Decision 2021 | Day 18 | Tories | Hoodwinking Canadians | Part 1

erin-o-toole-flag.jpg

In his column in the August 30th edition of The Georgia Straight online, Now Magazine political editor Enzo DiMatteo asks the question, “Has Erin O’Toole got Canadians hoodwinked? — as witness today’s headline above.

The sub-headline for DiMatteo’s story asks if Canadian voters aren’t being “seduced” by a more palatable, re-packaged version of Conservative Party leader Erin O’Toole, reminding readers of last weekend’s violent anti-vaxx mob rallies in Bolton and Cambridge, Ontario, where Conservative party supporters and campaign workers — the base of the Tory party? — provided insight into the hate spewing values that represent the core beliefs of, perhaps, a significant contingent of Conservative party members, and what an intolerant 2021 anti-democratic Tory party really stands for.

“Mostly by flying under the radar and keeping the seamier anti-vaxxers, anti-maskers and conspiracy theorists in his base (not to mention his caucus) quiet … the party is spending lots of cash on social media polishing O’Toole’s everyman image with photo opportunities of the Conservative leader playing with Fido and feeding llamas (or were they alpacas?). It’s quite a stretch from the photoshopped images of O’Toole the party had been sharing on Twitter to make him look more buff.

The Globe and Mail's Chief Political Correspondent writes that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is

QAnon. Yellow Vesters. Flat earthers. They’re all part of the Con base (and growing) since Stephen Harper began stoking populist and Western separatist sentiment (not to mention Islamophobia) in the party more than a decade ago.

Q-Anon supporters of the Conservative Party of Canada

As Conservative poll numbers rise, many voters seem to have forgotten about the Trumpeteers that occupy the lower rungs of the party. Make no mistake. They’re the same folks who voted for “True Blue” O’Toole during the party leadership. Remember him? The campaign team behind O’Toole then are the same ones responsible for the homophobia-tinged crusade in the 2018 Ontario election against Kathleen Wynne.

While O’Toole has tried to present himself as a moderate conservative out for the little guy, it’s not the version of conservatism that the party he oversees actually stands for. There’s no progressive in this conservatism. Truth is, many don’t believe in climate change. They don’t believe in (or see) the need for mandatory vaccinations during a public health crisis. They don’t believe in gun control. They don’t really believe in LGBTQ rights. They don’t believe in a woman’s right to choose. Many of them don’t even believe the pandemic is real.

On Sunday, August 29th Georgia Straight editor Charlie Smith, asked what turned out to be a provocative question, “Do you know the most popular white supremacist slogan in the world?” The answer: “Here it is: “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.”

Conservative Party of Canada election slogan, "Secure the Future, Fuck Trudeau"

Charlie Smith goes on to write that he was curious to know if the Conservative Party’s campaign slogan, “Secure the Future”, had ever been used in other political campaigns. Turns out it has. Surprise, surprise. White nationalists just love the Klan notion of “securing the future” for whites.

Enzo DiMatteo pointed out in a column published earlier this year …

“O’Toole has adopted the Trumpian language of the far-right, railing against ‘cancel culture,’ fuelling suggestions that the Liberal government’s pandemic response is part of a socialist ‘Great Reset’ and pulling out the dog whistle on China and the coronavirus every chance he gets.”

In his article, Mr. Smith references a Georgia Straight column written by academic and community activist, Stuart Parker, who is curious as to why Erin O’Toole on August 19th introduced the legalization of amyl nitrate and other “poppers” as an issue of importance in the Canadian election.

“Poppers,” Parker writes, “became known as a gay party drug in the 80s and until the past decade were primarily associated with the gay club scene and online casual sex through applications like Grindr.” Asks Parker, “Why would O’Toole get his health critic Michelle Rempel to raise the legalization of poppers in correspondence with the Minister of Health and follow up with a headline-grabbing poppers legalization announcement?”

Parker believes that Erin O’Toole is making his first intentional, programmatic, planned play for what is known in Trump world as “The Porno Right” — the Incel crowd comprised of typically single or otherwise sexually unfulfilled males whose online world focuses on hate for gender-feminists, who consume an abundance of misogynistic porn (including anal rape) on 4Chan, 8Chan, Pornhub, and XHamster, their hate fuelled by mass consumption of amyl nitrate and an assortment of other “poppers”.

