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Joe Comuzzi to join Tories

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http://www.chroniclejournal.com/stories.php?id=50347

Joe Comuzzi to join Tories
By JIM KELLY
Friday, June 22, 2007

Former Thunder Bay-Superior North Liberal MP Joe Comuzzi has agreed to join the Conservative Party of Canada, The Chronicle-Journal has learned.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper will be in Thunder Bay on Tuesday to make the formal announcement at the Prince Arthur Hotel, according to a reliable source.
Comuzzi has been sitting as an independent since he was thrown out of the Liberal caucus by opposition leader Stephane Dion for pledging to support the Conservative budget on March 21.
A reliable source said Comuzzi, 74, made his decision earlier this week.
In joining the Conservative Party, Comuzzi becomes the first Tory to hold the seat since Donald James Cowan was elected in the former Port Arthur riding in 1930.
Cowan was succeeded by famed Liberal Clarence Decatur (C.D.) Howe in 1935, when Comuzzi was two years old.
The riding has been held by a mix of Liberal, Co-operative Commonwealth Federation and New Democratic Party MPs since then.
Comuzzi made it known far and wide that he would support the Conservative budget because it promised millions in research money that could benefit Thunder Bay including $14.7 million for the Molecular Medicine Research Centre. That money has yet to be announced.
Comuzzi‘s decision led to his ouster from the party by Dion.
Yet, the Liberal-dominated Senate passed the budget bill Friday. In the end, only Liberal senators from Atlantic Canada and Saskatchewan voted against the package, which passed 45-21 with six abstentions. It received royal assent about two hours later.
That wasn‘t his only run-in with his boss. Former Prime Minister Paul Martin accepted Comuzzi‘s resignation from cabinet on June 29, 2005 for opposing same-sex marriage (Bill C-38).
Comuzzi was also in former Prime Minister Jean Chretien‘s doghouse for asking for a review of the bilingualism and biculturalism policy on its 25th anniversary in 1998.
During the six terms since being elected in 1988, Comuzzi has spoken on riding issues, including the pulp and paper industry, the softwood lumber dispute, grain transportation, mining, business, health care and the local economy. He also served in many leadership capacities that related to transportation and industry.

A politician who listens to the constituents???? About time
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/32131.0.html

Comuzzi expelled from Liberal caucus over budget
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/58997/post-546507.html#msg546507
 
Politics as usual, I wonder if Casey will be joining the Liberals anytime soon.

 
Sigs Guy said:
Politics as usual, I wonder if Casey will be joining the Liberals anytime soon.

I predict that we won't be seeing that particular floor-crossing occur.  ;)
 
I'm fairly cynical about politicians these days. It was good to see Harper speaking today in a more conciliatory tone about how he needed to work with the leaders of the other parties though.

Plus with the latest floor crossings it seems more oppurtunistic than anything, the best example was Garth Turner going to the Liberals instead of the Greens simply due to "financial" reasons.
 
Being from Thunder Bay, I can say that between the Firearms Act and the inability of ANY government to improve the Trans-Canada Highway from the Third World Goat Track that it is (not to mention no passenger rail to Thunder Bay - a city of 117,000 people), homecomings for Mr. Comuzzi must seem like the first twenty minutes of Saving Private Ryan.  Twenty years as an MP in Canada's Natural Governing Party, and the best road out of town leads to Duluth, Minnesota?  Lots of Italians in Thunder Bay, they know "disrespect" when they see it, and they have seen it from Ottawa for twenty years.  Don't even get them started on Toronto. 

At some point, he had to ask: "Are these clowns in my party from the same Canada I am from?"

He had to ask it because 117,000 people in Thunder Bay had been asking him that since 1988.

Better late than never.

