The WAR on Science: Thursday, November 21, 2013, 7:00 pm Room 1900, SFU Harbour Ctr

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http://www.cbc.ca/news/health/scien...under-health-research-grant-changes-1.2858862

Scientists will be forced to knock on doors under health research grant changes
Future of health research in fledgling fields at stake, researchers say
By Kelly Crowe, CBC News Posted: Dec 03, 2014 12:49 PM ET Last Updated: Dec 03, 2014 12:49 PM ET

Photo of Kelly Crowe

Kelly Crowe
Medical science

Kelly Crowe is a medical sciences correspondent for CBC News, specializing in health and biomedical research. She joined CBC in 1991, and has spent 25 years reporting on a wide range of national news and current affairs, with a particular interest in science and medicine.

Canadian Institutes of Health Research
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
There’s a new controversy raging in Canada’s scientific community as word spreads about impending changes to the country’s major health science research organization.

In what has been called a "rebellion," emails are flying as scientists share news about a recent decision by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research's Governing Council. They say it will force scientists to shop around for matching external funds before they can access public money that used to be granted with no strings attached.

Fred Wien
The CIHR's decisions "can only be described as top-down, secretive and disrespectful," says Fred Wien. (Patrick Callaghan/CBC)

“Part of the reason for the rebellion is that the process that the senior leadership of CIHR has used to make these decisions can only be described as top-down, secretive and disrespectful," Fred Wien, professor emeritus at Dalhousie University wrote in a letter to colleagues.

"I feel very strongly, and a majority of my colleagues feel the same way, that the interests of Canadians are not being served," said one researcher who was recently briefed on the changes.

Aboriginal health research shift expected
To understand what’s going on requires a short primer on how medical research is funded in Canada.

Most of the country’s health scientists apply for funding through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, which receives just over a billion dollars a year from Ottawa for health science research.

About half of that money is awarded through an open competition, in a process so competitive that only around 15 per cent of those who apply are successful in securing research grants.

And scientists were already upset about new rules in that open competition. It overhauled a long standing peer review process where scientists met to discuss which grants were the best candidates for funding. It also set aside almost half of the money to fund a small number of large labs or collaborations, leaving the rest of the scientists to compete for limited funding opportunities.

'Many of these resource industries are the cause of many of our health problems so to get funding from them would be problematic.'
- Rod McCormick

Those changes had already "imposed significant anxiety and confusion among researchers," according to one letter sent to the head of CIHR.

Now, adding to that confusion, is a new series of changes that will affect the structure of the CIHR’s 13 research institutes, which specialize in areas such as aboriginal health, child health, gender studies, nutrition, and aging.

The institutes each have their own independent advisory board, and they award grants based on priorities they establish within each institute, to focus on specialized areas of research.

Or at least that’s how it used to be.

Now, in a decision making process described as "shrouded in secrecy," the CIHR is implementing changes that risk pitting one institute against the other as their budgets are cut in half.

The other half of the money is being pooled into a common fund, and to access that money the institutes will have to compete with each other, and the scientists will have to knock on doors to find matching external funding.

It’s a requirement that has raised particular concerns at the Institute for Aboriginal People’s Health, where researchers fear they have few options for finding those matching funds.

"Unfortunately for aboriginal people, we don’t really have many organizations we can leverage with," said Rod McCormick, who holds the B.C. Chair in Aboriginal Early Childhood Development at Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, B.C. "I don’t think it’s a secret that the Harper government wants us to get our funding from resource industries. But many of these resource industries are the cause of many of our health problems so to get funding from them would be problematic."

Others have echoed that concern.

"We also came to understand that our work would require substantial investment by industry partners that we simply couldn’t attract or that would not be acceptable to Aboriginal communities," wrote Charlotte Loppie, professor at the School of Public Health and Social Policy at the University of Victoria. "We simply can’t justify why we must partner with the very industries that are harming them or their fellow nations."

The Harper government has made it clear that collaboration between federally funded scientists and the private sector is a priority, and some scientists believe the CIHR is following that directive.

"The end result of the changes will be to push scientists to commercialize and to work on research that will produce concrete results almost immediately," said a member of the one of the institute advisory boards who spoke off the record. "The changes will have the effect of shooting the future in the leg by not investing more in research that will produce results over time."

"It’s absurd to be forced to make an argument in 2014 about why a country needs to invest in long term basic science,” that source said.

In what has been described as "near unanimous negative sentiment," at least eight out of the 13 boards have written to protest the changes, which also include eliminating the individual institute advisory boards, and then bundling the institutes into four groups. The institutes are also losing dedicated staff based in Ottawa that were attached to each institute.

"Many scientists view this as a major concern because it really challenges the operating ability of the Institutes," said Bill Avison, from Western University in London, Ont.

What’s at stake, some say, is the future of health research in areas such as aboriginal health. That’s why news of the recent decision prompted outrage and anger from some of the most prominent researchers in Canada’s aboriginal research community.

"A serious rift is now developing between CIHR and the Aboriginal health community and beyond," wrote Wien, in a letter to the CIHR.

Aboriginal health research is a relatively young field of study in Canada, and for a decade the CIHR had a special fund to help indigenous students earn Masters and PhD degrees. That funding has recently been cut by CIHR, further hampering their ability to compete for research money.

"It’s not a level playing field," said McCormick. "There aren’t very many aboriginal health researchers in Canada. We don’t have the senior researchers, we don’t have the numbers that can compete against the biomedical researchers who are well established in Canada."

The funding changes have also raised concerns for the future of child health research in Canada through the Institute of Human Development, Child and Youth Health.

"We think that it threatens the viability of health research for children in this country," said Avison, chair of the Council for Canadian Child Health Research. "The agenda for children tends to get lost in the bigger picture. The other issue of course is there’s not enough money for research in this country."

Others have said they don’t understand the reason for the changes or why they’re being brought in so quickly.

"We struggle with the lack of full disclosure on WHY such changes are being mandated," wrote the chair of the advisory board for the Institute of Nutrition, Metabolism and Diabetes

The decision was made by the CIHR’s Governing Council, which is appointed by Ottawa and includes health professionals, university officials and members from the private sector.
 
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http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/suz...ing-access-to-information-user-fees-1.2862491

Suzanne Legault warns MPs against raising access-to-information user fees
Information watchdog says budget constraints put Canadians' right to access information in jeopardy
By Kristy Kirkup, CBC News Posted: Dec 05, 2014 6:04 PM ET Last Updated: Dec 05, 2014 6:04 PM ET

Information Commissioner Suzanne Legault says a budget shortfall in her office cannot be solved by increasing user fees for access to information requests. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Canada's Access to Information Act allows members of the public to request government information from various departments. There is currently a $5 fee to make a request.

Legault told CBC News that increasing the cost is "not a good idea."

"Access to information rights are really fundamental to democracy," she said. "We have to make sure that it is appropriately resourced. It is not going to be appropriately resourced through an increase in the fee structure, unless you were to be charging such an exorbitant fee that it would be impossible for people to access their rights."

During her testimony to the committee on Thursday, Legault outlined the challenges she's facing, including a 30 per cent increase in workload and a shrinking budget.

Information office struggling with demand, finances

Legault also said the number of complaints being made about withheld or delayed information is on the rise and she needs an increased budget to address this.

"We need more investigators, and it is not my office that is in a crisis, it is the fact that Canadians' right to access government information is in jeopardy, that is the real issue," Legault said. "Because my office is underfunded to such an extent that we can't investigate their complaint in a timely manner, their rights are being thwarted."

During the Commons committee, Tory MPs proposed increasing the $5 application fee attached to requests.

"You can look at cuts or you can grow your pie," said Conservative MP Joan Crockatt.

Legault does not agree with this proposal.

"It is for the government to decide whether they want to tell Canadians they are going to have to pay more to access government information. It really is not up to my office," she said. "The only thing I can say is that as an information commissioner, I don't think this is a good idea for Canadians' access rights."

The commissioner said a bigger fee would not help with the financial problems she faces. Money from access to information fees currently goes to general revenues, not Legault's office.

Legault is poised to release recommendations next month about how to reform the Access to Information Act, which has not been overhauled since it came into effect in 1983.
 
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http://www.marketwired.com/press-re...ity-through-collective-bargaining-1973561.htm


Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada



Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada
December 03, 2014 06:00 ET

Federal Government Scientists Seek to Protect Scientific Integrity Through Collective Bargaining

OTTAWA, ONTARIO--(Marketwired - Dec. 3, 2014) - Federal government scientists are upping the ante in their dispute with the Harper government over continuing cuts to federal science programs and the muzzling of federal government scientists by bringing their concerns directly to the bargaining table. This week, the union representing federal government scientists will table a proposal that would obligate the government to negotiate scientific integrity policies, ensuring adequate public standards of science and support for science are upheld.