End gender violence

Parker ends his article in the August 20th edition of The Straight, writing …

“But let us recognize that O’Toole’s announcement has very little to do with the health of gay men or even that of career masturbators. But it has everything to do with the Porno Right coming of age as a political constituency that, like its adversaries in the Christian Right, must mostly be courted through coded communication and dog-whistles, dog-whistles that arrived in Canadian politics in Ottawa with the announcement of the legalization of the drug of choice for the Incel Porno Right constituency within the Conservative Party of Canada.”

As we have written previously, Erin O’Toole’s Reform/Alliance Conservative Party hues closer in its leanings to the belief system espoused by QAnon conspiracy theorists, as they gain more influence with each passing day.

Decision 2021 | Day 17 | ‘Wave Election’ Means a Tory Majority

Polling data on the 2021 Canadian federal election, August 31, 2021

In an interview with CTV News host Evan Solomon on a weekend edition of his political observer programme, Overview, former federal New Democratic Party leader Tom Mulcair stunned the avuncular host by telling Mr. Solomon that he believes we are in the midst of a “wave election” (an election in which one party makes significant gains), that rising support for Erin O’Toole’s Conservative Party, aided by the sharpest two-week decline in confidence for a sitting Prime Minister that he’d witnessed in his political lifetime will translate into a massive majority win for the Conservatives, out of power in the nation’s capital since the end of the 2015 federal election.

“As we neared the end of the 2011 federal election campaign, despite all the work that Jack and I had put into growing the New Democratic Party in the province of Québec, our internal polling showed us that we were likely to make only minimal gains, likely only two additional seats in the province, raising our number from three to five. And then the French Leaders’ Debate took place, with Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaking halting French, and Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff speaking perfect Parisian French. Only Jack, who’d spent a good part of his childhood in Québec, spoke the familiar language of the Québécois, employing the patois of the Québec people throughout, showing that he was “one of us.” Coming out of the debate, approval ratings for the NDP skyrocketed, such that by election day we won 59 out of 75 seats, while catapulting the NDP into the position of Leader of Her Majesty’s Official Opposition.

In 2015, the federal New Democratic Party began the election with the rock solid support of 35.7% of the electorate, with the Tories stuck at 31.7%, and a hapless Justin Trudeau-led Liberal Party mired at a 23% approval rating. On September 26, 2015, during the Munk debate in Toronto the probable outcome of the election changed, as Mr. Trudeau went after me for condemning the work his father had undertaken, a feckless Stephen Harper standing between the two of us, mute, unamused and confused. Now, Liberal support had grown to 27% by the end of September — which put them a long way off from power — but in the final 19 days of the campaign, Campaign 2015 became a wave election, with support for my New Democratic Party crumbling to as low as 21%, with support for Stephen Harper’s Tories also taking a hit.

Justin Trudeau won that election with 39.7% of the popular vote.

Fake polling result allows Tory leader Erin O'Toole to declare early victory
Last week the polling graphic above was fiction. This week? Not so much.

Long story short, when the electorate gets it into their heads they want change — as they have in 2021 — change is what they’re gonna get. In 2021, as support for Erin O’Toole grows daily, only the province of Québec is denying Mr. O’Toole the majority he seeks. Québécois citizens are not fools — in the same way that 2015 support for the Liberals grew from 5 seats to 40, because under no circumstance do the people of Québec wish to be left out of the power equation, I believe that it is only a matter of time before Mr. O’Toole and Conservatives begin to sweep Québec, effectively eliminating the Bloc Québécois as serious contenders for office, while dramatically downsizing the number of Liberal seats in the province.

Make no mistake, with three weeks to go, Canadians are in the midst of a wave election — nothing can stop this wave. On Monday, September 20, as hard as this is for me to voice to you, Canadians will elect a strong, secure majority Conservative government to Ottawa.

God help us all!”

Recent polling in British Columbia shows an utter collapse in support for the Liberals, and a two-way fight for dominance between New Democrats and the Conservatives. The Liberals will be lucky to come away with five seats.

