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Harper returns to Canada, will face scandal questions

Prime Minister Stephen Harper returned from his trip to South America Friday, and there is one heck of a mess waiting for him on Parliament Hill.

Maclean’s Magazine Ottawa Bureau Chief John Geddes says the Conservatives are at one of the party’s lowest points since they formed government in 2006.

As the RCMP was looking into whether to open a criminal investigation into the senator spending scandal yesterday, Senator Mike Duffy was calling for a full and open inquiry into the $90,000 cheque he received from Harper’s former Chief of Staff Nigel Wright.

Harper still hasn’t answered questions on the scandal and Geddes says the prime minister will probably take the weekend to figure out what his next move will be.

“There are two possibilities here. One is to tackle the issues head on and try to address them more explicitly, be more apologetic but also be more definitive in explaining exactly what happened in his own office,” explains Geddes.

“The other would be to try to fill the vacuum or give people something else to think about, which is to try to show a vigorous, activist agenda and hope that he can cruise through to the end of the Parliamentary session in June.”
He tells us Harper will likely try to re-group over the summer and then try to gain some momentum with a new policy speech.

Geddes also expects Harper will shuffle his cabinet and come out with a throne speech in an attempt to shift the conversation away from the senate.

In the meantime, new Liberal leader Justin Trudeau is getting a nice bump in the polls and the NDP continues to hammer away at the Tories with its campaign to abolish the senate.

Geddes says Harper’s problems don’t end there. “They’ve had this backbench revolt that was really over the freedom of Conservative backbenchers to say what they like in the House.”

“It was prompted by the desire of some MPs to talk on abortion related issues and all of that really injected a sense of independence in backbench MPs who typically towed the line. Now we’re starting to hearing grumblings from the backbenches and I think the two things are related. I think those MPs started to think, ‘Hey, we’re tired of being told what to say and when.’ Now that this fiasco is unfolding, I think some of them would like to speak their minds a little bit, so Harper has a caucus management problem on his hands.”

Geddes says while things don’t look good for Harper right now, this crisis probably isn’t as big as the one he faced in 2008 when the Liberals, New Democrats, and Bloc Quebecois threatened to form a coalition government.

Executive committee to ask Rob Ford to address accusations

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford’s executive committee is writing a letter that will urge Ford to speak formally about the recent accusations of drug use.

Speaking to reporters outside of the mayor’s officer, Deputy Mayor Doug Holyday said the statement will be released later today.

Holyday said the longer it takes Ford to speak, the worse it gets and said he’s concerned about the pressure Ford is under.

Holyday reassured the city’s residents that city hall is on top of administering business. “I don’t like the city of Toronto shown in this light.”

Political affairs specialist John Stall with 680News spoke with Holyday about the executive committee’s reported plans.

The only thing I can tell you about a meeting with the executive committee is that Councillor Peter Milczyn is trying to organize a conference call to discuss the ongoing problem at city hall, pertaining to the mayor’s situation,” says Holyday.

“I told Milczyn and others through e-mail that I wasn’t going to participate in a phone conversation. If we were going to have any meeting it would have to be face-to-face, and I would try to get the mayor there,” he adds.

Holyday notes he will be seeing Ford today.

“I am going to tell him about the executive committee, and he knows probably by now they wish to have a meeting. I think that opposed to having a meeting without him, I’d rather have a meeting with him, and if they have questions to put to him, go ahead and put them.”

According to The Globe and Mail, said the executive committee has put together a contingency plan to run the city — if and when the mayor backs away for a while to get the kind of help that they are pushing him to seek.

Christy Clark thanks Liberal MLAs in Vancouver

christy clark thanks liberal mlas

BC Premier Christy Clark thanked her newly elected and re-elected MLAs in Vancouver on Thursday, who gathered for the first time following the Liberals’ surprise victory in last week’s provincial election.

“From the bottom of my heart, I want to say to all of you … thank you,” Clark said.

“All of us in this room made a tremendous sacrifice in putting their lives on the side, putting your name on the line, putting your reputation up for scrutiny, and all of you earned every single vote you got and you deserved it.”

Clark went on to talk about job creation, growing the economy, controlling government spending, paying down the deficit and “living within our means” — all very familiar refrains from the election campaign.

