Early election call shows Stephen Harper’s hubris

Harper’s early writ drop was a cynical political ploy — one that might backfire badly.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper's hubris led him to “game the system” by calling for an extra-long, massively expensive election campaign, and to offer an insulting defence for his decision, writes Robin V. Sears.

STEVE RUSSELL / TORONTO STAR Order this photo

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s hubris led him to “game the system” by calling for an extra-long, massively expensive election campaign, and to offer an insulting defence for his decision, writes Robin V. Sears.

“Those whom the gods would destroy, they first make proud.” — Sophocles

Canadians are a tolerant breed when it comes to indulging their political class. We permit them to tell tall political tales usually without retribution. We allow them to claim laughable political virtues, and only snicker occasionally. We even allow them to fling buckets of our money at us, and usually say, “Thank you.”

But there are lines you should not cross.

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper may just have crossed one. We do not often reward politicians who call unnecessary, sneaky or excessively short or long elections. Our “fair play” instincts kick in. As Jean-Pierre Kingsley, the former Elections Canada commissioner pointed out, Harper is “gaming the system.” Calling an election on a long weekend in midsummer is simply rubbing salt in an irritated Canadian vacationer’s wound.

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Stephen Harper adds premiers to his list of electoral opponents: Tim Harper

The Conservative leader’s campaign offers a hint of scorched earth as he goes after Kathleen Wynne and Rachel Notley.

Now that he's campaigning against premiers like Alberta's Rachel Notley, Stephen Harper has added another chapter in the saga of the outsider, giving the early days of his 2015 re-election bid a hint of scorched earth, writes Tim Harper.

ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO

Now that he’s campaigning against premiers like Alberta’s Rachel Notley, Stephen Harper has added another chapter in the saga of the outsider, giving the early days of his 2015 re-election bid a hint of scorched earth, writes Tim Harper.

Stephen Harper has always seemed most comfortable as a self-styled “outsider,” no matter how oxymoronic that might sound from someone who lives at 24 Sussex Drive.

Depending on his needs, he can find elites in courtrooms or newsrooms to rally his troops and he likes to tell us he avoids the trappings of office, from power lunches to black tie soirees.

But now that he is campaigning against provincial premiers, Harper has added another chapter in the saga of the outsider, giving the early days of his 2015 re-election bid a hint of scorched earth.

It’s starting to look like Harper against the world and he appears to like it this way.

But it also reveals a glaring blind spot for this man—his inability to accommodate anyone who does not share his ideological bent.

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Premier Notley unloads on Harper after his remarks badmouthing the Alberta NDP government

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BY , CALGARY SUN

FIRST POSTED: | UPDATED:

TCP_JMC117284286Alberta Premier Rachel Notley, left, meets with Prime Minister Stephen Harper in Calgary, Alta., on Monday, July 6, 2015.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

Stephen Harper throws down the gauntlet. Premier Notley picks it up.

Harper fires a missile Notley’s way though it’s clearly meant for federal NDP leader Thomas Mulcair.

The Conservative leader takes aim at the provincial NDP for being “incapable of producing a budget” while raising taxes — a corporate tax hike and a progressive income tax scheme where tax rates go up on yearly taxable income over $125,000.

The Conservative leader calls the result a “disaster” and says it’s been rejected by Albertans.

On Tuesday, Notley returns fire. The premier says she is “protecting the jobs and incomes of regular working families rather than that of wealthy Conservative friends and insiders.”

Ouch.

Notley says her NDP government replaced “regressive taxes with better ones.”

She says they threw out the health care tax proposed by the Prentice PCs.

The premier says Alberta now has “normal corporate taxes” and a “normal progressive income tax system” like other provinces in Canada.

Notley adds Albertans still have the lowest provincial tax load in the country.

Joe Ceci enters the fray, fresh from a meeting at the Calgary Chamber of Commerce, not exactly an NDP crowd.

Ceci is the Alberta NDP budget boss and brought in the tax measures.

“He’s electioneering,” says Ceci, accusing Harper of whipping things up.

“Everybody understands what elections are all about. They’re for saying things that get the attention of the populace. While they may not be accurate they do get people’s attention.

“In many ways there have been lots of people pleased with what’s happened in Alberta. I listen more to that than I do some other things.”

As in, what Harper says.

Conservative website promotes Stephen Harper with taxpayer-funded ’24/Seven’ videos

AUGUST 05, 2015 by

On Sunday, Stephen Harper explained that the reason he was calling the longest election in Canadian history since 1872 was that he feels the money for this election should “come from the parties themselves, not from the government resources, parliamentary resources or taxpayers’ resources.”

Well, guess what?

