According to senior Liberal strategist Ryan Sparrow …

by kadyomalley on Friday, August 8, 2008 9:06am - 0 Comments

Seriously, is there a scintilla of actual evidence – circumstantial or otherwise -  that now infamously former Liberal candidate Robert Morrissey bolted because of the Green Shift?

I mean, I’m not saying he didn’t – heck, anything is possible. But based on the coverage so far, it seems as though that particular claim originated with Conservative Party spokesbird (and erstwhile part-time House of Commons salary-drawer) Ryan Sparrow, who isn’t exactly what I’d call objective – and, I’m betting, is downright shocked by how easy it has been to push this story to the local PEI press despite a noticeable lack of independent corroboration.

True, Peter MacKay has now waded into the fray – and by doing so, has sent the retiring incumbent, Joe McGuire into fits of highly entertaining outrage – but I’m not sure if that means much, frankly. This is, after all, the regional minister who claimed to be completely unaware that his own province was playing host to the Liberals’ Atlantic Liberal caucus earlier this week. If that’s the case, it’s hard to see how he can be considered a credible source of internal Liberal party gossip.

The Liberals, however, aren’t exactly doing much to counter Sparrow’s surprisingly successful shot in the dark. Last night, the party put out a statement from no less a personage than party president Don Doug (I don’t know how I got that wrong) Ferguson, in which he announced the resignation of a second candidate – Garry Oledzki, who had been preparing to run for the party in Palliser, Saskatchewan, for “personal and professional” reasons.

To which those members of the parliamentary press gallery still checking their respective berries at ten to six on a sleepy Thursday night responded, thusly: “Oledzki? Palliser? Did I miss something? Clearly, the resignation of this Oledzni fellow, of whom most of us have never heard until this very second, is important enough for Don Ferguson to issue a press release. Therefore, it must be juicy.” At which point the frenzied Googling began, as journalists attempted to figure out exactly why the Liberals would be so concerned about getting out ahead of a story that didn’t appear to have existed until they pointed it out to everyone.

The predictable result: At least one headline about Liberal candidates dropping like flies, despite the fact that, once again, there is no reason to assume that the two events were connected in any way, or that either candidate was driven out by the horrible prospect of campaigning on the Green Shift.

In fact, as far as electoral prospects, the two ridings – Egmont and Palliser – couldn’t be less similar. Egmont, which McGuire won with 53% of the vote during the last election, is the closest thing the Liberals have to a stronghold in Atlantic Canada. Oledzki’s chances in Palliser, on the other hand, could most kindly have been described as “mathematically speaking, not quite non-existent” – over the last decade, the riding has swung back and forth between the Conservatives and the NDP; the Liberals ran a distant third in 2006.

Given all that – and despite the best efforts of both Ryan Sparrow and the Liberal Party to convince me that these departures are a bleak harbinger of the party’s electoral fortunes – I think I’d rather wait to hear from the now former candidates before officially declaring this to be an Outremontesque crisis for Dion. Hopefully in time, they’ll forgive me.

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  • http://www.macleans.ca Kady O’Malley

    Kody: Yes. Or possibly no. Whatever response will allow me to smile, nod, and back slowly away from this entirely inexplicable subthread on the unreported link between the anti-anti-global-warming conspiracy and the sex life of some guy who didn’t end up running for president.

  • kody

    Yes, and the “inexplicable” link to the aforementioned and your condescension and feigned ignorance,

    smile and nod away.

  • kody

    One more thing,

    thank you so much for proving my point:

    the honest characterization: one of three leading contenders for the Democratic nominee for president, who is(until his affair was exposed by the Enquirer) a contender for the VP spot for Barack Obama, and a champion of the left wing base of the Democratic party,

    the the way the partisan leftist media (yourself included) wants you to interpret it:

    ‘some guy who didn’t end up running for president’.

  • http://carnewsandviews.com jwl

    kody You are on the wrong thread for Edwards ranting. Luiza wrote a post about it yesterday, go there and complain about msm behaviour.

  • gary

    ARG!!! Stop being so purposely obtuse oh ye of the Kool-aid krowd!

    The point of the post: How reliable can the “story” be when the biggest quotes come from Sparrow- a Tory spinner-supreme, who is currently trying to find a way to link cancer rates and the Green-shift plan?

    Uncertain about the election date that could happen any time within the next YEAR AND A HALF? Gee, no, I would say that’s sooo strange- why wouldn’t someone want to potentially be not working for 18 months? Or do all of your employment opportunities come with an 18-month grace period to see if you want to take it?

    The guy in Saskatchewan? Wouldn’t have even made the papers if not for the PEI guy.

    But I guess you guys on Albert St. need to do something to justify the war room, so keep entering those talking points!

  • Jarrid

    Gee Gary, chill out, it’s summertime.

  • Deb Prothero

    Geez, Kady; you sure attract some odd followers with questionable literacy skills. Your point was well-made in your first post. Me-thinks the news cycle has shortened too much for anything intelligent to come out of it until both sides are given an opportunity to speak. Any comment before that is speculation – hardly news.

    As for Morrissey, what if he has a family to feed? He’s a nominee not a returning candidate. Jobs for high-level former provincial cabinet ministers are probably tied in with being unbiased and non-partisan.

    How’s he to feed his family if he’s not able to find a temporary job for a few months? What if he’s an honourable person who doesn’t want to take a position that he’ll have to quit on a moment’s notice?

    As for his letter to the editor, it was clearly a stab at the Conservative government to increase old age pensions and guaranteed income payments to seniors who are suffering right now. My impression was that he was speaking on behalf of his constituents and trying to get the subject of the inequality between rich and poor in our country. And the timing of it is just after the wasteful, ridiculous cut in GST started to take effect. I imagine he was frustrated, on behalf of his constituents.

    Why aren’t reasons required for the legion number of Conservatives jumping ship? We could indulge in some speculation on those resignations or we could wait for both sides to speak.

    One more thing, Dion does not have the numbers alone to pull the plug on the parliament. He’s got to either get the NDP or the Bloq onside. So he is not the only one who has to want to go to the polls.

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  • Sisyphus

    Alexa McDonough is not running next election.
    She’s getting up there but she still looks pretty good in a Green Shift.

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