Clark will head a majority B.C. Liberal government after leading her party to a stunning come-from-behind victory, taking 50 of the province’s 85 ridings.

The premier made a point of thanking the Liberal candidates who did not get elected in their ridings, acknowledging she herself “knew a little about that.”

“I want to pay a tribute to those of you who were not elected,” she said. “I want you to all stand up, so we can acknowledge your work.”

Clark has yet to say which MLA will step aside so she can run in a byelection and secure a seat in the legislature after losing her seat in Vancouver–Point Grey to high-profile NDP candidate David Eby by 785 votes.

Clark said B.C. voters elected the Liberal party because they “cared about the economy first.”

“They were the ones that set us on the journey. They were the ones who wrote this comeback story for our party and for our government,” she said.

“The people of British Columbia have said they are trusting us with their future, to make sure we achieve the goals we set out and that we promised we will deliver in the next four years. They have given us their trust and there is nothing more valuable than that.”

She promised a summer sitting of the legislature and “labour peace” in B.C. classrooms.

The premier isn’t expected to name her cabinet until the election results are final. The final count begins May 27 and the writ won’t be returned to the legislature to make the results official until June 5.

On Wednesday, embattled B.C. NDP leader Adrian Dix said he will stay on as head of the party despite a disappointing election defeat.

Calgary rated ‘best city in Canada’

calgary-skyline

MoneySense magazine has released the results of their 2013 Best Places to Live list and rated Calgary as Canada’s best large city and best overall city out of 200 small, mid-sized and large cities across the country.

Calgary bumped three-time winner Ottawa from the top spot to second place, which MoneySense attributed in part to the failure of discretionary incomes in Ottawa to keep pace with the growing wealth rushing into Calgary and Edmonton.

Edmonton rated third in the best large city category and Toronto ranked seventh in the Canadian list.

Other factors responsible for Calgary’s jump to the top spot are high incomes and low unemployment fuelled by the energy sector boom.

MoneySense also made note of the relative affordability of owning a home in Calgary — despite high costs, above-average household incomes tend to make the prospect of home ownership more affordable than in other big cities where home prices far exceed residents’ ability to afford them.

Ottawa is Canada’s most boring city, according to inaugural Boring Awards

Ottawa was declared as the most boring city of Canada at the recent inaugural Boring Awards in Toronto.

Ottawa beat out other nominees, including Laval, Que., Lethbridge, Alta., Abbotsford, B.C. and Brampton, Ont.

A screening of the documentary Boredom, directed by Albert Neremberg, followed the awards. The film claims to document a worldwide epidemic of boredom and share a warning: boredom can kill you.

There were some commendable choices for other awards, including the 64th Annual Tax Conference in Calgary, Alberta, as the most boring event of the year.

“Boring and orderly is the Canadian way,” by former MP Monte Solberg, as published in the Toronto Sun.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper was this year’s most boring Canadian, according to the list of winners emailed to Yahoo! Canada News by Neremberg.

Rob Ford, late night television’s newest source of comedic fodder, won the award for the least boring Canadian. Ford beat the Ikea monkey, Peaches, Ryan Gosling and astronaut Chris Hadfield.

GVHBA’s 20th annual Parade invites public to tour professionally renovated homes

House

The Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association (GVHBA) invites the public to tour 11 professionally renovated homes located across Metro Vancouver on Sunday, June 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The 20th annual Parade of Renovated Homes, produced by the GVHBA Renovation Council and sponsored by FortisBC, offers a unique opportunity for people to see the amazing home transformations that are possible when you work with a profesional contractor.

The homes on the Parade showcase leading-edge design, advanced construction techniques and products, and energy-saving features, and include a Tuscan-inspired transformation, a beautiful condominium renovation with a 360-degree city view, a luxurious townhome remodel, a gorgeous interior and exterior upgrade of a classic ’60s home, and a contemporary whole-house makeover.
GVHBA CEO Bob de Wit said Metro Vancouver homeowners will spend $3.8 billion sprucing up their homes this year, and this popular one-day event offers the public an exceptional opportunity to tour professional renovated homes.

