Home > Politicians acting badly, whack-a-mole politics > Harper Goes on the Offensive

Harper Goes on the Offensive

March 3rd, 2008

I have been pondering la affair Cadman all weekend, trying to get my head in the right place for commenting on it. My concern was that I was quite prepared to pooh-pooh this whole thing because my team are the bad guys. That’s not good enough thinking, and I tried to turn it around: if this was a Liberal scandal, how would I react?

My conclusion, there wasn’t enough there yet. Legally, there is no crime committed, only hearsay evidence. Ethically, again it’s one a few peoples word vs. the hearsay of what a dead man said (if Cadman was alive, we have a different story). My conclusion was going to be, until the other shoe drops, there’s not much here. However, I also felt there was more to come, and it could complete this story. The question was, who was going to look worse once the story played out?

Well, Stephen Harper dropped a shoe today, a big one, by threatening to sue Stephane Dion, Ralph Goodale and Michael Ignatieff:

The prime minister served notice Monday that he plans to sue the Liberals if they don’t apologize for comments they made concerning the Chuck Cadman affair.

Liberal Leader Stephane Dion, the Liberal Party of Canada and MPs Ralph Goodale and Michael Ignatieff were all served letters over statements published on the party’s website.
Those statements question Stephen Harper’s alleged involvement in financial “offers” made to Cadman to sway his vote in a crucial 2005 Commons showdown.
Harper’s lawyer, Richard Dearden, calls the statements “false and devastatingly defamatory.”
“These malicious and reckless defamatory statements impugn the reputation of Prime Minister Stephen Harper,” Dearden writes in a letter of notice.

Who knows what’s coming next, but one things for sure: Harper has decided he doesn’t want an election over this issue. Unless the Liberals have more proof to offer (and believe me, the folks at the “Warren Kinsella coffee house and war room” are looking), they won’t be inclined to bring down the government over this issue – at least not yet.

Politicians acting badly, whack-a-mole politics

  1. 300baud
    March 3rd, 2008 at 15:23 | #1

    pooh-pooh this whole thing because my team are the bad guys.

    This is *so hard* to overcome. I don’t even know who my team is for sure, but I’m usually pretty certain who the other guys are, and it warps my thinking to an embarrassing degree. I try very hard to be objective, but even when I think I’m correcting for my bias, in hindsight I can tell I usually failed.

    I wonder why it is so important to people to stake out a view and defend it. Both against other views and, when it becomes inconvenient, even against reality. I used to be curious and interested in what really is, but now despite my better judgment I’m more interested in just thinking I’m right. Maybe it’s time to unplug, I don’t know what else to do about it.

  2. Brian
    March 3rd, 2008 at 23:38 | #2

    I don’t even know who my team is for sure, but I’m usually pretty certain who the other guys are, and it warps my thinking to an embarrassing degree.

    Very well put. I’m not so sure I’m with the Conservatives, but I sure as hell am not with the Liberals. I wonder too if it’s someone ingrained tribal instinct in us. But when I started this blog I swore I was going to try and be objective. Hard to do some days.

    AS for unplugging, I slowed way down last year, as much from computer/internet/blogger problems as frustration, but the latter was part of it too.

    PS, isn’t it very odd that a web based spell checker doesn’t recognize the word internet?

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