Federal election polling for British Columbia, August 31, 2021

Federal Tory popularity in Alberta — in the 2019 election at 71% — has grown 14 points in the past two weeks, wiping out any support whatsoever for Justin Trudeau, and maybe, just maybe, allowing the New Democrats to hold onto their lone seat in Edmonton. A week in politics is a lifetime.

Polling data for Alberta, August 31, 2021

Support for Justin Trudeau’s Liberals has collapsed across the Prairies.

One of the reasons that Justin Trudeau called an unnecessary summer election occurred as a consequence of the internal polling numbers that showed that, thanks to the Liberal party’s work on the COVID-19 pandemic, Erin O’Toole’s Conservatives, the New Democratic Party, and the Bloc Québécois would be all but wiped out come Election Day — with particular application in the province of Ontario, where the Liberals held a commanding 45% to 27% lead over Erin O’Toole’s hapless Conservatives.

Polling data on the 2021 Canadian federal election, for Ontario, August 31, 2021

Clearly, that is no longer the case, with Justin Trudeau’s Liberals losing more and more support in Ontario with each passing day, as is occurring in Québec and, most surprisingly, in the Maritimes. The only factor in play denying Erin O’Toole’s Conservatives a healthy majority government — support for the Tories in la Belle Province, Québec always a potent decider.

Former NDP leader Tom Mulcair with CTV News Question Period host Evan Solomon

If the politically astute lifelong resident of Québec, Tom Mulcair, is right — and there’s no reason to doubt Mr. Mulcair’s political acumen — the people of Québec will soon jump on the political wave that is currently sweeping the nation and, as Mulcair states will also “not want to be left out of the party, and be denied access to power in Ottawa”, translating into massive support for Erin O’Toole’s Conservative, growing the party exponentially over the next three weeks, gaining as many as 40 seats in Québec, predicts Mr. Mulcair, providing the Tory leader with a comfortable majority in Parliament with which to govern over the course of the next four years.

Decision Canada: coverage of the 2021 Canadian federal election

All of the above said, we’re still three weeks out from Election Day.

If, in fact, a week is a lifetime in politics, absolutely anything could happen over the course of the next 20 days to change the political calculus.

Gerald Butts: "Campaigns matter."

As campaign co-chair on the successful 2015 Liberal campaign, and long a senior advisor to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, although Gerald Butts is probably tearing his hair out at the current state of affairs vis-à-vis Liberal fortunes in the 2021 federal election, Mr. Butts is absolutely correct …

Campaigns Matter

Any day now, Erin O’Toole could step in the muck, and absolutely destroy his campaign, or a Tory candidate or three or five could go rogue, and say something so off-putting that it could destroy the Conservative campaign once and for all, setting the stage for a change in the electoral fortunes of the beleaguered Liberal Party of Canada, allowing Justin Trudeau to pull off a come from behind election victory, once again installing him as Prime Minister of Canada. Everyone likes a good, old-fashioned underdog story.

Political party leaders in the 2021 federal election campaign

In 2021, the Leaders’ Debate — when the vast majority of people first take notice of the election — emerges as an especially important and perhaps even pivotal event in the life of the current campaign to form government in Ottawa, after Election Day 2021, on Monday, September 20th. Let’s face it, this election will be about what it was always going to be about: which one of the major political parties and which one of the political party leaders is best prepared to protect families across Canada from the continuing and ongoing ravages of COVID-19, and the deadly Delta variant.


Erin O’Toole Says If He Wins Justin Trudeau’s New Office Will Be A Porta-Potty

There’s an easy answer to the question above, and it isn’t Erin O’Toole’s Conservative Party of Canada. As you’ve heard so many times, “It ain’t over til the tubby, 71-year-old guy sitting in front of his computer, says it’s over.”

clock-election-raymond.jpg


Round and round she goes, where she stops nobody knows. David Herle presents details on the latest EKOS Research data, compiled by founder Frank Graves and his crack team, on the Curse of Politics podcast, above.

In addition, here’s Mr. Graves on Twitter late last night ……

A 2021 polling update from EKOS Research founder, Frank Graves | August 31, 2021

Decision 2021 | Day 16 | Jagmeet Singh Screws NDP, Libs, & Us

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh welcome the prospect of a far right Erin O'Toole-led Conservative government

In 2019, when asked, federal New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh told reporters — and the nation — that a Jagmeet Singh-led NDP would never support the Tories in a Conservative Party minority, or majority government. A chasm existed, he said, between the values that New Democratic Party members hold dear, and the far right values of intolerance Conservative party members have long held close to their mean bosoms.

