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|    mtl.general    |    Ahh Montreal, home of good strip joints    |    39,416 messages    |
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|    Message 37,813 of 39,416    |
|    =?UTF-8?B?Q29uyYDGpkNvbsmA?= to All    |
|    We can do it, Mr Mulcair . . . . (1/4)    |
|    11 Jan 14 18:51:38    |
      XPost: can.politics, bc.politics, ab.politics       XPost: man.politics, sk.politics, ont.politics       From: ConsRCons@govt.cda               . . . Because this country needs a leader who cares about its people       before anything else.              Harper cares about corporate profits, spy agencies and access to       Canadians' privacy, backing Israel and the U.S. in their wars, and       changing Canada's penal system to mirror that in the U.S.              Justin Trudeau cares about his hair, how to charm the ladies, how to       curry votes of any any group he might campaign within, and adjusting his       political speeches to match the wants of those particular audiences.       He's charming and insincere.              Thomas Mulcair can get our strength back; in job creation, in       environmental protection and in the respect of the world for our honesty       combined with the pride of autonomy.       Neither of the other leaders can - or will.              If you're planning to vote for the New Democrats in the next election,       give them your support financially to whatever extent you can. They're       up against some very dirty players when it comes to election campaigns       and they will need every dollar we can give, to not only advance their       policies, but to fight the negative ads that will be coming at them.       _____________________________________       January 11, 2014 - Globe and Mail By John Ibbitson                     NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair's next task: Win over the country              He's no charmer. He has no name cachet. And his party is often maligned       for its tax-and-spend legacy. But Mulcair may just be the candidate to watch                     He has emerged from Jack Layton's shadow, won over his party and earned       the respect of people who follow Question Period. But now Thomas Mulcair       has a bigger battle – to win over the country. And he must do it this       year, long before the 2015 election campaign. He must also raise money       at a rate his party has never known, and connect with a suburban middle       class unsure of who he is. Most important, he must find some way to       steal the spotlight from the hyper-charismatic Justin Trudeau.If he       succeeds, persuading Ontario to swing left – and Quebec to stay there –       he will offer New Democrats their best-ever shot at power. If he fails,       he may lead them to the back of the pack.              High stakes. But Mr. Mulcair is supremely confident after his brilliant       performance during the Senate expenses scandal; his relentless,       prosecutorial grilling damaged Mr. Harper's credibility and solidified       his own reputation as a tactician.              "In 2015, people are going to be looking for somebody able to run the       country," he told The Globe and Mail during a wide-ranging conversation       in his spacious Centre Block office above that of the Prime Minister.       "I've got 35 years' experience."              The question is whether, even with those 35 years, Canadians are ready       to hand the reins to the tax-and-spend social democrats, and to a leader       often portrayed as impersonal and inaccessible?              His chief rivals have problems. Mr. Harper is battling scandal and voter       fatigue while Mr. Trudeau is untested and still struggling to revive a       party not far removed from its deathbed.              But both are much better known, and even the oft-maligned Prime Minister       is more popular, a deficit Mr. Mulcair must overcome quickly. In       politics, momentum is a fickle force, and the afterglow from the Senate       scandal may soon fade.              His party has a strategy, however, one it hopes will make Mulcair a       household name, and this week the first polling of the new year offered       some encouragement. Nanos Research reports that, among voters asked       which party they would consider endorsing, NDP support is holding firm       while that of both the Liberals and Conservatives has not. Even better,       Mr. Mulcair's personal appeal went up and Mr. Trudeau's fell, a sign the       Liberal leader's honeymoon may be coming to an end, just as a       Tom-meets-the-people tour is to begin next week.              A threat to party unity – free trade with Europe – will reappear when       Parliament returns Jan. 27, but he at least has had practice at healing       internal rifts.              When Jack Layton lost his battle with cancer on Aug. 22, 2011, the NDP       faced a crisis: how to replace a leader so beloved that even a       Conservative luminary, former prime minister Brian Mulroney, remembered       him as "someone who turned out to be a great man."              The ensuing leadership campaign attracted eight candidates but boiled       down to a race between Mr. Mulcair and another Quebecker: Brian Topp, a       former party president favoured by the NDP establishment. Although he       was deputy leader and had been in Ottawa for four years, Mr. Mulcair was       still considered an outsider who might drag the party toward the mushy       middle. He was also known for his quick temper. Feelings against him ran       so high in some circles that former leader Ed Broadbent felt compelled       to speak out.              "People should look carefully at the fact that, of the people [in       caucus] with Tom, 90 per cent of them are supporting other candidates,"       the NDP's grand old man, then 75, told The Globe and Mail.              Nonetheless, when the vote was held in Toronto on March 24, 2012, Mr.       Mulcair won convincingly on the fifth ballot. He then moved quickly to       heal internal rifts – leadership rivals were given prominent positions       in his shadow cabinet, former Layton aide Karl Bélanger became his       principal secretary and, later, Anne McGrath, his predecessor's chief of       staff, was asked to lead preparations for the next election.              He also had to weather a crisis that divided his caucus, again without       being dictatorial. When the sovereigntist Bloc Québécois introduced a       motion to repeal the Clarity Act, the federal legislation that requires       a clear majority vote before a province can try to secede, the NDP was       torn. Their own policy was similar to what the Bloc wanted. But while       some MPs, mostly from Quebec, supported the motion, others wanted       nothing to do with propping up separatists.              In a caucus meeting that lasted hours, Mr. Mulcair heard everyone out.       Later, he met MPs individually and in small groups to explain that,       while the party could never support the Bloc motion, neither could it       repudiate its own policy. In the end, the NDP put forward a "unity bill"       worded so that it could vote against the Bloc.              One member crossed the floor. But party insiders say that, by showing       such patience and willingness to compromise, Mr. Mulcair has since       enjoyed solid support from his caucus. He is especially close to the       many rookie MPs from his home province, as much mentor as leader, while       instructing them in the campaign skills they will need if the party has              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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