The Conservative Government in Ottawa introduces the new budget today after Canada's Government was prorogued in December.
In a series of budget leaks (budget leaks are supposed to cause the resignation of the finance minister) the Government has revealed a budget deficit approaching $40 billion dollars, in contrast to previous governments surplus budgets designed to pay down debt.
The banks will get billions, municipalities will get billions, the automotive sector will or has already got billions. Everyone is getting billions, why in Alberta even the oil companies are getting billions in new subsidies although that is provincial money.
Will there be anything for the cattle industry which is agricultures largest sector? Should there be anything for the cattle industry?
See an interesting article on the budget at:
http://news.guelphmercury.com/Opinions/article/431068
"Canadians everywhere are asking politicians: raise your game, be equal to the hour. The inauguration of President Obama shows us how one man putting himself at the head of millions can restore trust and restore faith in the political process.
"We in Canada must do the same. We need not drift with the tide. We can act. We can choose. We can work to avoid the worst and search for the best."
Was Harper raising his game when he persuaded the Governor General to prorogue Parliament so that he could avoid a confidence vote he was destined to lose?
Did he search for the best when he used the prorogation to stuff the Senate and federal boards and commissions with partisan appointees?
Has he led us to a new faith in the political process by using calculated budget leaks to manipulate public opinion?
No one expects Stephen Harper to be a Barack Obama - or a Pierre Trudeau, who dazzled Washington when he addressed to Congress in February 1977.
But is it asking too much to ask our Prime Minister to raise his game above shabby partisanship, to ask him to try at least to be equal to the hour?
In a series of budget leaks (budget leaks are supposed to cause the resignation of the finance minister) the Government has revealed a budget deficit approaching $40 billion dollars, in contrast to previous governments surplus budgets designed to pay down debt.
The banks will get billions, municipalities will get billions, the automotive sector will or has already got billions. Everyone is getting billions, why in Alberta even the oil companies are getting billions in new subsidies although that is provincial money.
Will there be anything for the cattle industry which is agricultures largest sector? Should there be anything for the cattle industry?
See an interesting article on the budget at:
http://news.guelphmercury.com/Opinions/article/431068
"Canadians everywhere are asking politicians: raise your game, be equal to the hour. The inauguration of President Obama shows us how one man putting himself at the head of millions can restore trust and restore faith in the political process.
"We in Canada must do the same. We need not drift with the tide. We can act. We can choose. We can work to avoid the worst and search for the best."
Was Harper raising his game when he persuaded the Governor General to prorogue Parliament so that he could avoid a confidence vote he was destined to lose?
Did he search for the best when he used the prorogation to stuff the Senate and federal boards and commissions with partisan appointees?
Has he led us to a new faith in the political process by using calculated budget leaks to manipulate public opinion?
No one expects Stephen Harper to be a Barack Obama - or a Pierre Trudeau, who dazzled Washington when he addressed to Congress in February 1977.
But is it asking too much to ask our Prime Minister to raise his game above shabby partisanship, to ask him to try at least to be equal to the hour?
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