"Preserving scientific integrity within the federal government is crucial to ensure we can continue to protect Canadians' health, safety and the environment as well as promote genuine innovation," says Debi Daviau, President of the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC), which represents approximately 15,000 federal government scientists, engineers and researchers. "To our members, this is about much more than their salaries; it's about preserving the standards on which both Canadian public policy and public services are maintained."

The proposal being tabled would see enforceable policies negotiated that, among other things, ensure:
federal scientists have the right to speak;
reinvestment in research programs;
adequate national and international collaboration among scientists;
preservation of government science knowledge and libraries, and;
a guaranteed role in informing evidence-based public policy.

"It's sad, frankly, that it's come to this," added Daviau. "But negotiating provisions in our collective agreements seems to be the only way to get this government's attention and adopt meaningful, enforceable scientific integrity standards. At least this way our members would have the chance to grieve violations of standards they argue are essential to maintaining adequate public science services."

Many of the concerns raised by federal government scientists are detailed in two recent PIPSC reports - The Big Chill and Vanishing Science - based on an unprecedented 2013 survey of federal government scientists in the wake of massive federal government cuts in 2012 as well as recent government restrictions on the ability of federal scientists to communicate publicly dating from as early as 2007.

The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada represents some 55,000 professionals across Canada's public sector.
Note:
The Big Chill and Vanishing Science reports are available on the PIPSC Web site at:
http://www.pipsc.ca/portal/page/portal/website/issues/science/bigchill and http://www.pipsc.ca/portal/page/portal/website/issues/science/vanishingscience

CONTACT INFORMATION
Johanne Fillion
(613) 228-6310 extension 2303 (office)
(613) 883-4900 (cell)
 
http://www.pipsc.ca/portal/page/portal/website/issues/science/vanishingscience

Harper Government Cuts to Science Overwhelmingly Detrimental and Out of Sync with Public’s Priorities, Say Surveys

The Big Chill
Debi Daviau

View large image

Canadians hoping to gauge the hazards of the Harper government’s ongoing budget cuts need look no further than the impact of the cuts on government science, concludes a new report by the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) titled Vanishing Science, based on recent, separate surveys of federal government scientists and the public.

According to newly released data from a survey conducted by Environics Research, over 9 out of 10 federal government scientists (91%) believe cuts to federal science budgets – most of which take effect over the next few years – will have a detrimental impact on the federal government’s ability to serve the public. (Over half – 51% – already believe the impact to be very detrimental.) Moreover, the cuts are strangely at odds with the science priorities of the overwhelming majority of Canadians. A recent poll of Canadians, also conducted by Environics, reveals that nearly three-quarters (73%) believe public health, safety and protection of the environment should be the government’s top science priorities – some of the very areas that have come in for the severest cuts.

The report also reveals:

a significant majority of Environment Canada scientists (69%) believe Canada is doing a worse job of environmental protection than 5 years ago, nearly 9 out of 10 scientists (86%) at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans believe recent changes to the Fisheries Act will hamper Canada’s ability to protect fish and fish habitat, and 8 out of 10 scientists (80%) at the National Research Council believe Canada has done a worse job over the past 5 years of advancing our international standing in technology and innovation, an area the Harper government has particularly touted as important to the economy and that includes so-called basic research – which the government has all but defunded.

“The Harper government’s efforts to balance the federal budget in time for the 2015 election is being built on deep, unpopular cuts to public science that put at risk Canadians’ health, safety and the environment,” said PIPSC President Debi Daviau. “These are not cuts to ‘back office operations,’ as the Finance Minister described them in 2012 – not unless by ‘back office’ he means Canada’s natural environment, air and water quality, the survival of other species, and the health and safety of all Canadians.”

Invitations to participate in the online survey of federal scientists, hosted by Environics Research, were sent to 15,398 PIPSC members – scientists, researchers and engineers – engaged in scientific work in over 40 federal departments and agencies. Of these, 4,069 (26%) responded between June 5 and 19, 2013. The survey is considered accurate + or – 1.6%, 19 times out of 20. A shorter public opinion survey was conducted by Environics of 1,003 Canadians between November 14 and 20, 2013. The results are considered accurate + or – 3.1%, 19 times out of 20.

Full report http://www.pipsc.ca/portal/page/por...ience/vanishingscience/pdfs/fullreport.en.pdf
Report in brief http://www.pipsc.ca
Environics Survey of Scientists http://www.pipsc.ca/portal/page/por...anishingscience/pdfs/survey_scientists.en.pdf
Environics Survey of Canadians http://www.pipsc.ca/portal/page/por...vanishingscience/pdfs/survey_canadians.en.pdf
 
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http://o.canada.com/technology/envi...lds-details-of-16-million-pr-for-oil-industry

Stephen Harper’s government withholds details of $16-million PR campaign for oil industry
Minister wants to spend up to $16.5 million on advertising

Joe Oliver
Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver.
PHOTO: THE CANADIAN PRESS/SEAN KILPATRICK


Mike De Souza
Published: May 22, 2013, 3:57 pm

OTTAWA — The Harper government is declining to explain how and where it is spending millions of taxpayer dollars on advertising to promote oil, gas and pipeline companies as well as other Canadian natural resources.

Facing nearly four hours of questions from opposition MPs this week, Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver also declined to provide specifics on a training program, worth up to $500,000, for his department’s scientists and other officials, “designed to help them communicate with the public and to do so in a way that is accessible to the public.”

Overall, Oliver said his department wanted to spend up to $16.5 million on advertising in the upcoming year, with details made available “at the appropriate time.”

“This is a critical moment in the development of our natural resources, and therefore we have allocated a significant amount of money for advertising,” Oliver told a special committee studying spending estimates in the House of Commons on Tuesday evening.

NDP natural resources critic Peter Julian said that the new spending represents a 7,000 per cent increase in advertising budgets at Natural Resources Canada since 2010-2011.

Oliver said a key part of the latest advertising was aimed at promoting the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, a multibillion dollar project proposed by Alberta-based TransCanada, that would link Canada’s oilsands industry to refineries on the gulf coast of Texas. Canadian and American oil companies are lobbying the Obama government to approve the pipeline in order to support oilsands expansion and jobs.

Oliver declined to say how much money was being spent in the U.S., or in Europe where the Harper government is lobbying against climate change legislation requiring a reduction in heat-trapping greenhouse gases from transportation fuels. He also declined to say whether any advertising money would be spent to promote renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power.

In March of 2010, federal and Alberta government officials met with oil and gas industry CEOs to discuss “upping their game” for oilsands outreach and communications as part of a renewed strategy — promoted by Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s former staffer, Bruce Carson — to “turn up the volume” on public relations and show that “issues are being addressed and we have the right attitude,” according to internal federal records previously released to Postmedia News.

The NDP’s Julian denounced the multimillion-dollar campaign, describing it as “political advertising.” He also criticized the need to spend taxpayer dollars to train scientists on public speaking, in the context of an ongoing investigation by a parliamentary watchdog looking into allegations that the government is muzzling its scientists from speaking publicly about their research.

“The idea that there would be some kind of formal media muzzling of scientists is something that most Canadians would profoundly disagree with,” said Julian.

Liberal natural resources critic Marc Garneau also challenged Oliver to come clean on potential impacts of spills and accidents of diluted oilsands crude in the Pacific Ocean.

Nearly three years after a major spill of diluted heavy oil from the oilsands in Michigan, Alberta-based Enbridge is still facing orders from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to clean up the remaining pollution. In Canada, Oliver said, government scientists were studying the issue and didn’t have answers.

“I said they are conducting research,” said Oliver. “How would I know what the precise results of that research would be?”

But Garneau said that the government should have these answers if it wants to promote development projects such as pipelines to the west coast to expand exports of Canadian oil overseas.

“This is irresponsible,” said Garneau. “First you do your science.”

Opposition MPs also attempted to question Oliver’s grasp of climate-change science in the wake of recent comments casting doubt on scientific evidence that humans are contributing to global warming that could cause irreversible damage to the planet’s ecosystems.

When asked if he believed recently observed above-average global temperatures confirmed that climate change was occurring, Oliver spent a few seconds shuffling through papers on his desk before agreeing.

