Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"
|    ont.politics    |    Ontario politics    |    90,757 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 90,433 of 90,757    |
|    brewnoser to All    |
|    Justin Trudeau - politician of the year    |
|    17 Dec 20 19:01:47    |
      From: brewnoser2@gmail.com              When a right wing journalist [National Post, Calgary Herald] gives the nod to       a Liberal prime minister for doing a great job during a very difficult year,       the country has no reason not to agree.       ________________________________       CTVnews - December 17, 2020              Don Martin: Why Justin Trudeau is my (reluctant) pick for politician of the       year              OTTAWA -- If you rule out a microscopic organism, specifically that spiked       ball of viral misery called COVID-19, picking the top Canadian newsmaker in       2020 is a helluva tough call.              The logical nominees include any ICU doctor or nurse, the underpaid workers       helping long-term care residents deal with the agony of isolation or one of       those superior chief medical health officers.              But a politician? By contrast to the saints of health care, they’re not even       close.              Having said that, it is with one thumb up and the other slightly pinching my       nose that the obvious Canadian politician of the year is Prime Minister Justin       Trudeau.              There are reasons why this is an unworthy pick. More about that later.              But Trudeau compressed a decade’s worth of federal government action into a       single year – and it’s not even close to being finished.              Remember the Wetʼsuwetʼen hereditary chiefs and their natural gas blockade       in northern B.C.?              It was so important at the time, but the challenge of resolving that dispute       now seems almost quaint by contrast to the deadly arrival of COVID-19 later       that same month.              In just 300 days, Trudeau and his cabinet have overseen the largest rollout of       new programs and spending in peacetime history.              Trudeau quickly read the mood of an anxious public who needed to know his       massive rescue mission would spit out billions of deficit dollars from a       wide-open government vault.              The multi-layered rollout of direct individual payments, wage subsidies, rent       relief and interest-free loans for struggling businesses kept the pump primed       in a severely-sputtering economy.              And becoming the world’s biggest buyer of vaccines per capita, going far       beyond what could ever be injected into Canadian arms, was a smart move as the       surplus will be shared with poorer countries at the back of the line.              Trudeau is now giving a mea culpa in year-end interviews for not acting faster       to procure medical masks and protective clothing in March. That’s a valid       self-criticism.              And any pandemic post-mortem may show the spread might’ve been slowed if his       government had raised the Canadian drawbridges against international arrivals       a few weeks sooner.              But it was the figurehead stuff where Trudeau shone.              His daily briefings during the first wave were textbook crisis communications,       mixing victim empathy with public health advice and hope for a post-pandemic       future              He even gave an inadvertent lesson on slowing the spread to the world when       Anonymotif’s ‘Speaking Moistly’ spoof of Trudeau’s gaffe became       YouTube’s third-highest trending video of the year.              But there’s a nose-holding asterisk over any praise of Trudeau’s       performance this year.              There are many who believe the WE charities scandal was overblown because       it’s mostly forgotten now, but it offered disconcerting insight into the       ethical shortcomings of this prime minister.              He couldn’t even see a problem when own spouse and mother were pocketing       benefits from a WE charity receiving a sole-sourced contract worth almost a       billion dollars. That suggests almost wilful blindness.              Three times Trudeau’s now been before the ethics commissioner for a       spanking. And while the commissioner’s final report on the WE scandal has       yet to be released, it seems likely to at least wrist-slap Trudeau's behaviour.              Couple that with Trudeau's shameless proroguing of Parliament to dodge the WE       probe, his MP lapdogs obstructing committee work when it returned, his       government’s general lack of transparency and an increasingly centralized       power structure and the new        Trudeau boss is pretty much the same as the old Harper boss.              And yet, that’s arguably politics as normal in severely abnormal times.              Trudeau in 2020 was a comforting face in a time of disorienting disaster who       lectured the behaving-badly when provoked and is giving us a tunnel-light       glimpse of a future without facemasks.              For displaying high-profile leadership in delivering massive relief in record       time while ordering up far more vaccines than Canada will ever need, Justin       Trudeau gets my one-thumb-up nod as this country’s best politician in a very       miserable year.              That’s the bottom line.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca