<b>Wheat Board director joins Liberal team</b>
Friday, September 21, 2007
REGINA -- Saying he is frustrated by the Conservative government "attack" on the Canadian Wheat Board, a board director plans to represent the Liberals in the next federal election.
Rod Flaman, an Edenwold area farmer, was to be acclaimed Thursday night as the federal Liberal candidate for Regina-Qu'Appelle.
Flaman, a farmer-elected director with the Canadian Wheat Board, said the Conservative government's attempt to dismantle the board's monopoly on barley sales is one of the main reasons he is entering the federal political fray.
"It's a much broader issue than just the wheat board. (But) I think that the wheat board is a good point for me to launch my campaign from," said Flaman.
Flaman was himself once a vocal opponent of the Canadian Wheat Board's monopoly on wheat and barley exports. He was among a number of farmers who protested the single-desk system of selling in the 1990s, when the federal Liberals were in office.
But after being elected as a Canadian Wheat Board director in 2000, he came to call the wheat board a success story.
Flaman criticized the Conservative government's attempt to end the barley monopoly by an order-in-council this summer, rather than going to Parliament. The government's attempt to remove barley from the board's monopoly by way of regulation was quashed this summer by a federal court ruling. Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz, citing support from farmers that are calling for an end to the monopoly, has since announced the government will appeal.
Flaman said he will continue to serve as a wheat board director until a federal election is called, at which point he would take a leave of absence.
Friday, September 21, 2007
REGINA -- Saying he is frustrated by the Conservative government "attack" on the Canadian Wheat Board, a board director plans to represent the Liberals in the next federal election.
Rod Flaman, an Edenwold area farmer, was to be acclaimed Thursday night as the federal Liberal candidate for Regina-Qu'Appelle.
Flaman, a farmer-elected director with the Canadian Wheat Board, said the Conservative government's attempt to dismantle the board's monopoly on barley sales is one of the main reasons he is entering the federal political fray.
"It's a much broader issue than just the wheat board. (But) I think that the wheat board is a good point for me to launch my campaign from," said Flaman.
Flaman was himself once a vocal opponent of the Canadian Wheat Board's monopoly on wheat and barley exports. He was among a number of farmers who protested the single-desk system of selling in the 1990s, when the federal Liberals were in office.
But after being elected as a Canadian Wheat Board director in 2000, he came to call the wheat board a success story.
Flaman criticized the Conservative government's attempt to end the barley monopoly by an order-in-council this summer, rather than going to Parliament. The government's attempt to remove barley from the board's monopoly by way of regulation was quashed this summer by a federal court ruling. Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz, citing support from farmers that are calling for an end to the monopoly, has since announced the government will appeal.
Flaman said he will continue to serve as a wheat board director until a federal election is called, at which point he would take a leave of absence.
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