Last week, in a radical departure from NDP party policy, and what he’d said in the past, Jagmeet Singh told reporters that the federal NDP would have no problem in supporting an Erin O’Toole-led Conservative government, that now may be the time for change, that he felt he could hold sway over Mr. O’Toole that would allow the NDP to inform Tory government policy.

The cynical electoral politics of the federal NDP always come to the fore.

NDP leader Jack Layton and Prime Minister Stephen Harper smiling together

At this juncture, a bit of history respecting the federal New Democratic Party’s policy of accommodation with right-wing parties is in order.
In late 2005, Liberal Prime Minister Paul Martin met with relatively newly-anointed NDP leader Jack Layton to discuss with him legislation that he would introduce in the House of Commons within the coming 30 days …

  • Child Care. Arising from a report submitted by Social Development Minister Ken Dryden calling for the implementation of a universal child care programme in Canada, his government would soon be introducing legislation that would create the first national universal social programme in 40 years, a fully-funded national child care programme, and …

  • The Kelowna Accord. Arising from a First Ministers’ Meeting in Kelowna, British Columbia in the autumn of 2005, and the passage of an initiative entitled “First Ministers and National Aboriginal Leaders Strengthening Relationships and Closing the Gap” — more commonly known as The Kelowna Accord — legislation that Mr. Martin had fought for his entire political life that would fundamentally change the relationship of Canada to its Indigenous peoples, wherein the federal government would commit to $5.085 billion in spending over 5 years on bettering health care services for Canada’s Indigenous peoples, create a new Indigenous education system that would be run by native bands across Canada, and would train new Aboriginal teachers while constructing new schools on remote Indigenous reserves, while also addressing the issue of clean water in remote Indigenous communities.

Prime Minister Martin asked Mr. Layton for his support for both of these progressive and groundbreaking pieces of social legislation, how important it was for him personally, for families with young children — and for women held out of the workforce due to the inadequate provision of affordable quality child care and, finally, for Canada’s Indigenous peoples, that their concerns might finally be addressed in a caring and fulsome manner.

Sadly, it was not to be.

With the enthusiastic support of the New Democratic Party, and that of its leader, Mr. Jack Layton, Mr. Layton colluded with then Official Leader of the Opposition, Conservative Party leader Stephen Harper to vote against the child care and the Indigenous relations legislation brought before the House by the Liberal minority government of Paul Martin, with Mr. Layton voting to thwart both pieces of groundbreaking legislation, in the process defeating the government, and leading to the calling of a federal election, and subsequent minority Harper-led Conservative government in Ottawa.

As he repeatedly told Canadians throughout the 2005-2006 election period, Conservative leader Stephen Harper was admantly opposed to both pieces of “social legislation,” neither of which pieces of “social engineering legislation” would move forward in a Stephen Harper-led government.

And so, such socially regressive government policy — opposing any sort of universal national child care programme, nor any re-definition of the relationship between the government of Canada to its Indigenous peoples — came to pass, with the full and cynical support of NDP leader, Jack Latyon, who would go on to become best friends with Stephen Harper, the two party leaders meeting regularly for friendly, but utterly non-productive, chats at 24 Sussex, for five long years, Mr. Layton cynically propping up a corrupt Tory government led by his good pal, Prime Minister Harper.

A bit of background on Mr. Layton’s cynical approach to politics. From the time Jack Layton became leader of the federal New Democratic Party in 2003 thru until 2011, Mr. Layton had one dual-pronged goal on his mind …

  • Gain seats for the NDP in the House of Commons, and

  • Replace the Liberal Party as the official Opposition, with the eventual goal of forming an NDP government in Ottawa.

Under Jack Layton’s leadership, support for the NDP increased in each election. The party’s popular vote doubled in the 2004 election, which gave the NDP the balance of power in Paul Martin’s minority government. In May 2005, the NDP had supported the Liberal budget in exchange for major amendments, in what was promoted as Canada’s “First NDP budget”. In November 2005, Layton voted with other opposition parties to defeat the Liberal government. The NDP gained more seats in the House in the 2006 and 2008 elections, in which the party elected 29 and 37 MPs, respectively.