“I do not know what all this belief business is about,” he said in response to a question from Linda Duncan, an NDP MP from Edmonton. “We have said that climate change is a pressing global problem, and we are acting to deal with it. The nature of our policy response is different from that of the opposition parties.”

Natural Resources Canada told Postmedia News on Wednesday that it would try to answer questions about its public relations and communications training spending as soon as possible.

The department subsequently emailed Postmedia News explaining that details of the $16.5 million in advertising would be published at some point in the future. It also said that the special training program for scientists and staff was required under the government’s public relations policy and that the program’s budget would not exceed $400,000 at Natural Resources Canada.

Read more Articles from Mike De Souza
Twitter.Com/Mikedesouza
© COPYRIGHT - POSTMEDIA NEWS
 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/ott...ection-campaign-funded-by-taxpayers-1.2864611

Ottawa's ads called a pre-election campaign funded by taxpayers
Government advertises its new family tax policies with language from the Conservative playbook
By Sophia Harris, CBC News Posted: Dec 09, 2014 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 09, 2014 5:28 AM ET

The $7.2-million ad campaign for Canada's 150th anniversary has begun 2½ years in advance, raising the suspicions of critics who say it's being used to bolster the Conservative brand. (Canadian Heritage)


Tax season may be months away, but the federal government has already taken to the airwaves to inform Canadians about upcoming tax breaks for families.

Canada’s 150th anniversary is even further in the distance. But Canadians have already been bombarded with feel-good messages about the upcoming birthday — 2½ years from now.

Canada Job Grant ads cost $2.5M for non-existent program
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Critics say these multimillion-dollar taxpayer-funded ad campaigns that launched online and on air over the past few months appear timed for one main goal: to get Canadians to vote Conservative in the next federal election in October.

“Frankly, it’s partisan election preparation. It’s in the nature of propaganda in order to strengthen the Conservative brand in the final year before the general election,” says Mathieu Ravignat, federal NDP treasury board critic.

Strong. Proud. Free

Jonathan Rose, a political science professor at Queen's University, says a slogan used in both campaigns appears as if it was lifted from the Conservative Party playbook. Television ads end with the tag line: “Canada, Strong. Proud. Free.”

'It’s in the nature of propaganda in order to strengthen the Conservative brand in the final year before the general election​.'
— NDP treasury board critic Mathieu Ravignat
The 2011 Conservative Party election platform stated it supported “a Canada strong and free …proud of its history.” The Conservative Party’s website says it stands “for a Canada that is strong, united, independent, and free” (emphasis added). It also notes that Stephen Harper is dedicated to building a “stronger” and “prouder” Canada.

“They are reinforcing the message that ... the party stands for. And so they’re getting the benefits of all this free publicity on the backs of taxpayers,” says Rose.

He says the family tax benefits campaign also reinforces one of the Conservative Party’s main mandates, “supporting families.”

The party’s 2011 platform stated that “Canadians work hard to provide for their families.” The current 2014 commercial for tax benefits tells viewers that “across Canada, families are working hard.” The election platform also talked about tax breaks “putting money back in the pocket of taxpayers.” The current ad’s voiceover says the new government tax measures “could help put thousands of dollars back into your pocket.”

Suspect timing?

Rose also takes issue with the timing of the tax campaign, which began in early November and runs until Dec. 11. Canadians can’t access any new perks until they file their 2014 tax returns, likely next March or April. The beefed-up child care expense deduction won’t even kick in until the 2015 tax season. The enhanced child care benefit has yet to be approved by Parliament and, even if passed, parents still won't get their cheques until July.

Universal Child Care Benefit
The enhanced universal child care benefit has not yet been approved by Parliament, but ads are running now. (CBC)

“There’s nothing citizens can do now. So [the campaign is] completely meaningless. What it does, however, is prime citizens about how great the federal government is in providing benefits for the family,” says Rose.

The Finance Department says there’s nothing suspect about the campaign’s timing. Even if Canadians can’t access the tax benefits now, department spokeswoman Stephanie Rubec points out that a couple of the perks “are effective as of 2014” and that the other ones are coming soon.

“It is thus timely to inform Canadians about these upcoming tax cuts and increased benefits so that they can fully benefit from them,” she said in a statement.

The Prime Minister's Office also says there's nothing suspect about the campaign's motive: "These ads are intended to ensure that Canadian families are aware of the benefits available to them, which allows them to plan and budget accordingly," says Jason MacDonald, spokesman with the PMO.

The Finance Ministry would not put a price tag on its tax-break ads. Government records show the department was allocated $10 million for advertising in 2014.

Early anniversary

NDP MP Ravignat also finds it strange that the Conservative government created ads to promote Canada’s 150th anniversary more than two years in advance. In addition to an extensive online campaign, TV ads appeared earlier this fall and will run again in January.

“The timing is suspicious, and it is clear that they want to associate themselves with I guess the glory of that particular celebration. And it is an assumption that [this government] will be there in two years," says Ravignat.

The Heritage Ministry was allocated $7.2 million in 2014 for Canada’s 150th anniversary advertising.

The 60-second version of the commercial showcases the pre-Confederation Charlottetown and Quebec conferences combined with emotive scenes of a modern Canada Day fireworks celebration and Sidney Crosby playing hockey.

When asked why a campaign is underway now, the Heritage Department said this year marks the 150th anniversary of the two conferences: “The Charlottetown and Quebec conferences were key events that led to the creation of Confederation — and are both pivotal moments that helped to shape our country: Strong, Proud, and Free,” said department spokesman Tim Warmington in a statement.
 
The TPP is the dirtiest deal you've never heard of.
<iframe width="854" height="510" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/OUAzeeSbc38" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/..._nearly_500_million_over_past_five_years.html

Ottawa’s advertising contracts reach nearly $500 million over past five years

Ottawa inked or amended $93.2 million worth of advertising contracts in 2013-14, a Star analysis of ad contracts shows.

Among major campaigns, the government’s ubiquitous “Economic Action Plan” advertisements cost $14.9 million,

By: Alex Boutilier Staff Reporter, Published on Sun Dec 14 2014

OTTAWA—Ottawa inked or amended more than $93 million in advertising contracts last year, and nearly $500 million over the past five years, according to a Star analysis of Public Works contracting data.

The maximum value of last year’s contracts came in at $93.2 million, the analysis shows, and the work covers both the provision of advertising services as well as media buys and ad placements.

Public Works noted the final bill will only be made public in Ottawa’s annual advertising report, released 12 to 16 months after the end of the fiscal year.

“The contract values are the maximum the government is contracted to pay suppliers ... They are not the actual payments made to a supplier,” the department noted in a prepared statement after the Star requested an interview.

“The total value of payments made to advertising firms is reported in Public Works’ annual report on advertising.”

But contracting history from the last five years shows the contract value is a reliable indicator of the overall bill. Between 2009-10 and 2012-13, Public Works reported $367.1 million in advertising spending. The contract value data puts the figure slightly higher, at $413 million.

The difference between the two figures represents contracts coming in under budget, or altered after the initial deal was struck.

Even with that variance, the data shows that Ottawa’s total spending on advertising services is rapidly approaching $500 million over the past five fiscal years.

“This government has almost spent half a billion dollars on government advertising ... and at the same time they’re telling veterans and other Canadians that the cupboard is bare,” said Mathieu Ravignat, the NDP’s Treasury Board critic.

“It takes a certain amount of cognitive dissonance to say both of those things at the same time.”

The majority of the 2013-14 contracts went to Cossette Communications, the Quebec-based advertising firm that for years has served as the government’s go-to ad-buying agency.

A spokeswoman for Cossette’s Montreal office, Marilyne Levesque, said most of the money associated with those contracts flows through the company to purchase ads, with the company taking a percentage.

According to the government’s last official report on advertising activities, spending hit a five-year high at $136.3 million in 2009-10. Between 2010 and 2013, spending ranged between $69 million and $83 million annually.

The lion’s share of that spending went to television ads, costing federal coffers $33 million in 2012-13 — a full 60 per cent of all ad spending that year. The next largest amount went to Internet ads, totalling $10.9 million or 19 per cent of advertising spending.

Among major campaigns, the government’s ubiquitous “Economic Action Plan” advertisements cost $14.9 million, followed by ads focusing on “Responsible Resource Development” ($8.2 million) and a campaign promoting tax cuts ($7 million).

All three are likely to figure prominently in the Conservatives’ 2015 bid for re-election. Liberal MP David McGuinty accused the government of using public funds for partisan gain.

