Colby Cosh

Colby Cosh

Maclean’s man in Edmonton writes about everything. Follow Colby on Twitter: @colbycosh

And the Black Rod is made of chocolate!

by Colby Cosh on Monday, December 7, 2009 4:21am - 97 Comments

After some hours trying to decipher Angelo Persichilli’s column about the Château Laurier Conspiracy, I think I’ve found the key. One must disconnect Persichilli’s speculation about What It All Means from his actual reporting. It seems likely he overheard or was given access to audio of some genuine conversation, though the whole account is slathered in enough passive-voice sauce to turn anybody’s stomach. Ignore the carefully placed buttresses to the story’s authority and importance, like “This was not an isolated meeting between a few MPs”, and what you’re left with is… an isolated meeting between a few MPs, who bellyache tipsily while Bob Rae listens politely and encourages frank discussion but strongly insists he is not interested in a coup.

This is exactly what you would expect Bob Rae to do if he were a completely loyal lieutenant with no ambitions of his own whatsoever, intent solely on serving as his leader’s eyes and ears. It is also exactly what you would expect Bob Rae to do if he were planning a lightning coup for the stroke of midnight on New Year’s Eve. Most likely, Bob Rae is just what you think he is: an ambitious fellow forced to play a difficult hand, one who may be happy to profit from a regicide but is fully aware that he who draws the dagger rarely survives to wallow in the glory.

Beyond the facts, the column is full of fairly innocuous propositions disguised as dramatic disclosures. Succession to the leadership is a “dominant theme of discussion” in the Liberal Party? Well, sure, that’s what political parties are: machines for ensuring that aligned political interests stick together if something happens to the leader. I promise you that succession to the Conservative leadership is a pretty frequent subject of table-talk when Conservatives get together. (And, in fact, it’s a strength of the Liberal Party, not a weakness, that it has a lot of semi-credible successors around.)

And Persichilli “wouldn’t be surprised” if Ignatieff retreated to his “beloved academic world” at any moment? So who would be? The Liberals imported that danger/hope as part of the package deal when they dragged Ignatieff back from Harvard. Persichilli, I feel, is merely reminding us of the facts of life in a way that makes his eavesdropping seem fraught with urgency and electricity.

The more I concentrated on what is truly knowable and relevant in Persichilli’s story, the more I felt sorry for Bob Rae. Imagine having to stand there, nodding and smiling and nursing a schnapps, while you pretend to take the strategic judgment of Ruby Dhalla and Carolyn “Body Bags” Bennett oh so seriously. To what Christmas fantasy did his mind drift off while Dhalla, an ISO-certifiable ninny, was waxing obnoxious about the party “not doing enough to nurture the next generation of leaders”? Did he dream of being elected Santa Claus, passing in his crimson finery through the gingerbread doors of the Elf Parliament as the Candy-Cane Peace Tower glimmered in the night sky?

Bookmark and Share
  • Richard Sharp

    Best comment? At least the Libs have some potential leaders waiting in the wings if and when Mr. Ignatieff steps down (not until after an election, for certain).

    Compare that to Mr. Harper's pit bulls and poodles. Has beens from the failed Harris government. Failed neocons from the Reform and Alliance parties.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Style Style

      Yes, Ignatieff's front-bench of failed Dew Democratic premiers is much more impressive…

      • kcm

        Are you saying the cons wouldn't want someone of the calibre of Rae, notwithstanding different ideaologies of course. And Dosanjh wasn't that bad a BC premier, he was unfortunate to have to pick up after Clark.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/Style Style

          The Conservative front-bench seems pretty strong now – MacKay, Baird, Prentice and a few others seem to hold their own in Parliament and in their portfolios. Rae's best days seem far behind him, although he often still shines. Other Liberals seem pretty nondescript.

          • kcm

            The con front bench [apart from Prentice] is a bunch of hacks, thugs and Harris retreads…not that i'm overwhelmed by the libs either.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/frenchie101 frenchie101

          Rae, he's a dipper..No way would he fit in with the conservatives, nor would they, we want him..he's all about spending, and no idea where to get it from.I do hope he leads next, another one to eat up ,& spew out.As for useless Dosanjih, he was an awful premier, we are still paying for his mistakes. There is nobody to to take Iggy's place, maybe try MHF, just for a laugh

          • kcm

            Ah…do you know what notwithstanding means…or did you miss it? Dosnjh wasn't there long enough to merit awful…but no doubt the tag NDP is all you need.

          • Orson Bean

            I do admire Dosanjh personally not for anything he did as NDP premier or Liberal MP, but rather prior to that when he stood up to Sikh fundamentalists and literally got beaten up for it. That was tremendously courageous of him, and I will always admire someone who is willing to pay, and pays, a price for speaking out against evil like that

        • dbk

          Yes. What every party needs is a leader whose resume includes leading their provincial party to the brink of oblivion.

          Derek

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Be_rad Be_rad

    I admit to straying from my comfort zone in daring to critique math. The beauty of the english language, though, is its ability to convey meaning despite details. I got what you were saying.

    • Andre

      oh don't get me started on the multiplicity of english meanings… I mean definition… I mean….. drat

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/jolyon jolyon

    "It seems likely he overheard or was given access to audio of some genuine conversation"

    Why is it not likely that someone at this little get together leaked the info to Persichilli? Would it be a great surprise if Rae or Dhalla or Bennett decided to make life uncomfortable for Iggy?

    To me, it sounds like a few disgruntled people got together and blew off some steam. Our media rarely writes about the machinations that take place on daily basis within parties so when someone does write about it, the story gets blown way out of proportion. Unless there is a lot going on within Lib party that msm is not telling us about, I too would be amazed if Iggy quits before he leads party into at least one election.

    • Bill Simpson

      It is hard to imagine anyone less politically substantial than Ruby Dhalla, who was once memorably described as a "wind-up toy" by someone or another. I have the misfortune to be represented by this individual; she would be out of he depth on a school board, and her only qualification is to have an asian background. She is steadily losing support in her own riding to the conservatives and will be lucky to survive the next election.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/jolyon jolyon

        I was thinking Dhalla was the least likely leaker but who knows.

        Between the Krieber letter and now this, there is obvious campaign from progressive wing of Lib party to let their leader know they are not content. I guess Iggy's charm, so apparent on the cocktail circuit, is not working on his progressive caucus. Apparently Libs have been talking about Iggy and his leadership since Krieber letter but msm has not really mentioned it until yesterday.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/colbycosh colbycosh

    One of these things is not like the other/ Which one is diff'rent, do you know…

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/acidhofolus acidhofolus

    Red Bob Rae and Ujjal Dosonjh are the two most dangerous men in the Liberal party.They are both very ex left wing NDP premiers.Their intent is to remove the center out of the Liberal movement.they can see that their old pal Taliban Jack is gaining momentum as the party in opposition and they want to have a hammer by attracting the same far left crowd in the next election.Ignatieff is finished because he has not got the energy to fight these two.If Rae claims to be his friend who needs enemies

    • Kaplan

      Are you insane?

      Serious question.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/frenchie101 frenchie101

        No!

        serious answer.

  • Aidan

    Awesome write up.

From Macleans