Beyond The Commons

Beyond The Commons

Aaron Wherry covers all the goings-on in and around Parliament Hill. Follow Aaron on Twitter: @aaronwherry

The Commons: Little ditty 'bout Jack and Stephen

by Aaron Wherry on Tuesday, April 28, 2009 7:16pm - 33 Comments

The Commons: Little ditty 'bout Jack and StephenThe Scene. By the third of Michael Ignatieff’s questions, the Prime Minister was losing patience. The Liberal leader had considered Mr. Harper’s second answer insufficient and said so out loud and, for sure, such an assertion could not be let alone.

“Mr. Speaker, the answer is the same in French and English,” Mr. Harper said en francais, proceeding to restate his case for the current distribution of employment insurance.

All shrugs and soft tones until then, the Prime Minister switched suddenly back to English, tipping to television producers around the capital that something vaguely noteworthy was about to be said.

“Let me be very clear,” he said, his concept of clarity often having something to do with the failings of the other side, “I am not sure what it is exactly now the leader of the opposition is proposing, but I can assure him that what we will not be doing is raising EI premiums and other taxes on Canadians.”

The government members snapped to their feet to applaud their leader’s non sequitur. But their leader was merely stretching his sneer, warming up as it were for the lesser battle to come.

After a couple questions about swine flu and four rounds of blame and accusation between the Bloc and government side, it was the NDP’s turn. Jack Layton then stood as Jack Layton does stand and spoke as he does speak.

He proceeded first, with slightly different numbers, to similarly bemoan the inefficiencies of aide for the unemployed. But to this previously covered dispute, he added a flourish. ”It is exactly 50 days ago today that the House adopted a motion by the NDP to improve employment insurance,” he noted. “Where is the action and where is the help?”

Mr. Harper seemed unaware of the motion to which Mr. Layton was referring and proceeded instead to explain, for the benefit perhaps of those recently de-jobbed, how employment insurance works.

“Mr. Speaker,” Layton asserted in response, “the Prime Minister has just pointed out that people when they lose their jobs are going to get penalized under the system that we have got here.”

He then hearkened back to better times. Or at least less awful times.

“Let us go back to the last recession,” he said. “Eight out 10 people who were out of work at that time were able to get help from EI. Now it is less than half. Something is wrong with the system and it should be fixed. Fifty days ago in the House a motion was adopted to establish what should be done. The Prime Minister used to say that he had a moral obligation or any prime minister did to respect the House. When is he going to respect the House, but more importantly, the people—”

Alas, his time ran out in mid-shout. And now the Prime Minister was visibly displeased.

“Once again, Mr. Speaker, the numbers from the leader of the NDP are completely inaccurate,” he began. “For instance, over the past year, as I have said already, the increase in unemployment and the percentage increase in the unemployed and in EI beneficiaries has gone up one for one; 80%. More than 80% of those who are paying in will collect employment insurance. More importantly, this government has improved the system, by lengthening the period of benefits, by putting more money into training and more money for the unemployed.”

Then the big finish, his right hand jabbing and pointing and swiping about. “When we talk about respect for the House,” he said, “the NDP members should bother to read the budget before they decide to vote against it and not vote against the unemployed.”

It is a wonder the Prime Minister still bothers in this way. It’s been three months since his government tabled that budget that members of the NDP may or may not have bothered to review. For that matter, it’s been nearly five years for Mr. Harper and Mr. Layton, the last three of those spent mostly in disagreement. Surely, even Mr. Harper tires of this. Surely, at the very least, his doctor has warned him about the long-term risks associated with high blood pressure.

“Mr. Speaker, the Prime Minister is simply propagating myths because it does not match the reality of what people are experiencing on the street, 50 days of inaction,” Layton shot back with his third turn.

The Conservative side grumbled.

“Let us try something else the House has done,” Layton continued. “The House has said we need strong action to deal with the issue of credit card gouging. In fact in the House another NDP motion was adopted, laying out what should be done, picking up on some of the initiatives that the Obama administration is bringing forward.”

The government side moaned.

“Yesterday the House spoke,” Layton finished. “The question is this. When is the government going to act? Is the Prime Minister going to tell his finance minister to stop talking and start acting to protect the middle class?”

Back, for a final time, came the Prime Minister.

“Mr. Speaker, I just talked about what we did in the budget on employment insurance. What we also did in the economic action plan on credit cards was we gave the Minister of Finance additional regulatory power to deal with some of these problems in the credit card business,” he said.

“The problem is, once again the leader of the New Democratic Party and his party had decided to vote against the middle class and vote against these things before they even knew what was in the budget. That was wrong and they should stop doing it.”