In the 2011 election, Mr. Layton’s NDP won 103 seats, the most successful party result ever — enough to allow him to form the Official Opposition. Federal support for the NDP in 2011 was unprecedented, especially in the province of Québec, where the party won 59 out of 75 seats. Unfortunately, Jack Layton was never afforded the opportunity to lead the Opposition in the House of Commons, succumbing to cancer on August 22, 2011.

In 2015, under the soon-to-be deposed leadership of NDP leader Thomas Mulcair, the New Democratic Party of Canada did not realize its dreams of government, instead devolving its meagre riding count to only 44 seats.

child care

Here we are in 2021. By the end of the 2019 election, the seat count for the NDP in the House of Commons had been reduced to 24 seats.


NDP attack ad, not against Erin O’Toole, but against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

Current federal New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh has clearly taken a page out of the cynical electoral playbook created by Jack Layton: child care, who needs it?; improved relations with Canada’s Indigenous peoples … yeah, tell it to someone who cares; the Liberals’ Child Care Benefit that has reduced child poverty 40% since 2015 … children want money, they can work in factories or go begging on the streets, the NDP just don’t care; seniors living in care or assisted living facilities, yeah well, you’ve had your time enjoying the good life on this planet … if Erin O’Toole wants to place former Ontario Conservative Party leader Mike Harris in charge of privatizing corrupt seniors care centres across Canada, such that Mr. Harris can rake in even more millions of dollars than he has running Ontario’s corrupt Sienna Senior Living, Revera, Extendicare and Chartwell seniors facilities, where thousands have died … again, we just don’t care.


Another cynical NDP ad targeting Justin Trudeau, not Tory leader Erin O’Toole

Federal New Democratic Party Members of Parliament want more seats in the House of Commons, so that more Dippers can earn $168,000 annual salaries (plus all those great benefits, like free dental care, unlimited massages, and more) as sitting members in the House of Commons — not to mention, those gold-plated pensions that will keep them living the life of riley when they retire, or are defeated — with Mr. Singh earning even more, given the top up he receives as leader of the fourth Opposition party.


Rabid and violent non-mask wearing anti-vaxxer, anti-democratic supporters of the Conservative party, fools all, create mayhem at a Justin Trudeau rally, where he committed to a one billion infusion of monies to the provinces to fund vaccine passports, to keep all Canadians safe. Tory leader Erin O’Toole’s response, “People have the right to voice their concerns about the Liberal government’s overreaching pandemic policy. Conservatives are opposed to federally-funded vaccine passports.” O’Toole later moderated his position on rally violence, given that some protesters were Conservative Party supporters. And what did we hear, initially, from NDP leader Jagmeet Singh, when asked about the violence at the rally … crickets; only later did he condemn the attack.

For the second time in 16 years, the federal New Democratic Party is not only willing, but actively working towards the goal of ensuring Canada will not have a national child care programme, nor do the federal NDP seem interested in preserving or improving the Child Care Benefit that has made life so much easier for young families, and neither does the federal NDP seem to care, in supporting the Tories, about Indigenous reconciliation.

Nor does Jagmeet Singh and the federal NDP seem to care about the health of Canadians during this once in a century pandemic, for while the Liberals offer up one billion dollars to provinces to ensure the implementation of vaccine passports to support the 90% of Canadians who are demanding that we be kept safe, allowing the pandemic to end sooner than later, Erin O’Toole’s cynical and fanatical Conservatives seem deeply indebted to the support offered by the violent fools in the the anti-vaxx movement. Jagmeet Singh seems not to care one iota about our safety and our health. Of course, as always, New Democrats talk a good game — but when it comes right down to it, the federal NDP cannot be counted on.

The New Democratic Party of Canada is running some great candidates, and as a lifelong member of the NDP (dating back to 1963) VanRamblings would like to see more New Democratic Party members of Parliament elected — becauses there are good and great persons of conscience and integrity in the NDP, like longtime federal MP Don Davies, or newcomers like the recently nominated Vancouver-Granville NDP candidate, Anjali Appadurai.

