Update #1: On August 19th 2013, Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced that he will be proroguing Parliament for the third time since 2008. This time, he is using this extremely rare move (for all other PMs, not him) in the hope that the Senate Scandal he created will have lost its importance in the minds of Canadian voters. I feel it is up to the Canadian Media to take our Prime Minister to task for this affront to Canadian democracy. Mr. Harper needs to speak to Canadians about the Senate Scandal, about the Robocall debacle, about Deregulation of the Rail Industry and the Lac Megantic catastrophe.
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Mr. Harper, you have been my Prime Minister for seven and a half years now. Over that time I have wanted to ask you lots of questions. Because I never get the chance to ask you, I have wanted journalists to pose these questions. I have come to learn, however, that it is not a simple matter for journalists to ask you any questions of import.
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Mr. Harper, you have been my Prime Minister for seven and a half years now. Over that time I have wanted to ask you lots of questions. Because I never get the chance to ask you, I have wanted journalists to pose these questions. I have come to learn, however, that it is not a simple matter for journalists to ask you any questions of import.
You rarely hold news conferences, Mr. Harper, and when you
do, you are adamant that the entire group of journalists will ask a maximum of
five questions. This surprises me on two counts: first, I cannot recall any
leader, Canadian or American, who has paid such little regard for taking
questions from the media, and by extension, citizens; and second, it is we
Canadian citizens who pay your wages.
I assume you are a busy fellow. Besides all of the demands
required of a Prime Minister, you have repeatedly told us that you are writing
a book on the history of hockey. (I am an avid hockey fan and played the game
for almost 40 years, so as surprised as I am that you of all people have decided to write on
such a topic, I am looking forward to reading what you have to say about it.)
So I am cutting you some slack on why it is so difficult to
find the time to speak to Canadians about important matters. Some of these
matters are related to scandals, but as we have seen with Mr. Obama and the IRS
and NSA scandals, sometimes the best approach for a nation’s leader is simply
to come right out and address these kinds of questions.
I have dozens of questions that I would like you to answer.
But for the sake of time, I have chosen what you deem to be an adequate number:
five. I apologize for the wordiness, but I feel that some background for each
question may be helpful. Here they are.
Mr. Prime Minister:
1.
Given that the first state-owned oil and gas
company of North America, SaskOil, was sold to private investors by
Saskatchewan’s Progressive Conservative Government in 1986 (when it became
Nexen), does it seem ironic to you that
your government recently allowed the sale of Nexen to CNOOC, which is a
state-owned company of China?
2.
Given that on March 25th 1994, when
you were a rookie Reform MP, you made an eloquent speech in defense of
democracy by speaking against the federal Liberal government’s 21-page omnibus
bill, why did your government develop
and pass the 425-page omnibus Budget Bill C-38 that, among many other
non-budgetary items, gutted the regulations of most Canadian fresh waterways
without any open public debate?
3.
Given the public uproar over the ubiquitous use
of robocalls during the last federal election (in which you won a majority
government), why did you subsequently and repeatedly send
expensive lawyers to stop the courts from hearing the Robocall case brought forth by the
Council of Canadians?
4.
Given the fact that every student in
publicly-funded Canadian schools has been taught to value the knowledge gained
from science and the scientific method, why
has your government attempted so strenuously to muzzle its scientists?
5.
Given the incredible demands that the job we pay
you to do has, do you really have the
time to write a book about the history of hockey?
Those are my five
questions, Mr. Prime Minister. Although not all of them are easy ones for you
to answer, you must be pleased that none of them have anything to do with your
recent choices for the Canadian Senate, namely, Senators Brazeau, Duffy and
Wallin, nor the mysterious $90,000 cheque.
I am certain that other Canadians have their own important questions for you to answer. It's too bad that you have to spend so much time writing that book about hockey!
I am certain that other Canadians have their own important questions for you to answer. It's too bad that you have to spend so much time writing that book about hockey!
(For more on Stephen Harper’s reluctance to answer the
questions of Canadian journalists, and by corollary, Canadian citizens, please
see http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/story/2013/05/22/f-rfa-macdonald-obama-harper-scandals.html)