“Professional RenoMark renovators, many of them award winners, will be on site to offer expert advice and discuss their craftsmanship. Project values range widely, offering homeowners an abundance of ideas they can incorporate into their own renovations,” said de Wit.

Dix Done as leader for next election, says professor

A political science Professor at the University of the Fraser Valley says there is very little chance Adrian Dix will lead the NDP into the next election. Hamish Telford says after last week’s election Dix will have a tough time governing his own caucus.

Telford says Dix has boxed himself in by refusing to give up his positive campaign, “If he, in the next election campaign, tries to be more forceful, more aggressive, people are going to be constantly reminding him, ‘why are you going negative, why aren’t you running a positive campaign?’ This would dog him for the next four years and right into the next campaign. As would his flip-flop on Kinder Morgan and of course, his memo story from the 1990’s won’t have gone away either.”

Telford says the NDP should take the time they need to choose a new leader and avoid the damage of having a revolving door at the top.

Bank employee in Hyderabad arrested for defrauding Canadian customer

Hyderabad–A phone banking officer of ICICI Bank here has been arrested for hacking the bank account of a Canadian customer and fraudulently withdrawing over Rs.32 lakh ($60,000) from his account.

Cyberabad police took into custody Bijjala Raghu Kishore Reddy, an employee of the ICICI Bank International Banking Group call centre, who allegedly opened a fake account in connivance with another person and hacked into the ICICI Bank account of Pierre Courtot of Canada.

Kishore Reddy then allegedly transferred Rs.32,09,819 from Courtot’s account and withdrew the same from different ATMs, said Cyberabad’s Deputy Commissioner of Police (Crime) S. Ranga Reddy.
Police are on the lookout for second accused, Chimili Srinivas, an employee of Narayana Educational Group.

Roopesh Trivedi, additional general manager, phone banking division at the Hyderabad ICICI head office, lodged a complaint with police after Courtot informed them about unauthorized transactions of Canadian $61,451.48 from his account.

Investigations revealed that 27-year-old Kishore Reddy, a resident of Visakhapatnam, had attended the customer’s calls and reportedly hacked into his account and defrauded him.
The accused used part of the money to buy land, gold ornaments, mobile phones and other items.

Police seized Rs.3.25 lakh in cash, gold ornaments worth Rs.4 lakh, a demand draft for Rs.4 lakh, two mobile phones and documents from Kishore Reddy.–IANS

Dix To Stay On As Leader

dixVancouver:  On Wednesday Adrian Dix spoke with the media for first time after his party`s loss in the recent provincial elections. He said he was not stepping down and will stay on as leader till a complete review of the whole NDP election process was complete.

Later, Dix delivered this statement following his party`s loss:

Shortly before the election we’ve just had, I met a hearing-impaired young man.

He stopped me, asked for my notebook and wrote me a note. “Are you going to win?” he asked.

I wrote back: “I think we can, if we work hard.”

He wrote me back: “You have to win.” And proceeded to write out why it was so important to him.

We didn’t win. And “disappointment” doesn’t begin to describe how that feels.

Disappointment for the people who needed change, like that young man.

Disappointment for what this may mean for our province.

Disappointment for so many who put their heart and soul into our campaign.

Since May 14th, I have taken some time to reflect, and to consult with my colleagues.

I have spoken to most of our candidates and to many others.

Here are some thoughts:

As leader of the BC NDP, I take full responsibility for this defeat.

Clearly, our campaign was not good enough.

We did not do a good job prosecuting the case against the government, based on their record.

And we did not make a clear enough case to British Columbians about what the consequences would be of re-electing the Liberals.

I don’t believe last week’s results are the end of “positive politics” in BC.

The answer to the Liberals’ populist right-wing playbook is not to simply adopt it.

But voters expect opposition leaders, in particular, to hold sitting Premiers accountable for their records.

You have to define the problem before you can persuade people of the solution.

I should have done a much better job of this than I did during the campaign.

Second, we did not effectively communicate our platform to voters.

Our party offered a substantive, fully-costed platform that offered real solutions to real problems faced by British Columbians.

I called this the “hard road to victory”—and I still believe politicians owe it to voters to tell them honestly what they propose to do if elected.