“What the prime minister is doing, what his government is doing ... there’s only one word to describe it: they’re cheating. They’re cheating because they’re using public resources to further their chances of electoral success,” said McGuinty.

McGuinty has written to Finance Minister Joe Oliver to urge him to adopt his private member’s bill, C-544. McGuinty said the bill would give the auditor general’s office the authority to nix public ad campaigns that too closely resembled political messaging.

The Star requested an interview with Public Works Minister Diane Finlay’s office on Monday. Outside of the department’s response, a spokesman for the minister’s office said they had nothing to add.

Value of advertising contracts worth more than $1 million, by government department
 
http://www.thestar.com/news/insight...new_book_is_a_takedown_of_stephen_harper.html

Author Michael Harris’s new book is a takedown of Stephen Harper
Party of One by Michael Harris argues that Prime Minister Stephen Harper is destroying Parliament and Canada’s reputation in the world.
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Veteran Canadian diplomat Paul Heinbecker says Harper has made us outliers on the international stage.VIEW 3 PHOTOSzoom
OSAMU HONDA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Veteran Canadian diplomat Paul Heinbecker says Harper has made us outliers on the international stage.

By: Jim Coyle News, Published on Sun Oct 19 2014
By the time author Michael Harris nears the end of his magisterial review of the strife and times of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, it is as if he felt the need of a shower.
Almost 500 pages of Party of One: Stephen Harper and Canada’s Radical Makeover have by then been devoted to chronicling the Harper government’s bullying, abuse, duplicity, betrayal, affinity for crooks, public shaming of individuals, diminishment of democratic institutions.
“It was hard every day getting up and working on this particular government,” Harris told the Star in advance of the book’s publication this week. “It made you feel poorly.”
So in the last chapter he seeks figurative respite. He takes readers on a drive across the Canso Causeway to Cape Breton, N.S., and on to River Bourgeois, there to meet a man worlds away from officialdom, backroomers, talk show know-it-alls.
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Stephen Harper announces $5.8 billion for federal infrastructure‹›••••••••••
He goes to meet Farley Mowat, then 92, in the last months of his life, yet sound of mind and opinion.

“Stephen Harper is probably the most dangerous human being ever elevated to power in Canada,” Mowat tells the author.
“We took Parliament for granted, but, like the environment, it turns out that it is an incredibly delicate and fragile structure. Harper has smothered MPs and is destroying Parliament.”
Harris presents a meticulously researched, deeply reported case for why Mowat was in all respects correct. “I think that (the Harper government) badly needed a rational critique in detail and I hadn’t seen it,” he says.
Now we have one. And it may be that since Peter C. Newman’s landmark Renegade in Power 50 years ago there has not been such a comprehensive account of a Canadian government and critical eye cast on a prime minister’s poverty of spirit. In fact, Party of One will likely stand as the definitive text on the Harper government, the go-to reference on every Ottawa bookshelf.
Through his long career in journalism, Harris, now 66 and national affairs columnist for iPolitics, has been drawn to stories — Mount Cashel, Donald Marshall — of injustice and abuse of power. Again in this book, “that’s the No. 1 impulse,” he says. “A lot of the things that (Harper) was doing struck me as not only unjust but unjustifiable.
“In doing the research I found I was not the only person who thought so, and people a lot smarter and more involved in the system understood the nature of the threat that he presents.”
Harris believes the most important quote in the book is from former Commons Speaker Peter Milliken that appears as the frontispiece:
“Parliament can hardly be weakened any more than it already is. Harper can’t go much further without making the institution dysfunctional. He is trying to control every aspect of House business. In fact, it will have to be returned to its former state by someone if we are to have a democracy.”
It’s no accident that Harris opens the book with the account of a 22-year-old alarmed by the prime minister — former Senate page Brigette DePape, who famously held up a “Stop Harper” sign in the chamber during the 2011 Throne Speech — and ends it with 92-year-old Mowat basically expressing the same thing.
In the chapters between, Harris provides considerable evidence to support their concern.
He reviews the robocalls scandal, the Senate scandal, the muzzling of Canada’s scientists when their research posed obstacles to the government’s agenda, the kneecapping of independent regulators and arm’s-length officers of Parliament, the dismay of career diplomats to the makeover of Canada’s international standing.
Some verdicts on the Harper government, coming as they do from those not given to such public judgments, are beyond devastating.
“Canada’s diplomacy is hugely different under Harper,” veteran diplomat Paul Heinbecker, former ambassador to Germany, tells the author. “It is a reversal of our history.
“We have become outliers. We are seen as more American than the Americans, more Israeli than Likud. Given what our foreign policy has become, I would not have joined the service today if I were a young man.”
Harris lists the attacks on former Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission president Linda Keen, former parliamentary budget officer Kevin Page, former auditor general Sheila Fraser, the chief justice of the Supreme Court of Canada.
“They wanted to do their duty and Stephen Harper wanted them to do what they were told,” he writes.
In the case of Keen, a leader in her field who has never worked again in Canada, the lesson was, Harris says, that “when (Harper) enters your life and gets you in his sights, it’s not just to best you, it’s basically to crush you.”
With his government, normal constraints do not apply.
As former information commissioner Robert Marleau told Harris, “when his government was found in contempt (of Parliament), Harper treated it like a minor, partisan irritation. Parliament is now a minor process obstacle.
“Canadians are sleepwalking through dramatic social, economic and political changes surreptitiously being implemented by a government abusing omnibus bills and stifling public and parliamentary debate,” Marleau continued.
“Mr. Harper has not played within the rules. Having attained absolute power, he has absolutely abused that power to the maximum.”
Still, the most telling appraisals of Stephen Harper come, as is often the case, not from his political enemies but those, like former Reform party leader Preston Manning, who once admired and worked with him.
In the end, the most chilling vignette in Party of One might be that provided by former cabinet minister Helena Guergis.
In the beginning, “everyone tried to please him,” she said. “I admit it, for a time I was one of them. There is so much jealousy amongst caucus, so pathetic. All hoping for some small recognition — recognition meaning favour with the leader. He is the one who gives things out.”
In 2007, when Guergis and former MP Rahim Jaffer announced their engagement to caucus, there was a thunderous ovation. With one exception.
Stephen Harper remained seated, staring.
“I noticed that he was twirling his foot,” Guergis told Harris. “The way he does when he is angry and thinking of pouncing.”
 
http://www.vice.com/en_ca/read/the-...-and-burned-environmental-books-and-documents

The Harper Government Has Trashed and Destroyed Environmental Books and Documents
January 15, 2014
Jordan Sowunmi
by Jordan Sowunmi
Staff Writer and Editorial CMS Manager
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Initial reports said some books were literally burned which the Department of Fisheries and Oceans has subsequently denied. Photo via.

In the first few days of 2014, scientists, journalists, and environmentalists were horrified to discover that the Harper government had begun a process to close seven of the 11 of Canada’s world-renowned Department of Fisheries and Oceans libraries, citing a consolidation and digitizing effort as the reason. Reports immediately proliferated that the process was undertaken in careless haste, with the officials sent to gather and transfer the documents allegedly neglecting to take proper inventory of the centuries’ worth of documents containing vital information on environmental life, from aquatic ecosystems to water safety and polar research, with some documents reportedly dumped in landfills or burned, leading some scientists to refer to it as a ‘libricide.'

Soon after, a widely disseminated photograph emerged displaying a dumpster at the Maurice Lamontage Institute in Mont-Joli Quebec, stuffed with hundreds of carelessly discarded historic books and documents. In Halifax, Kelly Wheelan-Eans, an environmental researcher with the Manitoban Wetlands told CBC News that he saved hundreds of documents that he found abandoned in an empty library. “It was really hard to figure out where to start because there was so many documents that you just went 'Oh my God,'” he said, disbelief palpable in his voice. “They just left this lying here?”

The incautious nature of the consolidation effort adds another alarming chapter to a Harper government that appears deadset on directing how scientific research is conducted in Canada. Last Sunday, CBC’s the Fifth Estate aired an investigation on how the Harper government has dealt with scientists over the past seven years. The doc illustrated a battle between an ideology driven administration and mostly apolitical scientists simply pursuing the facts gleaned from their research, and how it led many to be silenced and defunded. Scientists discussed being hamstrung and dissuaded from pursuing politically inconvenient facts, instances of research that didn't fit policy directives being curtailed or shut down completely; world-renowned researchers who were summarily dismissed and barred from accessing their work; and programs monitoring food inspection, water quality and climate change being reduced. The federal government has dismissed over 2,000 scientists since 2008.