And so it was settled. Mr. Layton would continue to dismiss the government’s legislation and, in return, Mr. Harper would continue to ignore Mr. Layton’s proposed alternatives. For sure, it seems an arrangement that satisfies both sides.

The Stats. Employment, seven questions. Citizenship and cultural funding, four questions each. Taxation, three questions. Swine flu, Quebec, the auto industry, forestry, the civil service, Omar Khadr and prison farms, two questions each. Flag pins, Canada Day, credit cards, drugs, product labelling and infrastructure, one question each.

Stephen Harper, seven answers. James Moore, four answers. Jim Flaherty, Christian Paradis and Deepak Obhrai, three answers each. Leona Aglukkaq, Peter Kent, Jason Kenney, Diane Finley, Denis Lebel and Peter Van Loan, two answers each. Tony Clement, Lynne Yelich, Pierre Poilievre, Jean-Pierre Blackburn, John Baird and Diane Ablonczy, one answer each.

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  • Sean Stokholm

    You and Feschuk go out to karaoke together lately?

    • http://www.iheartmusic.net matthew

      Either that, or someone around the Maclean’s office has been blasting John Cougar Mellencamp’s greatest hits for the last few days…

  • http://angrycanadian.ca Jim Morrell

    Harper seems to lose it every time he is challenged or held to account. The fact of the matter is this so-called Conservative (Reform) party acts like it is still in opposition. There has been no meaningful governance since 2006. Nothing is getting done! The Public Service has been beaten down to a state of total inertia. Power is concentrated within the unelected Prime Ministers Office. Ministers and MPs serve no meaningful role other than to do what PMO tells them to. There is something inherently unhealthy about so much power residing with a man obsessed with power.

    Personally, I believe the Conservative aka Alliance party, 9lets face it, the Alliance wing has muscled out the traditional PCers) will be spectacularly swept from power this fall. Arrogance and hubris has an uncanny way of coming back to bite you.

    • John T

      Jim Morrell …. let me guess, you are an NDP not a traditional PCer … Hubris is the very thing that swept the Liberals out, and the Conservatives in, to power. And I have to disagree … the PMO IS an elected position … and even if Jack Layton was the P.M. (heaven help us), the PMO has much less influence over legislation than does the American President – it is hardly inherently unhealthy. Unless, of course, if you disagree with his policies, which have, overall, been good for the nation.

      • http://angrycanadian.ca Jim Morrell

        I voted Tory in 2006 John – then I realized these guys are no tories.
        The Prime Ministers Office is staffed by unelected officials – other than the PM himself. The point is, PMO calls the shots. Ministers and MPs and merely there for decoration.

      • Sean Stokholm

        “the PMO has much less influence over legislation…”

        I’m not so sure about that – at least for the last ten years, and I’m even less certain about that claim in a majority scenerio (which ultimately become a mythological event we bore our grandchildren with). It’s arguably easier for Harper to wake up tomorrow and get the ball rolling on legislation to prohibit bushy eyebrows (for example), and use his party whip to make it happen, than it would be for Obama to get legislation approved by both houses without prior Democratic support, which in some cases can involve a lot of side deals to placate the needs of senators and congressmen (and it’s obviously harder when the houses have a majority from the other party).

        Also, the PM isn’t strictly a directly elected position – if the conservatives decided to make Peter Van Loan (for example) their leader tomorrow, then he would be the prime minister. Note that the current leader of the opposition was not elected as such.

        • Elizabeth Montgomery

          There’s certainly no opposition within the Liberal party to Ignatieff as leader. People forget that Stephane Dion agreed to step down after the disastrous showing in the fall election; the coalition crisis was the time for him to actually do it. He’ll be elected unanimously this coming weekend – my daughter is going as a delegate, she’s quite excited about it.

          • peimac13

            Dion may have stepped down but he was shoved out the door. Not that it was a bad thing but Iggy forced others into submission ( hello there Bob Rae) before a runoff could be had.
            Either way, CPC is starting to make some of us swing voters rethink who the lesser evil maybe. Just don’t expect much change from Iggy.

  • herringchoker

    “aide for the unemployed”.

    Is that like an aide-de-camp?

  • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

    More chopping. It’s no fun if there’s no chopping. Was the PM chopping? He is, after all, a chopaholic.

    • Elizabeth Montgomery

      LOL!!

      • Sisyphus

        The chopping increases in frequency and ferocity when he’s being ” very clear ” about something.
        He’s being being ” very clear ” about something when his response is tangential to the question asked.

        • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

          LOL. Do you think his fondness for being so “very clear” is a retranslation back into English of his favourite French phrase, “soyons clairs”? I love it when phrases bounce back and forth like that.