Not even a week later, the Conservative Party of Canada is actually promoting Harper using his 24/Seven vanity videos – which are taxpayer-funded and produced out of the Privy Council Office – on their own official website. Check it out:

conservativeca-24seven.jpg

The screenshot above, which appears at the URL http://www.conservative.ca/pm-harper/ is current as of 12:30 pm August 5, 2015.

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Child-care benefit could be a potential $43,160 bonanza for B.C. polygamist with 133 children

Do the arithmetic of 20 children under seven and 78 between the ages of seven and 18 and it adds up to a $43,160 payday for Bountiful, B.C. polygamist Winston Blackmore, shown in 2012 leaving a Vancouver court, and his wives.

Jason Payne / PNGDo the arithmetic of 20 children under seven and 78 between the ages of seven and 18 and it adds up to a $43,160 payday for Bountiful, B.C. polygamist Winston Blackmore, shown in 2012 leaving a Vancouver court, and his wives.

There was no bigger winner than Bountiful, B.C., polygamist Winston Blackmore last month when the Canadian government sent out cheques for the expanded Universal Child Care Benefit.

Blackmore, who is awaiting trial on a single criminal charge of polygamy, has 133 children ranging in age from babies to adults.

For every child under the age of six, Canadian parents received $520, and for every child aged seven to 18, they received $420, with no restrictions on how the money could be spent.

Using the best information available from several sources, the 58-year-old fundamentalist Mormon leader has as many as 98 children who are 18 or younger, and as many as 20 of those are seven and younger.

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Long election could scuttle Harper’s ability to claim privilege in Duffy trial testimony

Stephen Harper may have to testify at Duffy's trial after all.

Rod MacIvor/Postmedia News FilesStephen Harper may have to testify at Duffy’s trial after all.

An unintended consequence of the exceedingly long election campaign of 78 days is that MPs’ parliamentary privilege will expire during the writ period.

Normally, this would be mere trivia, but this campaign is being waged during the ongoing criminal trial of suspended senator Mike Duffy.

His trial, currently in hiatus, resumes August 12, and the crucial testimony of Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s chief of staff, Nigel Wright, is expected on that day or shortly after.

in Election 2015, that privilege will expire at the mid-way point of the campaign, on September 11, 2015.

When the privilege resumes — the 40 days before the next session– would depend on when parliament resumes sitting, with the swearing in of MPs.

Should the elected prime minister, whoever he or she might be, bring parliament back the day after the election, October 20, then the privilege would extend retroactively back to September 10, 2015.

There is, however, no need to recall parliament so quickly. Usually, several weeks or months pass after an election before the session begins. Indeed, some have speculated that the House will not sit again until later in the fall or maybe not until early in the new year.

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Refugees and income assistance – rebutting the chain email (“pensioners’ myth”)

Source URL: http://ccrweb.ca/en/refugees-and-income-assistance-rebutting-chain-email-pensioners-myth

Responding to chain email with false information

Have you heard rumours that refugees in Canada receive greater assistance from the government than pensioners?

For several years, a persistent chain email has been circulating claiming that refugees receive significantly more money in income assistance than Canadians collecting a pension.  The information, which is based on a letter published in the Toronto Star, is false. The record has been set straight by the federal government and the Canadian Council for Refugees.

Refugees come to Canada in different ways, but no matter the category, refugees receive very limited income assistance from the government.

The true picture is that:

  • Refugee claimants and refugees recognized by the Immigration and Refugee Board receive no special income assistance.  They may, depending on provincial regulations, be entitled, like other residents, to social assistance.
  • Privately sponsored refugees are not entitled to government assistance (including provincial assistance) during the period of their sponsorship (usually for one year after arrival in Canada).  Their income support must be provided by their sponsors.
  • Government assisted refugees have access to financial assistance from the federal government through the Resettlement Assistance Program (RAP).  This financial assistance is generally for one year maximum and is received only if they do not have their own financial resources or income. The exact rate depends on the size of the family and is tied to social assistance rates.  In Ontario in July 2013, for example, a single person receives $781 per month.  In addition, government-assisted refugees are entitled to a one-time set up allowance, to cover such things as clothes, basic household effects and staples, and telephone installation.  For a single person there is a maximum one-time allowance of $905, plus a $564 loan for house rental and telephone line deposits.

Most resettled refugees arrive in Canada with a significant debt burden, since they are expected to repay the Canadian government for their transportation to Canada as well as the cost of their medical examination undertaken as part of their processing to come to Canada.  Refugee families therefore often begin life in Canada with a debt running to thousands of dollars.  Interest is charged on this loan at a rate set by the Department of Finance each year.

For more information on transportation loans for resettled refugees and the devastating impacts they have, see: http://ccrweb.ca/en/transportation-loans and http://www.ccrweb.ca/documents/loansEN.pdf

Have you received a chain email or read a letter to the editor spreading this false information?