The government denies political objectives have anything to do with the decision to close the DFO libraries, citing $473,000 in savings and a lack of public interest as motivation for the decision.

Still, regardless of the incentives behind the recent cuts, it’s easy to see why on-lookers are viewing this politically suspicious decision with skepticism. Since taking office in 2006, the Harper government has governed with an iron-fist, establishing unprecedented barriers to information on the road to becoming the most secretive administration in Canadian history.

This type of fanatical secrecy comes with a host of problems for the public. “Harper’s government is different from previous administrations in the disdain it’s had for the media, and the obsession this government has with controlling the message,” said Dr. Jonathan Rose, an associate professor of Political Science at Queen’s University. “Ensuring that citizens have access to the right kind of information to make the proper decisions is integral, and if government is misleading in its communications, then the citizens are unable to do their democratic duty. It’s a problem because it inhibits the public’s decision-making process.”

As a whole, the Harper government has proven itself to be no friends of science. An editorial in the New York Times earlier this year excoriated Harper for a prolonged campaign in muzzling scientists. “The government of Canada—led by Stephen Harper—has made it harder and harder for publicly financed scientists to communicate with the public and with other scientists,” wrote Verlyn Klinkenborg. “Now the government is doing all it can to monitor and restrict the flow of scientific information, especially concerning research into climate change, fisheries and anything to do with the Alberta tar sands—source of the diluted bitumen that would flow through the controversial Keystone XL pipeline.”



The cuts mean fewer scientists will be able to research the waters of the Canadian Basin. Photo via.

Much of this obfuscation is happening with little outrage from the general public, allowing the Harper government’s shadowy bureaucracy to become the new normal. And it’s not because Canadians are unaware of Harper’s cloak and dagger governing. In a poll conducted by Ipsos Reid for Postmedia and Global News earlier this year, two-thirds of Canadians stated they believed that “the Harper Conservatives are too secretive and have not kept their promise to govern according to high ethical standards.”

While the Department of Fisheries and Oceans currently contains over 600,000 pieces of material, only 30,000 have been digitized. According to the Department of Fisheries website, they will be discarding duplicates and adding the rest online by request. They failed to mention anything about the books that will not be digitized due to copyright laws.

Keeping the public and press in the dark about what’s happening at the DFO is not without dangerous historical precedent, says Kelly Toughill, a journalism professor at King’s University in Halifax. “About 18 years ago the federal government ignored, then muzzled DFO scientists who were warning that cod was being over-fished in Newfoundland,” she wrote to me over email. “The result was the complete collapse of the cod fishery and the complete collapse of the economy of what was then Canada's poorest province.”

In a 1995 piece that garnered him a National Newspaper Award, Canadian Press reporter Steve Thorne wrote of scientists at the DFO whose research was suppressed and neutered by the government in an eerily similar fashion to what many Canadian scientists are saying today. “Federal fisheries officials routinely destroy memos, minutes and other records to hide politically unpalatable science and thwart access-to-information requests,” he wrote. “[…] Officials at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans have even tried to discredit scientists whose findings don’t jibe with political agendas.”

Whether the recent cuts to the DFO were simply capitulations to budget concerns, driven by ideological objectives, or something in between is up for debate. What isn’t up for debate is how the Harper government has made the muddling and obsessive guarding of information an administrative mandate, leaving Canadians in the dark in a time when international government encroachments on our personal information are at an all-time high.

“The next several months will see a battle over people who want greater accountability and transparency and a government who will try to frame the election message as one of fiscal responsibility,” said Dr. Rose. “And it’s up to the voters to decide which they find most persuasive.”


@jordanisjoso
 
http://o.canada.com/news/party-of-one-harper-and-the-merchant-of-venom

Maher: Stephen Harper and the ‘merchant of venom’
Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaks during a moderated question and answer session on the National Conservation Plan in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., on Friday, Oct. 17.
PHOTO: THE CANADIAN PRESS/ADRIAN WYLD

Stephen Maher
Published: October 17, 2014, 6:14 pm
Updated: 2 months ago

In 1988, Steve Harper ran for the Reform Party in Calgary West against his former boss, Progressive Conservative MP Jim Hawkes.

The world wasn’t quite ready for Reform back then, and Harper came a distant second and went back to Ottawa to work for Deborah Grey, Reform’s first MP.

In 1993, with Reform on the rise and Mulroney’s government collapsing, Harper ran again — calling himself Stephen this time — and trounced Hawkes, with a little help from an American political consultant named Arthur Finkelstein.

Finkelstein wanted to get “Hawke’s head on a platter,” because the conservative think-tank, the National Citizens Coalition, who hired Finkelstein, blamed him for the “gag laws” that restricted the amount of money that groups like the NCC could spend during election campaigns.

Michael Harris writes about the Harper-Finkelstein link in his new book, Party of One, which comes out this week.

Harris, whose investigative work over the decades has led to three commissions of inquiry, has written a careful, calm, 544-page examination of the dark side of the Harper government, which belongs on book shelves next to the friendlier assessment provided by Paul Wells in The Longer I’m Prime Minister.

Harper is inspired by Republicans, a leader hostile to Canada’s system of parliamentary democracy, and in Party of One Harris meticulously traces what he sees as Harper’s attack on that system, getting measured comments from Preston Manning, Sheila Fraser, Linda Keen, Kevin Page, Robert Marleau and Peter Milliken; and spicier stuff from Michael Sona, Rahim Jaffer, Helena Guergis and Bridget DePape.

Finkelstein is a “brilliant and secretive political consultant who had perfected the political attack ad,” Harris writes, tracing his connection to Harper over the years.

The prime minister’s office says Finkelstein has never worked for Harper or the party, but Harris suggests he influenced the prime minister.

From 1993, when he unseated Hawkes, until last week, Harper has been fighting to make Canada safe for attack ads. As he has changed positions on other things, abandoning previously seemingly strongly held views, he has been consistent on this. When he was running the NCC, Harper unsuccessfully sued the government, contending that limits on third-party ads violated the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Last week, leaked cabinet documents showed that he wants to change copyright law to allow political parties to use news footage in attack ads.

And throughout his career, Harper has been carpet bombing his opponents with Finkelstein-style campaigns.

This week, he got some fresh help from his old friends at the NCC, who launched anti-Trudeau radio ads that dovetail nicely with Tory attacks.

Harris connects the dots between Harper and Finkelstein, who is nicknamed the “merchant of venom” because of his skill with attack ads.

“Finkelstein’s modus operandi was always the same: pinpoint polling aimed at exposing a weakness in an opponent; then use a trenchant, repetitive advertisement to exploit the candidate’s Achilles heel,” Harris writes.

Finkelstein keeps a low profile, preferring to avoid the media and deliver his advice to politicians in face-to-face meetings, but Harris found a recording of a talk he gave in Prague in May 2011 in which he outlined his tactics. (Interestingly, he told his audience that Greek riots could be used to discredit austerity opponents, which Harper’s election ads did that month in Canada.)

Finkelstein said that in politics, objective truth isn’t important. Perceptions are. And it’s possible to win elections by creating “a totally negative vote against an opponent while not showing your own candidate,” Harris writes.

Harper often seems to efface himself, projecting blandness, leaving the spotlight on his opponents.

In his book, Wells describes the prime minister going through speeches written for him, taking out colourful language and memorable phrases, which perplexes his speech writers. He avoids reporters, preferring to recite talking points in response to questions from friendlies, like Angelo Lombardo, of the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters, who conducted a Q & A with him on Friday.

His opponents, who must seek public attention by blathering at reporters, inevitably expose themselves to attack.

What has been most successful about Harper’s attack-ad campaigns against Stephane Dion and Michael Ignatieff is that the Conservatives were able to identify the Achilles heel of both men. After that it was only a question of money, of which the Conservatives have more than their opponents.

Finkelstein is credited with “swiftboating” John Kerry in 2004, which allowed George W. Bush to beat him.

He told the Prague audience, correctly, that Kerry might have won the election if he’d responded more quickly to the attack ads.

This points to the problem with Finkelstein-inspired attack ads in Canada.

American research shows that attack ads can help tuned-out voters engage, particularly when campaigns are forced to respond to one another’s attacks. At their best, they can create real debate, highlighting the contrasts between candidates.

