This was in the Jaksoville Florida Times Union, as well as NewsDay NY
Tories refuse to commit to farmer vote on future of wheat board
OTTAWA ((AP) - Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the Canadian Wheat Board must "respect the opinions of all western farmers, not just those who agree with it" - even as his government hedges on holding a farm plebiscite to determine the grain monopoly's future.
The Conservatives are pressing ahead with an election promise to make participation in the wheat board voluntary, a change that many believe would fundamentally undermine the world's biggest wheat marketer.
The proposal has the combined majority opposition in the House of Commons up in arms.
Agriculture critics from the Liberals, NDP and Bloc Quebecois held a joint news conference Tuesday to denounce recent government moves as "unprecedented, unethical and undemocratic."
The opposition MPs want the Commons agriculture committee to hold emergency hearings next week to hear from wheat board advocates who they say are being muzzled.
Agriculture Minister Chuck Strahl issued a statement Tuesday, defending the decision to remove 36 per cent of the 44,578 producers on the preliminary board voters list because they made no deliveries in the past two years.
"It is my belief that this decision will result in a more equitable election process that empowers western grain farmers," said Strahl.
Speaking with reporters, Strahl refused to commit to a plebiscite before any board move to a voluntary basis. Western wheat farmers have been compelled by law since 1943 to sell only through the board.
Tories refuse to commit to farmer vote on future of wheat board
OTTAWA ((AP) - Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the Canadian Wheat Board must "respect the opinions of all western farmers, not just those who agree with it" - even as his government hedges on holding a farm plebiscite to determine the grain monopoly's future.
The Conservatives are pressing ahead with an election promise to make participation in the wheat board voluntary, a change that many believe would fundamentally undermine the world's biggest wheat marketer.
The proposal has the combined majority opposition in the House of Commons up in arms.
Agriculture critics from the Liberals, NDP and Bloc Quebecois held a joint news conference Tuesday to denounce recent government moves as "unprecedented, unethical and undemocratic."
The opposition MPs want the Commons agriculture committee to hold emergency hearings next week to hear from wheat board advocates who they say are being muzzled.
Agriculture Minister Chuck Strahl issued a statement Tuesday, defending the decision to remove 36 per cent of the 44,578 producers on the preliminary board voters list because they made no deliveries in the past two years.
"It is my belief that this decision will result in a more equitable election process that empowers western grain farmers," said Strahl.
Speaking with reporters, Strahl refused to commit to a plebiscite before any board move to a voluntary basis. Western wheat farmers have been compelled by law since 1943 to sell only through the board.
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