Game Day

peace-tower-parliament-ottawa-canada.jpgToday, Paul Martin is to give his second speech from the throne in eight months as Parliament resumes this week. The House of Commons will appear and function differently for the leader of the diminished minority government as opposition MPs now surround Liberal Party benches and new rules of order will serve to keep them seated until the appropriate time.

It’s been a quiet summer on the front page (save Martin’s unprepared fiasco of a premiers healthcare ‘summit’), yet the opposition leaders have been working hard independently and in concert to hold the Liberal government accountable and answerable to the Canadian electorate.

Every leader has a plan of how he’d like to see the business of the House unfold, however, stashed closely, each leader also has an alternate playbook of contingencies for many, if not most eventualities.

Stephen Harper will use this Parliamentary session as a ‘getting to know you’ time for Canadians and they will get to know the Conservative Party and its leader as he holds the Liberal government to its election promises. Harper has proven to be solid and effective as the Leader of the Opposition and this will be his time to emerge prime-ministerial if he plays his cards right.

Gilles Duceppe will find himself in an odd situation today if the Conservatives naturally oppose the throne speech (as is somewhat of a tradition in modern Parliamentary sessions). As Chantel Hébert points out, the Liberals and the NDP do not form a majority, and if the government is to start off without losing its footing, the Bloc may be in an odd position of supporting the throne speech. Paul Martin may make the speech easier to swallow for himself and his main Quebec rival if he makes concessions (read: side deals) for that province.

Stuck in the middle of all of this and responsible for inter-party communications to ensure that the House of Cards doesn’t fall before Paul Martin wishes is Liberal House leader Tony Valeri. Valeri, who contested Sheila Copps and retired the controversial longtime Liberal MP from politics, doesn’t even speak the same language as the man who holds the balance of power and perhaps the linchpin of the shaky Martin minority government.

Will Paul Martin see a leadership challenge during this uncertain government? Who, with the Bloc, will attempt to represent Quebec’s interests? Whom will the Liberals turn to key pieces of legislation? Whom will they turn against? Will any MPs be enticed to switch parties? How will the Sponsorship Scandal finally unfold?

Only two things are certain going into this 38th session of Parliament: there must have been some interesting caucus meetings last week… and there is not one member that envies Paul Martin.

“Silly” Healthcare Summit 2004

paul-martin-healthcare-meeting.jpgIn what has largely been described as a summit of posturing and promising what has already been promised, Paul Martin’s summit to hash out a “fix for a generation” is going as smoothly as expected for a meeting between the premiers and the man who ripped funds out of healthcare and now promises its “fix”.

“We should put out a chart tomorrow that (shows) $1 trillion that the provinces will spend on health care in the next 10 years … Then they can put out a chart tomorrow (showing) how much they’re going to spend in the next 15 years. We can then put out for 20 . . . You can get into these silly numbers all day long” — Gary Doer, Premier of Manitoba

“Maybe next time they’ll be talking about a 40-year plan. And then you just keep increasing the size of the numbers accordingly.” — Dalton McGuinty — Premier of Ontario

“A generational fix should not be a one-time fix of funding today and gone tomorrow; a generational fix should not be high expectation now with a declining federal share after two years.” — Bernard Lord, Premier of New Brunswick

“Remember etch-a-sketch? You sort of put it on, you shake it all up and it would disappear on you. You can’t build a health-care system on the basis of an etch-a-sketch plan.” — Gordon Campbell, Premier of British Columbia

“While the numbers have been debated to some extent, all agree that the federal government will have a significant surplus which will increase with time — while the provinces and the territories are dealing with chronic deficits.” — Dalton McGuinty, Premier of Ontario

On blaming Paul Martin himself for the need for a “fix for a generation”:

“Those Draconian cuts ….. were the start of it all … There was a unilateral [and] sharp decrease in federal transfers.” — Jean Charest, Premier of Quebec

Queen’s blogging talent

Leonard-Hall-Queens-University.jpgAh, frosh week has come and gone for the new undergraduates at Crazy Go Nuts University and like blogging superstar Joey Devilla, a fellow alum from the aforementioned university, I’ve been enjoying some of the new blogging talent from Queen’s U.

Hypothesis.ca is one such blog that’s brought me back into the madness that was froshweek. Their special on matress-flipping, I must say, was masterfully crafted and more informative, than say… Dan Rather during that same week. Keep up the good work John!