In Canada, for the past two elections, only the Conservatives have mounted effective attack ads — and a lot more of them — so observing our elections has been as dispiriting as watching a one-sided boxing match.
smaher@postmedia.com
@stphnmaher

Read more Articles from Stephen Maher
Twitter.Com/Stphnmaher
© COPYRIGHT - POSTMEDIA NEWS
 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/amn...for-putting-economy-ahead-of-rights-1.2874573

Amnesty International slams Harper government for putting economy ahead of rights
Jobs, economic growth linked to human rights: Amnesty International Canada
By Mike Blanchfield, The Canadian Press Posted: Dec 16, 2014 8:25 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 16, 2014 8:25 AM ET

Amnesty International Secretary General Alex Neve speaks during a news conference on Syrian refugees earlier this month. Amnesty International's Canada branch has issued a wide-ranging attack on the Harper government for making economic development a higher priority than human rights, especially in resource development.
Amnesty International Secretary General Alex Neve speaks during a news conference on Syrian refugees earlier this month. Amnesty International's Canada branch has issued a wide-ranging attack on the Harper government for making economic development a higher priority than human rights, especially in resource development. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press

Amnesty International's Canada branch has issued a wide-ranging attack on the Harper government for making economic development a higher priority than human rights — especially in resource development.


Alex Neve, Amnesty's director general, said the organization wants human rights issues to be on the agenda for the expected federal election in 2015.

Canadians will be talking about jobs and economic prosperity during next year's election, and those issues are inextricably linked to questions of human rights, said Neve.

Amnesty is accusing the government of doing too little to ensure that the rights of aboriginal people are adequately protected in the hundreds of major resource projects that are planned for the next decade.

"With all the attention that will be on jobs and the economy, we have to recognize how important it is to deal with indigenous people's land rights, corporate accountability and a trade policy that is grounded in human rights," said Neve.

"All of that is not only good for rights and justice, but that's actually ultimately the road for more sustainable economic growth lies."

A spokeswoman for Natural Resources Minister Greg Rickford said the government has gone to great lengths to consult with First Nations on resources projects.

Group wants rights on agenda for voters

"Our government has taken substantial action to enhance participation of First Nations in resource development," said Alexandra Lemieux in an emailed statement.

"For example, we recently opened the Major Projects Management Office-West to enhance engagement between governments, industry and First Nations."

Amnesty also said Canadian companies in the mining industry are not being held to account for human rights violations overseas.

Neve said Amnesty remains a non-partisan organization, but it wants rights issues on the agenda for voters.

"We have laid out issues and recommendations that we hope people take seriously when they are figuring out what kinds of questions they want to ask their candidates, and ultimately how they vote."

Amnesty said the government is selectively deciding to help some Canadians in prisons overseas and not others.

For example, the government has intervened on behalf of Huseyin Celil in China, Bashir Makhtal in Ethiopia, Mohamed Fahmy and Khaled Al-Qazzaz in Egypt, but not Ronald Smith, who is on death row in the United States, or convicted terrorist Omar Khadr.

Government defends record

A spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird defended the government's record in defending human rights.

"You can see it in our dedication to empowering women, including work for young girls in the maternal and child health initiative, and our campaign to end child, early and forced marriage," Adam Hodge said in an emailed statement.

Amnesty said that while the government's signature aid initiatives are good, its focus on maternal, newborn and child health and early forced marriage in the developing world will be undermined if full reproductive rights are not included.

The government has faced criticism for not funding abortion-related projects in those development initiatives.

Hodge noted the government has committed $3.5 billion to the maternal newborn child health initiative, including recent pledges at the Francophonie summit "that will contribute to the immunization of an additional 300 million children and aims to save up to six million lives."

© The Canadian Press, 2014
 
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http://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2014/12/2...ce=daily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=221214

The Christmas Letters: Stephen Harper on 'A Charlie Brown Christmas'
Leaked emails reveal PM's latest try at warm and fuzzy.
By Steve Burgess, Today, TheTyee.ca

The Tyee is not at liberty to divulge how these emails came into our possession. Illustration by Nora B. Kelly.

Please Advise! This Christmas Music Is Goddamn Awful

Just 'cuz it's tradition doesn't mean your ears should bleed, says Dr. Steve.


Please Advise! All Harper Wants for Christmas Is Good PR

But how to appeal to all the godless holiday heathens, he asks spinmeister Steve.


Merry Christmas. It Can't Hurt

Where's the harm in celebrating peace and good will?

Read more: Federal Politics,

Steve Burgess recently received a trove of leaked holiday emails. The Tyee feels it must publish them as a public service.

This one originated with the prime minister's director of communications:

Hey People -- The Big Guy wants to record this Charlie Brown DVD commentary as a Christmas thing. Figures it will make him look warm and fuzzy. I dunno. Can anybody at the PMO change his mind? Do they ever try? Here's his thing:

Good evening friends both young and voting age! Holiday greetings from your prime minister. For many years A Charlie Brown Christmas has been a cherished holiday tradition and tonight it is my pleasure to interpret it for a new generation.

Charlie Brown is a young man who is discontented at Christmas. This is in spite of our recent announcement of an income-splitting program that will mean a Merry Christmas for all Canadians (within a certain tax bracket). According to his friend Linus, Mr. Brown is something of a malcontent -- and believe me, there are plenty of those around. Let's turn now to our holiday songbooks and sing "You're a Mean One, Mr. Mulcair," about the hairy beast who wants to steal Christmas via socialism. Different Christmas special but it fits.

Charlie Brown becomes depressed when he goes to the mailbox and finds no Christmas cards. Still, he can hardly complain about the discontinuation of door-to-door mail delivery considering how little mail he gets, can he? No he can't unless, as mentioned, he is a malcontent. Perhaps Mr. Brown would get more holiday cards if he didn't whine quite so much. Perhaps you would too.

Charlie Brown gets some psychiatric advice from Lucy for which he pays five cents, a fine example of a private two-tier health care system at work. Lucy suggests he direct the Christmas play, which makes perfect sense because show business is full of malcontents and socialists.

Meanwhile Charlie Brown's dog Snoopy, a far more sensible creature, is decorating his doghouse with Christmas lights hoping to win first place money in a big contest. Snoopy is a self-starter who is tired of the dog dish handouts he receives each night from Mr. Brown's beloved welfare state. He wishes to make his own cash and at the same time support our resource-based economy through maximum energy consumption.

Mr. Brown becomes upset at this of course, because those in opposition are always complaining about something.

Mr. Brown's sister Sally requests money from Santa Claus, which is typical. Well, she's young -- she'll soon learn how the world works.

Mr. Brown wishes to ensure the Christmas play will not be "commercial." He would evidently prefer some sort of Marxist pageant.

Is it really a mystery why Mr. Brown is so unpopular? There is a lot of music and dancing in this part of the show. The kid on the piano is not as good as me so I usually mute this part while doing my own awesome version of "Sweet Child of Mine." Then Linus recites a passage from the Bible to remind our multicultural friends just whose statutory holidays they are poaching. (Linus now has his own show on Fox News.)

In selecting a Christmas tree Mr. Brown opts for a charity case unable even to support itself. "Everything I touch gets ruined!" he cries when the tree flops over, and Mr. Brown has got that right, friends.

That little sound bite will make for a pretty good attack ad next campaign.

Luckily the private sector steps in and saves the day, creating the robust and healthy Christmas tree that is clearly a metaphor for our True North strong and free. Everyone learns an important lesson about how the State cannot make your holiday a joyous one and moreover that Mr. Brown's untested leadership has the potential for disaster.

Please have a merrily conservative Christmas. And while we encourage you to exchange holiday greetings, remember: choose your words carefully. Snoopy works for CSIS now.

Please note our comment threads will be closed Dec. 22 to Jan. 5 to give our moderators a well-deserved break. Happy holidays, readers.
 
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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/glob...ds-undermine-the-rule-of-law/article22157964/

Errol Mendes
How partisan Conservative ads undermine the rule of law

Errol Mendes
Special to The Globe and Mail

Published Monday, Dec. 22 2014, 8:00 AM EST

Errol Mendes is a professor of constitutional and international law at the University of Ottawa and editor-in-chief of the National Journal of Constitutional Law.

In what country does a government take tax revenues and use it to pump out continuous government propaganda that tries to brainwash the citizens with its performance, whether truthful or not? Many would suggest China, Russia or even Zimbabwe. Sadly, it is also true in the Canada governed by the Stephen Harper Conservatives.

The opposition parties have claimed that the Harper government has authorized more than $600-million in disguised partisan ads since coming into office. These include some earlier Economic Action Plan television ads, and the newest ones announcing the yet-to-be implemented family tax benefits package – outrageously partisan.

