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http://www.canada.com/topics/news/politics/story.html?id=35447e8e-b2cb-413a-8812-e8d1d01abc2b&k=37953
OTTAWA - The opposition has offered to sideline one of its own MPs so that Prime Minister Stephen Harper can attend a controversial meeting with European Union leaders this month in Finland without the threat of his minority government being defeated.
New Democratic Party Leader Jack Layton made the offer in a speech Sunday to party officials and said there is nothing that now stands in the way of the prime minister living up to his international commitments.
Harper abruptly cancelled the planned meeting, and the first leg of a trip to Europe, last week amid suggestions that his EU counterparts would chastise Canada for abandoning its Kyoto Protocol targets to launch a plan that sets targets much further in the future.
The Prime Minister's Office said the decision to scrap the visit was based on Harper's feeling that he must look after the business of running the country, which means being present in the House of Commons for ''at least some of November.'' A visit with Finnish Prime Minister Maati Vanhanen has been rescheduled for the spring.
Harper is also attending an international meeting in Vietnam in mid-November, but that trip falls on a Commons break when MPs spend the week in their ridings.
''It seems lame to me,'' Layton said of the prime minister's excuse. ''I think for Canadians it seems like he's chicken of facing strong leaders that are meeting their emissions targets when he has effectively provided no leadership at all and is headed backwards on this issue.''
Layton explained that his idea to ''pair'' one of his own MPs with Harper ensures that he can attend the meetings in Finland and not have to worry about facing a confidence vote back in Ottawa that could topple the government.
Pairing is a parliamentary tradition that effectively levels the playing field when a member from another party is sick or otherwise unable to attend important votes in the Commons.
Harper agreed to such an arrangement with the NDP in the spring of 2005 for one of a series of confidence votes that threatened, but ultimately failed, to defeat Paul Martin's Liberal minority government. Darrel Stinson, a former Tory MP, was undergoing cancer treatment at the time, and was scheduled for surgery on the day of the vote.
Harper, then the official opposition leader, called the offer ''very generous and honourable'' at the time.
The PMO said it was not entertaining the latest offer.
The prime minister has no plans to back out of the pre-arranged second leg of the European tour, which involves a trip to Riga, Latvia, to meet with NATO leaders to talk about the war in Afghanistan.
''I think most Canadians are shaking their heads and saying, what's the matter? Why can he find time to go there and lecture the leaders at NATO about the need for them to provide troops to a war that more and more Canadians think is a bad idea, but he won't find time to talk to those same leaders about the urgent crisis of climate change?'' Layton said. ''They don't buy it.''
Layton said Harper has ''a lot to learn'' from European leaders because of the example they have set in tackling climate change and greenhouse gas pollution.
''We urge him to participate in that process, and we're ready to help pave the way for that in terms of how Parliament works,'' he said.
Once Again Jack is being an idoit, when will he learn? I like how he says ''I think for Canadians it seems like he's chicken..." Not only is he an expert on Afghanistan now he knows what Canadians think.
MOD EDIT: Changed the colour top make it readable.
OTTAWA - The opposition has offered to sideline one of its own MPs so that Prime Minister Stephen Harper can attend a controversial meeting with European Union leaders this month in Finland without the threat of his minority government being defeated.
New Democratic Party Leader Jack Layton made the offer in a speech Sunday to party officials and said there is nothing that now stands in the way of the prime minister living up to his international commitments.
Harper abruptly cancelled the planned meeting, and the first leg of a trip to Europe, last week amid suggestions that his EU counterparts would chastise Canada for abandoning its Kyoto Protocol targets to launch a plan that sets targets much further in the future.
The Prime Minister's Office said the decision to scrap the visit was based on Harper's feeling that he must look after the business of running the country, which means being present in the House of Commons for ''at least some of November.'' A visit with Finnish Prime Minister Maati Vanhanen has been rescheduled for the spring.
Harper is also attending an international meeting in Vietnam in mid-November, but that trip falls on a Commons break when MPs spend the week in their ridings.
''It seems lame to me,'' Layton said of the prime minister's excuse. ''I think for Canadians it seems like he's chicken of facing strong leaders that are meeting their emissions targets when he has effectively provided no leadership at all and is headed backwards on this issue.''
Layton explained that his idea to ''pair'' one of his own MPs with Harper ensures that he can attend the meetings in Finland and not have to worry about facing a confidence vote back in Ottawa that could topple the government.
Pairing is a parliamentary tradition that effectively levels the playing field when a member from another party is sick or otherwise unable to attend important votes in the Commons.
Harper agreed to such an arrangement with the NDP in the spring of 2005 for one of a series of confidence votes that threatened, but ultimately failed, to defeat Paul Martin's Liberal minority government. Darrel Stinson, a former Tory MP, was undergoing cancer treatment at the time, and was scheduled for surgery on the day of the vote.
Harper, then the official opposition leader, called the offer ''very generous and honourable'' at the time.
The PMO said it was not entertaining the latest offer.
The prime minister has no plans to back out of the pre-arranged second leg of the European tour, which involves a trip to Riga, Latvia, to meet with NATO leaders to talk about the war in Afghanistan.
''I think most Canadians are shaking their heads and saying, what's the matter? Why can he find time to go there and lecture the leaders at NATO about the need for them to provide troops to a war that more and more Canadians think is a bad idea, but he won't find time to talk to those same leaders about the urgent crisis of climate change?'' Layton said. ''They don't buy it.''
Layton said Harper has ''a lot to learn'' from European leaders because of the example they have set in tackling climate change and greenhouse gas pollution.
''We urge him to participate in that process, and we're ready to help pave the way for that in terms of how Parliament works,'' he said.
Once Again Jack is being an idoit, when will he learn? I like how he says ''I think for Canadians it seems like he's chicken..." Not only is he an expert on Afghanistan now he knows what Canadians think.
MOD EDIT: Changed the colour top make it readable.