- Reaction score
- 1,534
- Points
- 1,260
George Wallace said:I don't know. Mel Lastman was well known across the continent.
Come back, Mel. All is forgiven.
George Wallace said:I don't know. Mel Lastman was well known across the continent.
1) The CBC is in an even worse position, saying "there are reports of such a video, but we haven't seen it and can't confirm its existence".Crantor said:.... I think what the Toronto Star did would qualify as irresponsible journalism. If there is a video find it buy it get it whatever. Just saying you saw it isn't good enough ....
PuckChaser said:The unfortunate part is the "crack" story will take forever to die, but the defamation and libel lawsuits will never see a front page.
mariomike said:I believe ( and I could be wrong ) that most people do not allow themselves to get too worked up over other peoples politicians (except the US president).
Because, love them or hate them, there is little point if you can't vote for or against them in elections.
Hatchet Man said:But I do agree with your sentiment, if you were to talk to someone form Vancouver, they might bring up (this particular subject), but their interest is probably at the "meh" level.
mariomike said:The only mayor outside of TO that I can think of is Hazel McCallion.
Probably only because she has been in office for so long.
Margaret Wente: Journalists have no business in the Senate
MARGARET WENTE
The Globe and Mail
Published Saturday, Jun. 08 2013
Stephen Harper has always been allergic to journalists. He doesn’t like them and he doesn’t trust them. He has always suspected that they have only one agenda, which is to destroy him.
But the two journalists who’ve done him the most damage were supposed to be the ones on his side. Mike Duffy and Pamela Wallin, appointed to the Senate for their celebrity status and devotion to the party, have wounded him far more gravely than squadrons of investigative reporters ever have. They have helped to demolish the Conservatives’ claim to integrity in government and respect for taxpayers. And the Harper government’s inexplicable response to the scandal has disgusted much of his own base, who say they no longer recognize the party they thought they belonged to.
“I fear we’re morphing into what we once mocked, ” said Alberta MP Brent Rathgeber, who quit the caucus this week.
It’s hard to embarrass the journalism profession, but Mr. Duffy and Ms. Wallin have done it. Journalists are, after all, supposed to be in the business of holding governments to account and exposing public abuse. It is awkward, to say the least, when two of the most prominent former journalists in Canada become part of the problem.
Superannuated journalists have no business sitting in the Senate, which is often seen as essentially a reward for party loyalty. It makes a mockery of any claim they may have had to the appearance of impartiality. You can’t appear to hold powerful people to account if you at the same time allow yourself to be eligible for a reward of a nice sinecure, a housing allowance and a ready-made retirement plan from those same people. Journalists with any self-respect would do their jobs in such a way that they will never, ever get a Senate offer. If they want to go into politics, let them run for office like anybody else.
Mr. Duffy has attracted most of the heat because of Nigel Wright’s baffling decision to cut a cheque to help him pay back his illegitimate expenses. But Ms. Wallin is in deep trouble, too. Forensic auditors are now scouring her expense claims to determine whether she claimed expenses for personal or other business unrelated to the Senate. She has already paid back $38,000 in expense money she wasn’t entitled to, and, according to CTV sources, there’s more to come.
The picture that has emerged is of a highly energetic networker who parlayed her political connections into a lucrative career in the private sector. According to a report in the Toronto Star, Ms. Wallin has earned approximately $1-million in corporate board fees and stock options since becoming a senator in 2009. Until last month, she sat on the board of Gluskin Sheff & Associates, a private money management firm for wealthy individuals. That was worth $330,000 in cash, deferred shares and options. She collected almost $648,000 in cash and options awards from Oilsands Quest (now defunct). She has also collected more in undisclosed, but likely healthy, fees for sitting on the boards of directors of Porter Airlines and of CTVglobemedia, purchased by Bell in 2011. Presumably she didn’t need a loan to pay back those improper Senate expenses. (Disclosure: I know Mr. Duffy, Ms. Wallin, Gerald Sheff and Ira Gluskin. We media-political-business elites live in a small world.)
Senators of all stripes have been mixing business and politics for years. There’s nothing illegal about it. Senators can carry on business so long as they report it to the Senate ethics officer. But citizens of all stripes might be forgiven for asking why the Senate should serve as a handy base for lucky appointees to enrich themselves – and whether the nation’s business and the senators’ business are really so interchangeable. And despite other senators’ cries of shock and horror, it’s hard to escape the impression that the last people on Earth who want the Senate reformed are the senators themselves.
We can already infer that a good chunk of the $321,000 that Ms. Wallin claimed in expenses over a period of 18 months was illegitimate. How much? Eventually we’ll find out. Ms. Wallin also has another problem – the residency trap. Public filings by Gluskin Sheff list her residence as Toronto. Ms. Wallin, of course, insists that she lives in Saskatchewan. It’s hard see how both things can be true.