When these ads announce that it will fill the pockets of taxpayers with thousands of dollars, it’s a less-than-honest exhortation for viewers to vote Conservative in the upcoming 2015 election. There will, no doubt, be far more honest ads paid for by the Conservative Party with the same content once the election campaign starts and its spending will be restricted to far less than the millions that may be spent on it before the campaign actually starts.

Governments are allowed to advertise about services and programs that they are implementing, but when some of them are either untruthful, promote partisan positions or are not even authorised by Parliament, it becomes a vehicle to undermine the foundations of any democracy that values the spirit and letter of the rule of law.

Former Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty realized the democratic immorality of abusing public funds in such a manner and brought in key reforms to stop even his government from betraying the public trust by ensuring taxpayers do not fund disguised partisan ads. The McGuinty government brought in rules that requires all government ads to be reviewed and passed by the auditor-general. The holder of that office has the ability to stop clear partisan ads being funded by the taxpayer. The present national ads for the family benefits tax package would have been stopped dead in their tracks if we had a similar screening process of government ads at the federal level, especially given that they were not even passed by Parliament. Yet, it is reported that the Harper government may spend $100-million for these ads in the hope that it will give them another four years to continue abusing the public purse with similar ads after the 2015 election.

It may not be surprising that Mr. Harper has engaged in this unfair democratic subterfuge. Even back in 2000, while heading up the National Citizens Coalition, he launched court actions against the spending limits of third parties under the Canada Elections Act. With a challenge that seemed to ignore the need for ensuring electoral fairness, his conservative advocacy group used the argument of citizens’ freedom of speech to ask the courts to strike down limits on third-party funding beyond a $150,000 limit during the election campaign. He failed when the Supreme Court lectured him and his group that the law was needed for electoral fairness and a level playing field in order to prevent certain groups or individuals from dominating the media and the electoral process.

Now in government – and outside the electoral period – Mr. Harper has found a way for his government to flood the media with partisan propaganda to the tune of hundreds of millions of our dollars. If such democratic subterfuge has the same effect of unfairness before an election, then the Harper government is clearly undermining the spirit of the rule of law critical to fair elections. He has, in effect, made the government a third party that is allowed to spend potentially millions of dollars, making the actual limits in the election period illusory to some extent. This deserves a profound rebuke by Canadians.
 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/oli...ow-the-government-spends-your-money-1.2878430

Olivia Dorey wants you to know how the government spends your money

Former House of Commons page campaigning to make it easier to track government budgets

By Laura Payton, CBC News Posted: Dec 29, 2014 5:00 AM ET| Last Updated: Dec 29, 2014 9:31 AM ET

University of Ottawa student Olivia Dorey is campaigning to make it easier to track where governments are spending taxpayers' money. (Laura Payton/CBC)

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External Links

■2014–15 federal estimates

(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)

Former House of Commons page Olivia Dorey was once one of the people hand-delivering the federal budget to MPs when the finance minister rose to deliver his speech.

That task inspired her to try to read through a budget so she knew better what it contained.

"And I couldn't. I couldn't find the numbers, I couldn't make sense of what they were trying to explain ... I'm used to doing my own personal budgets, and this book, this book was nothing like a budget to me," she said in an interview in Ottawa.
■Canadian governments Pinocchios at budget time, study says
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■Budget office to investigate Flaherty's $7.1B surprise

Dorey studies public administration at the University of Ottawa, and is interested in politics. But she still couldn't figure out the budget. That experience jarred her to begin a personal mission to build a website where people could key in some basic demographic information and find out how the federal budget affected them.

Some of that information is available — specific funding for a hospital or transit, for example, or qualifications for Old Age Security — but much of it is simply not publicly accessible, or hard to follow after an initial announcement.

That's led Dorey to start lobbying MPs to build budgets differently.

"If I can't understand public finance and find the information I need, what hope do other Canadians have understanding it?" Dorey said.

She believes federal, provincial and municipal budgets should be clear enough that people like her grandparents in Bridgewater, N.S., who don't have university educations, can understand them. Her campaign led her to a strong ally: former parliamentary budget officer Kevin Page.

'Impossible to track'

Right now, there are several documents you have to read if you want to track a funding promise, including:
■The budget, the annual planning document for government spending.
■The estimates, which contain much more detailed information about spending.
■The supplementary estimates, the update to the estimates.
■The departmental performance reports, which recap how much was spent out of the amount budgeted, and staffing levels.

Even then, it can be hard to track spending if you want to go back several years. The documents sometimes offer only a few years in the same booklet, so readers have to pull numbers from older versions too.

And there are other problems.

Kevin Page 2012-04-26
Former parliamentary budget officer Kevin Page is supporting Olivia Dorey in her quest for more government transparency. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

"These books aren't synced up in any way. They actually switch back and forth between accounting styles," Dorey said.

"It's impossible to track money through the expenditure management system, and the way that it's presented ... you can't actually see or understand how much money is being spent on a specific department or on a specific project," she said.

Page says Dorey took his public finance class a year ago and calls her very bright. Her first step, he says, will be to change the culture of government. Right now, civil servants and governing parties have little incentive for being open with information that can be used to criticize them.

Parliamentarians vote based on departmental operating and capital budgets rather than specific program activities like veteran health care or Arctic oil spill cleanup. Some programs cut across departments, which makes it even more confusing. (Committees vote on specific program lines, but usually devote only one meeting to the estimates of the applicable departments).

Dorey and Page would like to see the votes more specific to program funding instead of operating and capital budgets so the money is easier to track.

There are people in the government who have the kind of information that Dorey wants available to Canadians, said Page, who spent a decade at the department of finance and another decade at the Privy Council Office (PCO), the bureau of civil servants who work directly with the Prime Minister's Office.

"Some bureaucrats deep in the bowels of treasury and finance and PCO, we have that information, but we don't make it available," he said.

'Here's the vision'

But, he says, that insistence on secrecy is bound to change as Dorey's generation advances and becomes the new set of civil servants and politicians.

"Olivia's on a course right now to kind of create a context for change, saying this is what we want. Here's the vision, this is what I'd like my grandparents and me to get, and my generation to have, in terms of access to information. So as citizens we feel like we know how our money's being spent. We can feel more engaged."

It would be unsurprising if Page were cynical about government transparency, given the range and depth of the disputes between him and the Conservative government.

But he sounds optimistic.

"Olivia wants, and it's really her generation ... what we have now is not their future. We live in an information age and I think as Canadians, as citizens, you want to have this information and even as much you want your MPs to have this information."
 
http://www.canadianlabour.ca/national/news/senate-votes-make-it-harder-canadians-join-union#

Senate votes to make it harder for Canadians to join a union

Posted: Friday, 19 December 2014

The Senate has passed a bill that will make it much more difficult for workers in federally regulated workplaces to join unions, and easier for a minority of workers to disband them.

Bill C-525, the so-called “Employees’ Voting Rights Act,” was introduced by backbench Conservative MP Blaine Calkins as a private member’s bill, circumventing the decades-old and proven process of using tripartite consultation with employers, labour and government to amend the Canadian Labour Code.

“Not a single employer or union identified a problem in current industrial relations that required these legislative amendments,” said CLC president Hassan Yussuff.

Yussuff points out that virtually all industrial relations authorities in Canada have warned against Bill C-525 and this process, saying it would needlessly upset the balance in federal labour relations.

“This legislation is really about denying Canadian workers the right to collective bargaining with their employer,” said Yussuff. “It is an invitation to employers to interfere with workers’ democratic right to choose representation, and it will destabilize federal labour relations.”

Destabilization aside, the Canada Industrial Relations Board has released a study showing that the mandatory voting called for in Bill C‑525 will result in a 500% increase in costs.

Bill C-525 passed third reading Tuesday night despite flaws found by the Conservative dominated Senate’s Legal and Constitutional Affairs committee last week. Amendments proposed by some Senators that would have fixed the mistakes were ignored because sending the Bill back to the House would have killed it.

“The Senate has abdicated its responsibility to provide sober second thought by allowing a technically flawed and badly drafted bill to pass into law,” said Yussuff.
 
http://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2015/01/0...ce=daily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=030115

What If We Made 2015 the Year of Poking Fun at Conservatives?
For a change of pace, let's lose the solemnity and hurl zingers at our leaders.
By Crawford Kilian, 3 Jan 2015, TheTyee.ca

Obama_Harper
Are you laughing with me or at me? U.S. President Barack Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper share a laugh at the APEC leader dinner in Singapore Nov. 14, 2009. Official White House photo by Pete Souza.

