Liberal budget passes final test: Conservatives abstain from vote; [Final Edition]
Jim Brown. Packet and Times. Orillia, Ont.: Mar 10, 2005. pg. A.5
OTTAWA -- The silence spoke volumes Wednesday as the opposition Conservatives, in an unprecedented move, sat mute in the Commons while the Liberal minority government's budget passed its final confidence test.
With the Tories abstaining, Prime Minister Paul Martin's troops easily turned back the combined forces of the Bloc Quebecois and the NDP by a 132-74 margin.
The closest any Conservative came to taking a stand was when when party leader Stephen Harper leaned forward and feigned rising to his feet -- before quickly settling back into his seat with a grin.
The 81 other Tories who turned out never twitched a muscle as they allowed the Commons clerks to skip past them in the roll call.
Finance Minister Ralph Goodale was happy with the result, even if his victory was gained by unorthodox means.
"It's a minority Parliament, so different and unusual things will happen," Goodale said as he emerged from the House.
"They obviously concluded that this budget was sufficiently strong that they did not want to risk their position in an election. That says the budget is popular with Canadians, and that is where the rubber really hits the road."
Harper pledged two weeks ago on budget day that he wouldn't forced a snap election by defeating the government.
He took heat from Bloc Leader Gilles Duceppe and NDP Leader Jack Layton for the unusual way he chose to prop up the Liberals.
But he insisted it was the responsible thing to do. He also took a shot at Duceppe and Layton, suggesting they could afford to posture on the matter because their combined numbers couldn't bring the Liberals down.
"What's become apparent is that the Bloc Quebecois and the NDP will grandstand on these things (but) it is up to us in the Conservative party to decide whether the time has come to have an election," said Harper.
"In our judgment -- I think in Canadians' judgment -- it is not that time."
Duceppe was unconvinced by the Conservative rationale for abstaining on the budget vote -- the first time in parliamentary history an official Opposition party had done so.
"I just don't understand it," said the Bloc leader.
"We're elected here to express ourselves. If they think it's a good strategy, maybe next campaign they should say: `Vote for us, we won't show up.'"
Layton accused the Conservatives of wanting to have it both ways.
"Why doesn't Mr. Harper have the courage to stand up and simply vote for the budget -- because that's what he's doing in effect," snapped the NDP chief.
Peter MacKay, the deputy Conservative leader, insisted an abstention wasn't the same as a vote in favour.
"It's basically saying, `None of the above.' We don't like the choices, but we're not going to make this government fall."
MacKay pictured his party as responding to a "higher calling" by averting an election that wouldn't be in the national interest.
Others admitted, however, that partisan considerations were also at play. Opinion polls show the Conservatives languishing below 30 per cent.
Nor has any other party dramatically improved its standing since last June's election. Even the first-place Liberals are barely flirting with 40 per cent, making their chances of forming a majority government problematic.