    • Critical Reasoning

      Do our Prime Minister’s gestures make him a chopper, or is he more of a waver? Before he became PM, everyone thought that when it came to balancing budgets, he was an unwavering chopper. Now he seems more like a choppy waverer. Yesterday he, even waived the late fees on our new choppers. Will the madness never end?

      • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

        LOL. I thought it was Gurmant Grewal who specialised in chopping the .wav’s.

        • Critical Reasoning

          Good point. Grewal tried his best to shop his chopped .wav’s, but he ended up with his own head on the chopping block due to the wave of indignation.

          • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

            Oh, what a tingling wife we waive
            And fast wee Prentices deprave

  • hollinm

    Perhaps the PM will stop with his chopping motions when the oppostion parties ask questions that are based on fact rather hyperboly. The opposition are desperately trying to stick the government with this recession and Canadians are not buying it. If they were the polls for the Conservatives would be down the tubes. They are not despite how some commentators want to spin it. At least those without a political agenda know that the recession was caused by the U.S. and spread globally like a brush fire. Until the American solve their problems and its economy begins to rebound we can spend ourselves into the poor house but the recession will continue in Canada until our exports to the U.S. are restored to past levels.

    • kc

      What has that got to to do with making sure the unemployed can acess EI? It’s the one programme we really are entitiled to.

      • Neil

        Who cannot access EI who is entitled to it? Jacko throws out lies, damned lies, and statistics, without giving a single example of someone entitled to EI benefits who is being denied. What he is really asking (but is afraid to say in plain English) is, “when is the government going to do what we would do, and turn the EI system into permanent welfare?”

        • Sean Stokholm

          Of course everyone who is *entitled* receives it. The point is that the criteria for entitlement varies regionally, such that it’s harder to get in Toronto than Halifa, for example. Also, the criteria in any region tend to make it difficult for part-time workers to collect, even though they pay into it. Conclusion: access to EI is neither uniform nor possible for all unemployed Canadians. It’s a fair dynamic to question, and it’s far call from trying to turn it into a “permanent welfare” program.

          • Liz

            Pity such a criteria for entitlement varied month-to-month doesn’t apply to MPs.

        • Liz

          Good idea Neil. Where were you when $5Million in overtime was paid to EI Program workers when at least as much could have been saved by simply giving the newly-unemployed people the money they are entitled to?

          • Stewart Smith

            we desperately need a Joe the unemployed plumber who can’t get EI
            of course his name doesn’t really have to be Joe nor does he really need to be a plumber

        • Sisyphus
  • http://www.savedarfur.org Sophia Geffros

    I’m so sick of this.
    I used to love QP…. but it’s so disheartening.
    Why do we accept this kind of behaviour and evasion from our elected officials?
    No wonder people are cynical about politicians.

  • paulsstuff

    “I voted Tory in 2006 John – then I realized these guys are no tories.
    The Prime Ministers Office is staffed by unelected officials – other than the PM himself”

    Uh, I don’t ever remember voting for positions in the PMO. Did something change?

  • Liz

    Warts and all, I still lurve me some QP. Don’t take it away! Some Canadians appreciate very much the joy and confidence of watching our government in action every day they are actually there live and in their flesh. Beats hot dogs with your MP on Canada Day by a good mile.

    Long live CPAC, CBC and ParlVu!

  • Liz

    And Macleans and Aarron Wherry and all too, eh.

    Obligation? Right? Responsibility?

  • Greg

    And so it was settled. Mr. Layton would continue to dismiss the government’s legislation and, in return, Mr. Harper would continue to ignore Mr. Layton’s proposed alternatives. For sure, it seems an arrangement that satisfies both sides.

    As good as this arrangement is, it is not as good as the one between the Liberals and Conservatives wherein the Liberals dismiss the government’s legislation, but vote for it anyway. For sure, it seems an arrangement that satisfies both sides, too.

  • http://deleted Sandi

    Layton really, really has to get over his man-crush on Obama – Jack, as much as you try to be, you ain’t no Obama, you ain’t no Tommy Douglas.

    Everytime they repeat the Economic “Action” Plan – I expect Harper to crash through a paper wall with his made in China Superman outfit – Captain Made-In Canada Canada.

  • darcymeyers

    “Surely, even Mr. Harper tires of this. Surely, at the very least, his doctor has warned him about the long-term risks associated with high blood pressure.”
    ——
    To think Layton could raise the PM’s blood pressure is giving him far to much credit.

  • Wayne

    So I see that I might be misstaken about the fall dance and maybe both Gilles and Jack wanna dance with Stevie – I just read one of the best quotes by Gilles with respect to the CROP poll : The BLOC doesn’t read polls we win elections – ROFL – though he has a point.

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