EKOS EKOS Research founder Frank Graves says Erin O’Toole NDP support tone deaf.

But if achieving the goal of more Dippers in Parliament means the federal NDP have made the cynical calculation that the only way for them to gain more seats in Parliament is to target Justin Trudeau, while keeping absolutely mum on what a far-right-of-centre Erin O’Toole-led Conservative government in Ottawa would portend, for VanRamblings that is simply a bridge too far, as well as cynical and repugnant electoral politics in the extreme that, we believe, most thinking, progressive members of the NDP — who truly do not want an Erin O’Toole government in Ottawa — will find utterly insupportable, leading to an inevitable decline in support for the NDP, with many New Democrats strategically casting a vote for the Liberal party which, although far from perfect, do not represent the abomination a Tory government in Ottawa would mean for most caring Canadians.


Music Sunday | Clairo | Meditations On Anguish, Hope & Trust

American singer-songwriter Clairo

American singer-songwriter Claire Cottrill was born in Atlanta, Georgia on August 18th, 1998, and was raised in Carlisle, Massachusetts, the daughter of marketing executive Geoff Cottrill. From the age of 3 on Clairo displayed a distinct gift for writing songs, and by the time she was a teenager had taught herself Pro Tools, a digital audio home workstation cum music studio, recording, editing, and mastering the songs she had written in her bedroom — not to mention, creating the videos to accompany her songs.

Clairo first drew widespread attention in late 2017 when the video for her feminist song Pretty Girl went viral on YouTube. The song was later recorded for an indie rock compilation benefiting the Transgender Law Centre. At the time, Clairo drew the attention of filmmaker Crystal Moselle — best known for her award-winning documentary The Wolfpack, the tale of six cloistered brothers and their unusual upbringing, raised in near-total isolation in a public housing complex on New York’s Lower East Side.

On the subway riding into New York one day, Moselle ran across a group of skater girls heading into the city, and opened a conversation with them. Within the year, Moselle began work on her début fiction film, Skate Kitchen, an empowering coming-of-age portrait of six young women on wheels, and a touching ode to the rewards and challenges of female friendship — asking Clairo to score and record the soundtrack for the film, as well as write and record a song for both the film, and the film’s trailer.

Clairo, her song Heaven, recorded for Crystal Moselle’s Skate Kitchen film soundtrack

And now Clairo has a new album, Sling, the second full-length release for the pop chanteuse, a luminous and devastatingly intimate lo-fi portrait and pandemic-induced exercise in reflection, the new record finding the singer-songwriter meditating on her own self-growth, and the quiet frustration of living in isolation. Expanding her sound with grace and subtlety, employing an instrumental palette including flutes, saxophones and a string section — with the support of co-producer Jack Antonoff — the concluding, gut punch coda on the album has the 23-year-old making a winking joke, and a dead-serious personal statement on aging, and feeling older than you ought to.

The coda to Clairo’s new album, Sling, the song Management, a dead-serious personal reflection on “aging”, and the meaning behind becoming an adult in our troubled world.

Cat Zhang writes in her review of Sling, in Pitchfork magazine online …

“On Blouse, the hushed lead single of Clairo’s new album, Sling, the little thrills of adolescence are gone. “Why do I tell you how I feel/When you’re just looking down the blouse?” she sings, the dewy sincerity she once radiated now hardened into bitterness. Here is another young woman whose trust has been abused by an older man, and who is so hungry to be validated that she’ll risk being sexualized again: “If touch could make them hear, then touch me now.” It’s brutal to realize when you’re young that the ogling curiosity older people regard you with is not the same as respect, and getting attention does not mean having real agency.”

Since she stumbled into fame in 2017, and not entirely of her own volition, Clairo has been narrowly interpreted through the prism of her generation — keywords: viral, YouTube, bedroom pop, bisexuality — as an avatar for sensitive youths more comfortable online than outside, and who speak frankly about their feelings. On Sling, you feel her sense of exhaustion.

The song Blouse, from Clairo’s sophomore July 2021 album release, Sling.

Harbor, a short film edited by Clairo, from Noah Baumbach’s film, Marriage Story.

Clairo, in concert in Vancouver Monday, March 28, 2022, at the Orpheum.