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Next October (or sooner), we will either cast out Stephen Harper or keep him in power for four more years. Pundits have already started their engines; the spinmeisters will soon be upon us like a cloud of mosquitoes.

They will approach the election with the implacable urgency of university faculty lobbying for more parking places. They will remind us of the heavy responsibility we bear, and use all the tactics of shock and awe to chivvy us to the polls. There, our shaking hands are to grasp the pencil and decree the direction Canada should take henceforth. It will all be unbearably solemn.

How did Canadians, of all people, get into this glum, obedient state of mind? The first Canadian volunteers to reach Britain in the First World War soon gained a reputation as bloody-minded, disrespectful and insubordinate. Today's Canadian is defined as the kind of person who says "sorry" when you step on their foot; the Canadian of a century ago would have punched your lights out.

That disrespect for authority expressed itself not just in cheerful contempt for their officers but also for their politicians as well. Canadians who ran for office also ran a gamut of crude jokes and ridicule from veterans and civilians alike.

This tradition flourished right up to recent years. In the midst of Trudeaumania in 1968, the great man was already being lampooned in books, opinion columns and cartoons. Journalist Stanley Burke and cartoonist Roy Peterson collaborated in the 1970s on Frog Fables and Beaver Tales and a sequel, which portrayed Pierre Trudeau as a frog -- amusing many and scandalizing none. He was succeeded by John Turner, who was soon sent off thanks in part to the shields women wore to protect themselves against Turner's famous bum-pats.

The Tories took plenty of flak as well; the CBC's Max Ferguson made his reputation with a sendup of John Diefenbaker's pompous, wattle-shaking speaking style. The Royal Canadian Air Farce skewered Brian Mulroney's oily good cheer, Joe Clarke's awkward laugh, and Preston Manning's Prairie whine.

Provincial and municipal politicians didn't escape. Toronto's David Crombie was the Tiny Perfect Mayor, Vancouver's Tom Campbell was Tom Terrific, Premier W.A.C. Bennett was Wacky and his son Bill was Mini-Wack. Premier Dave Barrett of the NDP poked fun at himself as "little fat Dave."

From jokes to statesmen

Comedy became a Canadian export, especially to the U.S. But somewhere in there, around the time of the McKenzie Brothers, we did start saying "sorry" when the politicians tromped on our toes. In interviews, journalists began to speak with excessive respect to prime ministers and their cabinet officers, as if the politicos were the bosses and not the servants. Mulroney, Clarke and Manning lived to become statesmen, not jokes.

Political ridicule began to be confined to editorial-page cartoonists and Rick Mercer. The CBC had been a major source of that ridicule, and by the time Chretien took power in 1993, the broadcaster's budget cuts were beginning to look like reprisal.

The result: the more ludicrous Canadian politics became, the more solemnly it was discussed. We were reduced to relying on the politicians themselves for gags. When the RCMP pepper-sprayed protesters at the University of British Columbia during an APEC meeting, Chretien knocked 'em dead with "As for me, I put pepper on my plate." I guess you had to be there.

The Liberals' civil wars, which should have launched a thousand gags, instead launched the dubious career of Paul Martin, who offered more cuts to the CBC and inspired nothing wittier than the epithet "Mr. Dithers."

At the same time, Canada's military became "heroes," to be spoken of in reverent tones and then discreetly forgotten. Careerist generals, who should have been flayed like losing hockey coaches, became sage propagandists for futile wars. Our veterans -- grandchildren of the wild colonial boys who took Vimy Ridge -- were left to deal alone with their PTSD and their high suicide rate.

Setting the stage for Harper

By 2006, Canadian politics featured sneers -- not laughter -- much less serious debate. The stage was set for Stephen Harper, the greatest deadpan comic of our time.

His admirers tell us Harper is a barrel of laughs in his office; in public, the best smile he can manage is a rictus sardonicus that frightens babies. He seems more comfortable in his Question Period passive-aggressive monotone, assuring Mr. Speaker that something irrelevant is in fact a reasonable answer to an opposition question.

Dulled by decades of solemnity, we no longer recognize comic genius when we see it. Stephen Harper is indeed a very funny man and he has recruited a troupe of comedians and comediennes who put the Royal Canadian Air Farce (and even the sainted Rick Mercer) to shame.

The slapstick is an old circus prop with which one clown whacks another clown's backside. The purpose of seltzer water is not to dilute a whisky but to be shot down the other guy's pants. The Funservative Party of Canada, under the direction of Stephen Harper, has been using such props against the NDP, the Liberals and all other opponents -- who seem to have no answer.

Fire or abuse loyal public servants like Atomic Energy of Canada head Linda Keen and diplomat Richard Colvin? Slapstick, against which a Turner Shield is of no avail! Appoint a long string of incompetent civil servants and MPs, from Arthur Porter to Mike Duffy? Seltzer down Canadians' pants!

The glory of becoming a punchline

Others in Harper's troupe have, like Bob Hope, mastered the art of delivering other people's gags (now called talking points). So Pierre Poilievre had us rolling in the aisles with: "The root cause of terrorism is terrorists." He and his Conservative colleagues have themselves become punchlines, like Paul Calandra and Dean Del Mastro.

At the end of a long day, relaxing in the Prime Minister's Office with his gag writers in short pants, Stephen Harper must wonder how long he can keep a straight face. For eight years he's been the guy with the boffo gags (Prorogation! StatsCan! Vic Toews! The F-35! Robocalls! Julian Fantino!) while seeing off a string of inept straight men like Stephane Dion and Michael Ignatieff.

Now he faces two more boring straight men. Cutie-pie Justin Trudeau is a good boxer with great hair, but if his voice were any higher he'd be a boy soprano, and if his policies were any righter he'd be a Red Tory. The only response the NDP has to Harper's Conservatives is Paul Dewar's famous facepalm answer to Paul Calandra. Thomas Mulcair, who in Question Period can flense the blubber off Harper like a harpooned whale, should have apprenticed on the standup comedy circuit instead of with the Quebec Liberals.

It's going to be a very solemn 2015 indeed if the NDP and Liberals (and the media) don't lighten up and start giving the ridiculous Conservatives the ridicule they deserve for running this country into the ground for the past eight years. Yes, we'll have to laugh at ourselves as well for letting them get away with it. But if we don't laugh the Conservatives out of office, they'll have the last laugh -- at our expense.
 
https://citizenactionmonitor.wordpr...omeone-who-i-think-is-ruthless-to-the-bottom/

Posted on January 2, 2015 counterpower of one, evidence based counterpower, information counterpower, moral & ethical counterpower, political action
Stephen Harper is “the most vindictive politician I’ve ever met, someone who I think is ruthless to the bottom”
Harper Cons have “lied, cheated, stole elections, cancelled other people’s rights, and in the process crushed a lot of people”

No 1220 Posted by fw, January 2, 2015

“Harper runs the most secretive government that ever existed in Canada. [According to Richard Nixon], if the Office of the Presidency does it, it’s not wrong. Harper wraps himself in the flag and he wraps himself in the office. But he isn’t worthy of the office. And he’s proven it time after time by lying to us about things, and in a democracy you can’t run a democracy on lies…. If we stand up and we do something about it we can stop this man. But if we sit back and count all the reasons why we can’t do a thing, that steamroller that Stephen Harper has rolled over the institutions of this country will continue to flatten everything in its path. And I for one don’t want to live like a rabbit. I don’t think you do either.” —Michael Harris, Canadian investigative reporter

In a scathing, no-holds-barred attack, investigative journalist Michael Harris unveils the real Prime Minster Harper lurking behind the nice-guy facade.

Here’s just one sample of Harris’ candid revelations –

Nova Scotia Tory MP, Bill Casey, discovered that Harper had unilaterally changed the text of an agreement that he, Harper, had signed with Atlantic Canada. Casey consulted the Justice Department about the change. Justice confirmed Casey’s understanding of the change. He put the Justice’s opinion on Harper’s desk. Harper swept the document off his desk and said, “Bill, the ******* words mean what I say they mean….You know your ******* problem, you’ve never been with the program.” Casey phoned his wife, told her what had happened and she told him not to vote for the agreement. The next day Casey was kicked out of caucus. He subsequently resigned, ran as an independent and won despite Harper’s best attempt to spread malicious lies about him during the election campaign.

Below is an embedded video of Michael Harris’ 25-minute address to the Unifor Ontario Regional Council on November 22, 2014. My notes, some verbatim, extracted from Michael’s talk follow the video. Michael Harris is an Investigative journalist and author of Party of One: Stephen Harper and Canada’s Radical Makeover.
 
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