Yet I’m not entirely without sympathy for these people. Ms. Wallin and Mr. Duffy have been around Ottawa for decades. They knew how the Senate game was played. You take a little more than you’re entitled to, and hope nobody notices. Senators have never been subjected to the kind of basic oversight that’s routine in the private sector, even for CEOs. Some senators are frugal with public money. Others aren’t. No one ever cared about these matters until now. The rules changed retroactively, and nobody told them.
And now Ms. Wallin, the ultimate insider, is an outcast in Ottawa and beyond. She will likely no longer by an attractive candidate for lucrative board assignments. And she will be forever haunted by that damning image of her splayed hand thrust in front of an invasive camera – a gesture journalists love, because it makes their prey look guilty as hell.
Naturally, the media – the people Mr. Harper detests so much – are riding this for all it’s worth. The CBC is talking darkly of a PMO slush fund that may, theoretically, have been used to compensate Mr. Wright for making Mr. Duffy’s problems go away – or at least that is the insinuation. (Mr. Wright, a wealthy man, certainly doesn’t need the money, and the PMO denies that a secret fund even exists.) Mr. Harper, who has a very large left brain but a wholly inadequate right brain, looks as if he has no idea how to make his own problem go away.
As for the public, it’s no wonder so many of them doubt that journalists can be trusted to act impartially in the public interest. With examples such as these, who can blame them?
FTFY - gotta love that auto-complete, no? ;DGood2Golf said:Hmmm..."profession"? She flatters her kind a bit much, I think. I didn't know that journalists are aself-rugby layingself-regulating, licensing professional body?
Unfortunately very true....except for those who believe it unquestioningly...."I heard it on Fox News, therefore..." or the 'chemtrail' crowdE.R. Campbell said:......journalism, rightly, is held in very low public esteem....
In defence of academic ‘fiddling’
Scholars’ most valuable contributions to public debate are grounded in research, writes Philippe Lagassé.
By Philippe Lagassé, Ottawa Citizen June 9, 2013
Are political scientists failing to play their part as critics of the government in Canada? Lawrence Martin thinks so. Writing in the Globe and Mail last week, he lamented that academics are busy working on narrow research projects, instead of using their privileged positions to find fault with those in power. Pointing to the activism of scholars past, Martin wondered why a new generation of public intellectuals has not followed suit, taking to the op-ed pages and talk shows to name and shame politicians who abuse their authority.
Coincidentally, Martin’s missive appeared at the same time as the annual conference of the Canadian Political Science Association. The column was met with bewilderment by many at the conference. A quick glance at the program explains why. Included among the presenters were professors and graduate students who routinely analyze current events in print, online, and on the air.
There is no shortage of critical commentary about Canadian political affairs from academics, young or old.
Of note, Canadian newspapers and magazines have recently featured political scientists critically assessing the prorogation of the Ontario legislature, Supreme Court decisions, the tactics and rhetoric of the Conservative party, the Idle No More movement, Canadian foreign, health, and social policy, and military procurements. This newspaper has been particularly open to publishing academics, but more than a few of these articles have appeared in Martin’s own newspaper, the Globe and Mail.
While it is hard to measure, a good case can be made that these academic contributions have been influential, either eliciting a reaction from government or helping the opposition sharpen their attacks. Regardless, these articles have been informative, boiling down dense academic research into short, accessible pieces that fuel debate and discussion about Canadian politics.
Given the evident presence of political scientists in public debates, it appears that Martin is more concerned with what they say and write, instead of how often they do so. What Martin really wants are more vitriolic and categorical critiques of the Conservative government from political scientists.
Is this an appropriate request? I am skeptical. While there will be occasions when governments deserve to be lambasted by academics, this is a job best left to pundits and partisans. Just as we expect journalists to stick to the facts in their reporting, political scientists should strive to follow the research. If a professor’s work leads him or her to conclude that a government merits a harsh rebuke, then so be it. But, speaking for myself, I have noted that careful analyses of a government’s actions usually lead to cautious criticisms, or guarded defences, of what governments are up to. The same, it must be said, holds for policies and positions of the opposition parties.
Indeed, academic research serves as a useful corrective against the facile truisms that routinely take hold of political commentaries.
Discussions of Canada’s political institutions are a case in point. It has become “common knowledge” that the prime minister is all powerful, ministerial accountability is dead, and parties and partisanship hinder our democracy. As someone who is currently researching the executive and Parliament, I find these assertions problematic. It is not that they are wrong per se, but they should be tempered by a consideration of longer term trends and contrary evidence.
Other academics will disagree with my findings, of course. But it precisely because we “fiddle” with research projects, as Martin remarks, that we are able to compare competing theories, methods, and evidence, allowing us to refine our work and arrive at better answers to complex political questions. Political science professors would be failing as researchers if they simply embraced whichever meme about the state of Canadian politics happens to be popular at the moment.
For Martin, this concern with research is cowardice. He seems to think that our focus on “things that can be empirically proven” is a failing. This is a baffling statement. The credibility of academics rests with the fact that they are preoccupied with what can be proven. If political scientists gave up on rigour and evidence, they would not be of much use to anybody, including those opposed to the current government.
Philippe Lagassé is an associate professor of public and international affairs at the University of Ottawa.
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