say that Harper looks set for a third term. This time he asked voters to give him a majority in the House of Commons of 308-Member; He avoided that earlier, wary of being accused of scope of right.

Harper said Canada should focus on the economy and did not need "quarrel" seen in the debate. It is the fourth election in four years, which reflects the failure of the two main parties to obtain a parliamentary majority and leaving successive Governments depend on the voice of the opposition to stay in power.

"We are asking - in an election, we wanted, in a Canadian election did not want that - we are asking Canadians to make a decision: do you want to have this kind of bickering, you want to have another election in two years." Or you want to focus on the economy? Harper said research directly into the camera.

Ignatieff replied: "this is not bickering, Mr. Harper." It is democracy. ?

Accused Ignatieff that Harper did not win the right to a majority because it does not meet.

democratic institutions. He called Harper "a man who will close something, he cannot control."

Harper stirred controversy by suspending the Parliament temporarily and was condemned for failing to inform the Agency fully on essential financial decisions. These issues and its determination to reduce the corporate tax led to queries which brought down his Government and forced the current election.

As Prime Minister, Harper won two elections in a row. Despite the Commander never a majority in Parliament, he was able to move instinctively liberal countries ever more right.

Harper, 51, has progressively lowered taxes of sales and business, an increase in spending on the military and given priority to sovereignty in the Arctic.

Ignatieff, 63, is one of the intellectuals of the Canada: a writer, historian and a TV in the regular Panel in Britain before entering politics. Repeated announcements conservative attack painted Ignatieff of outsider who spent 30 years outside the Canada.

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' Sad show:' can the leader's debate

The Green party leader Elizabeth May, excluded from debate of the leaders of Tuesday, the broadcast Consortium dazzled the event as a "sad show of the chiefs in partial debate."

In a conference press after the event, may called the event put in scene and in bad faith.

"I thought it was a spectacular set non-binding, flat, predictable trade," she said.

"I think it's a fairly safe bet that by the next federal election campaign, the media consortium has be packed in and nobody will trust never run a debate yet because it is a parody."

May blown the choice of topics and issues of the Viewer.

"I believe deeply that we need in Canadian policy is to move away from the scripted from the supporter, heads of political parties and the media to determine what Canadians want to hear," she said.

"[We need to] reopen and remobilise the democracy so that Canadians can ask questions directly... the event may become more spontaneous and less than a script and... the issues that are orphaned by political elites can return to the forefront.".

May, said the list of issues left to take the heat out the debate is long, including questions of First Nations, the position of the Canada in Libya, food policy, homelessness, energy, arts funding policy and the environment.

"This will be, I think, by the history books the memory of a dark day for Canadian democracy," said.

"We can have a debate with the leaders of the Federal Party of four out of five of the political background, serious - that the debate can concentrate on a handful screened problems, without spontaneity - and I think that, for most of the voters."that this debate does not encourage to get involved in Canadian democracy. ?

In a live chat online with CBC News in the debate, may has been very critical of the conservative party, criticizing their tough on crime approach and urges the Government to take steps to fight white collar crime and organized crime.

May has also advocated working toward a restorative justice system to defend the victims and "redirect the resources of a strategy of cannabis prohibition Act failed to where we need resources to cope with the threats of violent crime."

Also weighed on immigration during the chat, may say "backlogs in the immigration system grew up under the Harper Government because they do not rename people for Immigration Appeal committees".

She added that the Government Harper has "tampered with the immigration system" by moving fairly, of "cherry-picking some potential immigrants with some skills."

It has also blown Harper for saying there is that no corporate tax cuts in the conservative budget.

"This Government has regularly cut and plans to do so still 16.5% this year to 15 percent next year."

May also advocated a new approach for the firearms registry, "Canadian SW of rural and First Nations do not feel criminalized by owning a gun fire long." Greens believe that we must listen to those who find the onerous system to make this work better for them. ?

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2011年4月10日星期日

French leaders debate bumped by NHL playoffs

Politics and hockey went head to head Sunday and, ultimately, pastime of winter the nation held the biggest stick.

The parties and the consortium of broadcasting producing this week televised leaders debates decided to move the French debate - originally scheduled for Thursday - until one day after a conflict has arisen with the NHL playoffs.

The French debate is set for Wednesday at 8 p.m. (et), with the English-language debate set for Tuesday at 7 p.m. (et).

Wednesday was supposed to be a day off.

As any change with the defeat of Canadians of Montreal from the Toronto Maple Leafs Saturday night and the finalization of the annex to the NHL Conference is Play-off.

First match: Montreal Canadians vs. the Boston Bruins Thursday at 7 p.m. et.

A rivalry of old of several decades - at the same time, Federal leaders were programmed to take their French-language debate.

Head of the Bloc Québécois Gilles Duceppe said Sunday morning was there was no point in politicians trying to compete with that.

"I want Quebec to have the same opportunity to listen to the debate which Canadians will have," said Duceppe.

"We all know hockey is very popular in Quebec, and the Canada also and I think it would be a better choice to have this debate Wednesday, so that the people who love hockey and (will be) have the opportunity to see the debate and then listen hockey match Thursday evening"Duceppe told."."

"I think that the ratings are important," Duceppe has continued, but democracy is more important than ratings. ?

The debates are produced and transported by a consortium of broadcasters comprised of the CBC, CTV, Global and TVA in Quebec.

Block sent a letter to the consortium Sunday formally requesting the French debate to move one day to Wednesday, saying that the conflict of programming is "heartbreaking" many québécois.

Duceppe has called the other party leaders to present a United front to pressure the broadcast consortium to make the change - and the other parties were not about to disagree.

Leader of the NDP, Jack Layton said that he suspected "a very large number of people" would choose to watch the match between Montreal and Boston.

"If I was not in this election, I could well make the same decision," he joked.

Dimitri please, spokesman for the Conservative leader Stephen Harper, echoed comment Layton in a post on Twitter Sunday: "these decisions can be found with the television networks." We will be there the day they choose. ?

Martin Cauchon, Liberal candidate in the riding of Montreal in Outremont, told reporters that the Liberals strongly support the debate moved.

"This is important - and we must ensure as many people as possible watch"debates, Cauchon."said."

The two-hour debates will be divided into six segments. Each segment begins with a question asked by a Canadian voter, leading to an individual debate of six minutes between the two leaders, before concluding with an open debate on the same subject.

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