Probably the Liberal proposed handgun ban that did it for Thunder Bay.  That would be like banning safe injection sites in Vancouver.
 
http://www.chroniclejournal.com/stories.php?id=50888

Comuzzi won‘t look back
By JIM KELLY
Tuesday, June 26, 2007

There was no sweet deal for Thunder Bay-Superior North MP Joe Comuzzi.
In welcoming Comuzzi into the Conservative caucus Tuesday, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said he didn‘t buy Comuzzi‘s loyalty.
“Joe will be a lead voice in our caucus from this part of the country,” Harper told a packed room at a Thunder Bay hotel.
“No deal means no deal.”
Comuzzi confirmed Harper offered him no incentives.
“There were no inducements, no quid pro quo and no favours,” he told the large gathering of both Conservative and Liberal supporters.
Comuzzi had been talking with Harper and other Conservatives off and on since Liberal Leader Stephane Dion turfed him from the party in March for supporting the Conservative budget. Comuzzi, who has been sitting as an Independent since then, said he believed the budget contained millions in research money that could benefit Thunder Bay.
It was widely expected that $14.7 million is included in the budget for the Molecular Medicine Centre on Munro Street. That funding still hasn‘t been announced, but Harper hinted it could be coming.
Comuzzi told The Chronicle-Journal he was still having doubts as late as Monday about hooking up with the Tories until he got a telephone call from Douglas Fisher, a one-time NDP MP for Port Arthur (1957-65) and dean of the parliamentary press gallery.
“Good for you,” Fisher said, according to Comuzzi. “Don‘t ever look back and good luck.”
That was all Comuzzi needed.
“When I got that call, I became absolutely convinced and decided right then and there that I would never look back,” he said.
Harper, who was making his first official visit to Thunder Bay, said Comuzzi is the latest in a long line of former Liberals who have joined the Conservative party. They include Lawrence Cannon from Quebec, David Emerson from British Columbia and Wajid Khan from the Greater Toronto Area.
“Joe Comuzzi supported our recent budget and our historic deal which resolved the Canada-U.S. softwood dispute,” said the prime minister.
“So it feels very comfortable to stand here today with Joe and welcome him to the Conservative caucus,” Harper said to rousing applause.
Comuzzi said he looked forward to serving as part of Canada‘s new government.
“I gave 18 years to the Liberal party,” he said. “But it‘s not my party anymore. Mr. Dion is taking it down a road I cannot follow.”
Dion suggested Monday that Harper might have made a secret deal with Comuzzi to win his loyalty.
“I hope the government will not buy his support through an announcement in his riding,‘‘ Dion said on CTV‘s “Mike Duffy Live‘‘ show.
Comuzzi, 74, said he will serve out his term and may run in the next election, depending on when it is.
“The prime minister wants to go to late 2008 or 2009,” he said. “I hope I‘m around when the next election is called.”

If he does decide to run, he has a good chance of winning the riding as a Conservative, said those in the crowd Tuesday.
“People see him as a man of integrity,” said Ron Saddington, president and chief executive officer of Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre.
Scott McFadden, chief executive officer of Thunder Bay International Airports Authority Inc., said Comuzzi has a following.
“It‘s not necessarily affiliated with any political stripes,” McFadden said. “I think that‘s served him well in the past and it will in the future.”
Don Paterson said Thunder Bay-Superior North voters would have a tough decision in the next federal election if Comuzzi does run.
Paterson, who lost the Liberal nomination to Ken Boshcoff in neighbouring Thunder Bay-Rainy River, conceded Comuzzi has been popular in his riding.
“It will be a tough choice for the people in Thunder Bay-Superior North whether to stay with what the traditional vote has been, or if they‘re more interested in having somebody who has a seat at the table of the government,” Paterson said.
Businessman Cliff Friesen predicted there will be no repercussions for Comuzzi.
“He‘s not betraying the Liberal party at all,” Friesen said. “You have to remember he was thrown out of caucus. I don‘t think there‘s going to be any fallout for him at all.”
Lakehead University president Fred Gilbert agreed.
“He‘s demonstrated he‘s a man of the people,” Gilbert said.
“I think, knowing the people of Thunder Bay and Northwestern Ontario as well as I do, they will appreciate that level of conviction.
“It will not be as important what party that Joe‘s running for as much as what Joe stands for,” Gilbert said.
“I don‘t think it (switching parties) will do him any damage.”
Iain Angus was one of the few naysayers in the crowd.
The city councillor and former MPP and MP said it will be a challenge for Comuzzi to retain his level of popularity.
“He was already in decline as a Liberal, and secondly the Northwest has not been kind to Conservatives since the Depression and I can‘t see that changing,” Angus said.
Nishnawbe Aski Grand Chief Stan Beardy said it doesn‘t matter to him who is elected in the riding.
“For me as a First Nation leader, I work with whoever the elected representative is and I‘m hoping to maintain a relationship with Joe regardless,” he said.
 
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