Conservative Gains Should Quench Opposition
Thirst for An Election
March 19th, 2008
Our Conservative Government welcomed another Member
of Parliament this week. Rob Clarke, chosen in a democratic
nomination process by members of his local riding association,
secured a resounding victory in Desnethé--Missinippi--Churchill
River, a Saskatchewan riding previously held by the Liberals.
He beat out the Liberal candidate hand-picked by Stéphane
Dion by a very comfortable 1709 votes.
“Conventional wisdom” has always been that
sitting governments do not fare well in by-elections.
Often, voters are compelled to head to the polls in by-elections
as a form of protest against the government. Yet, in this
week’s by-elections the only protest seems to have
been directed at the Liberals, or perhaps more accurately,
Mr. Dion.
Since Mr. Dion took over the helm of the Liberal Party
there have been seven by-elections. Not only did Mr. Clark
take a Liberal seat for our government this week, the
Liberals came within 152 votes of losing Vancouver Quadra,
a long-time Liberal stronghold, to our Conservative candidate
there.
The Conservative Party picked up MP Denis Lebel’s
seat in Roberval--Lac-Saint-Jean in September. And we
very nearly won Hyacinthe-Bagot in that round of by-elections.
While the Conservative vote shot up substantially in four
of the seven seats at stake, the Liberals are down by
two seats - having lost one to the Conservative Party
and one to the NDP.
In summary, Mr. Dion’s hand-picked candidates aren’t
doing very well at all. Good thing high-profile Toronto-area
candidates and his former leadership rivals, Bob Rae and
Martha Hall Finley, won what one national newspaper columnist
called “two of the safest Liberal seats in creation”.
These results should also compel the opposition to question
their failed efforts to paint our Conservative Government
with the kind of scandal that plagued the Liberal Government
through more than 13 years of power.
Without a doubt, this is the most divisive, partisan Parliament
I’ve served in through my 15 years as your MP. The
opposition parties have used their tyranny of majority
to hijack House of Commons Standing Committees, where
typically the most productive work of Parliament takes
place. Last week the House Speaker had to admonish all
parties for bad behaviour and he called upon the House
Leaders and Whips to find a way to instill civility and
productivity in Parliament. As Chief Government Whip,
that is a goal I will continue to work towards.
The irony is that despite the ugliness and partisan sniping
both in and outside the chamber, our government has been
very successful in getting our agenda through.
This includes all three of our budgets and our economic
statement; our legislation to crack down on criminals;
and, our success in regaining Canada’s proud reputation
on the world stage as a nation that will come to the aid
of those in need, like the Afghan people.
Every time our Conservative Government draws the line
in the sand with the opposition parties, particularly
the abstaining Liberals, we succeed. And Canada and Canadians
succeed.
Hopefully these latest by-election results will quench
the opposition’s thirst for an early election and
save election-weary Canadians from another trip to the
polls.
|