We committed to a modest and focused agenda. But we put out detailed proposals in considerable volume and length in a way that didn’t resonate with enough voters.

We therefore failed to demonstrate a clear choice between our vision for the economy, the environment and a more caring society, and Premier Clark, her record, her plan and her team.

Finally, my announcement about our position on the Kinder Morgan pipeline on Earth Day hurt our campaign.

The way I made it raised a number of process issues that stuck with us.

I hold to the policy I set out on that pipeline.

But, plainly, I didn’t handle that issue very well.

On all these points, I take full responsibility. No ifs, ands or buts.

So what do we do now?

First, we will undertake a comprehensive review of this election, to learn and act on the painful lessons it has taught us.

I can assure you this review will spare nothing and no one, least of all me.

This will not be a simple internal review.

It must give voice to party members, and listen to those from outside our ranks.

It must address the strategy and tactics we employed in the election. And it must examine the fundamental questions of who we are as a party, and our relationship with the people of BC.

We therefore need to take an unflinching look at our strengths and weaknesses, and what we need to do to improve.

Successful political parties constantly evolve to meet the challenges they face.

And that’s what we must do.

Second, we will prepare for the upcoming legislative session and we will do the job we were elected to do.

The NDP caucus is a strong, experienced team with some remarkable new additions.

We will hold the government to account.

The Liberals committed in this election to balanced budgets, to lower public debt, to high levels of job creation, and to protecting services—in particular health care and education, and supports for seniors and for children.

That’s the contract they signed with British Columbians on election day.

And that’s the contract they must honour.

We will hold them to it – with passion. British Columbians will hold them to it.

I will stay on as leader to ensure that our obligations to our members and the public are met over the next few months.

That our review of what went wrong in the election ensures that lessons are learned.

That the Official Opposition does the job that hundreds of thousands of British Columbians elected us to do, and that we are organized to hold the government to account.

There are some important meetings ahead for our party: caucus meetings, a provincial council meeting in June, and a party convention in November that must craft the blueprint for renewal.

As for the long term, the caucus, the party executive and members of the NDP must start immediately to map out how we win the next election.

I will do whatever is required to see that this happens. I will be guided by the discussion and direction given.

I will put the public interest and the long-term success of the BC NDP ahead of any personal ambitions.

For now, together, we fight for shared prosperity, to reduce inequality, for jobs and a safe environment.

Working closely and in concert with our entire team, I will do just that.

I will do what is right for that young hearing-impaired man and the thousands like him who were counting on us.

Lastly, I want to say a few words of thanks.

To all the candidates who put their heart and soul into this election.

To all the party members and volunteers who worked so hard and gave up so much on the campaign, whether for an individual candidate or for the campaign as a whole.

And to every one of the hundreds of thousands of British Columbians who voted for us.

We will carry on.

We will learn and get better.

And we will succeed next time.

Thank you.

 

Cycling for Diversity team to finish journey on May 24 in Abbotsford

cyclingThe Cycling4Diversity team began its four-day journey on Tuesday morning and will pedal from Victoria and finish the trek in Abbotsford on May 24.

According to Ken Herar, the driving force behind this campaign, the journey will end up at The Reach Gallery Museum with an event called Rally in the Valley for Cultural Diversity from 6 – 7 p.m.

“On our third annual C4D ride we’ll be visiting 14 cities and making 27 stops en route,“ says Ken Herar.

“After months of planning, we are excited to kick off this initiative and prepared to speak to thousands of people on the topics of cultural diversity, inclusion and racism,“ says Herar.

“I only wanted to do the ride once in 2011, but through the encouragement and vision of co-founder Sarina Di Martino Derksen, we have turned this into an annual event,“ he says.

“What got me started with the event was when I was not allowed to attend a Christmas party in 2010 because I was of South Asian descent. This particular incident was the final straw for me personally.“

“But there were also e-mails I had previously received in which people shared how our various communities are not connected and are growing.“

“We all have to step up as one community and do better. One of the things I often share during C4D in British Columbia is we ask people to reflect on their prejudices and biases and see if they can be corrected and changed,“ says Herar.

Cycling4Diversity offers opportunities for learning, dialogue and discussions on the benefits of cultural diversity and the importance of eliminating racism.