  • ‘Don’t believe everything you read in the paper…’ The same applies to the Internet!
  • Think before you click –Sending on this email can have devastating impacts.  It spreads false rumours, hurting people who have already suffered in their home countries. Let’s offer them a better welcome to Canada than unfounded stigmas and prejudices.

How can you set the record straight?

  • Respond to the email with correct information and facts to the person who sent you this false information.  Give them the facts.  Ask them to send this information on to everyone that they sent the message to.  Here is a sample email message that you can use:

The information in this email is FALSE. 

Passing it on can have devastating impacts.  It spreads false rumours, hurting people who have already suffered in their home countries. Let’s show them a better welcome to Canada than unfounded stigmas and prejudices.

Put yourself in the shoes of a refugee in Canada – the TRUE picture is that some refugees who come to Canada receive no financial assistance from the government, and others at most extremely limited income assistance.

  • On top of a limited income, refugees resettled to Canada also arrive with a huge debt because they have to repay Canada for their travel costs.  Imagine arriving in Canada owing a debt greater than what you earned in your entire working life.  Many government-assisted refugees do just that and they must pay back the costs of their transportation to Canada, with interest.  For some families this can be as much as $10,000.  This is a huge burden for a refugee family that is starting fresh in a new country, with a new language to learn and few connections.  For more information, see: http://ccrweb.ca/en/transportation-loans

Please send this information back to anyone who has received this false information to set the record straight. For more information see the websites of the department of Citizenship and Immigration Canada (http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/faq/refugees/index.asp#support) and the Canadian Council for Refugees (ccrweb.ca/en/refugees-and-income-assistance-rebutting-chain-email-pensioners-myth).

  • Post a response to this chain email on your website or in your blog, with the correct information.
  • If the rumour is circulating widely in your community, talk to journalists at your local radio station or community newspaper to produce a piece with the correct information.  Take the opportunity to raise the realities and challenges faced by refugees in your community.

Looking for more information?

Explanation of the origins of the email by Toronto Star ombudsperson (below)

You Asked For It, article published by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, Sept.-Oct. 2005, responding to the chain email

Citizenship and Immigration Canada: Do government-assisted refugees get more income support and benefits than Canadian pensioners do?.

Citizenship and Immigration Canada: Financial support for Government-Assisted Refugees

For a rebuttal of a US version of the myth, see Snopes.com (a site dedicated to getting the facts on urban legends)

A version of the myth also made an appearance in Australia: ABC, MediaWatch


The Toronto Star ombudsperson published the following explanation of the origins of the email:

“Today’s rather sad and twisted tale began last March when the Star published a feature about plans to settle hundreds of African refugees in smaller Canadian cities. It was a simple story: Canada and the United Nations were flying asylum-seekers from a Somali refugee camp to new lives in centres such as Hamilton. As immigration/diversity reporter Nicholas Keung wrote, immigration officials hope to encourage (but not force) refugees to make new lives outside the magnet cities of Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. “We hope by relocating them all together and resettling them as a whole to the same community, we can create a positive environment to help them integrate into the Canadian society successfully,” an immigration official explained.

Fine and dandy. But halfway through the 1,500-word article, unforeseen trouble was lurking. In paragraph 16, the story said single refugees are eligible for $1,890 from Ottawa as a “start-up allowance, along with a $580 monthly social assistance, depending on how soon the person is able to find employment.” In addition, they get “a night lamp, a table, a chair and a single bed from the government,” the story said. In painful hindsight, those details could have been clearer. Actually, the $1,890 “start-up allowance” – including a $580 monthly social assistance cheque from Ottawa – was a one-time payment for basic household needs such as furnishings, pots and linens. The furniture is used. In quick order, two things happened after the article ran. First, a reader sent a nasty e-mail to the reporter. Among other things, it said charity begins at home and Canada should not “roll out the welcome mat” for refugees. The e-mailer assumed – erroneously – that the refugees would collect $2,470 a month. They’d be better off than Canadian pensioners.

More worrisome, the polemicist sent his rant to 100 recipients, some of whom likely spread the word to wider audiences. Ah, the wonders of the Internet! Alarmed by the e-mail, reporter Keung tried to contact the sender. It was too late. Having spread the misinformation, the e-mailer already had changed his address. At the same time, a second development occurred. The Star ran a letter to the editor that said the $2,470 “compares very well to a single pensioner who after contributing to the growth and development of Canada for 40 years can only receive a monthly maximum of $1,012 in old age pension and Guaranteed Income Supplement. “Maybe our pensioners should apply as refugees?” reasoned the writer.

Readers may not realize that fact checking of letters to the editor is nearly impossible at most daily papers, given limited staff resources and unforgiving deadlines. Although many mistakes are caught, the occasional doozer gets through. That was definitely the case here. Over the next several months, it became increasingly clear a disturbing urban myth had been born. Various offices at the Star have been getting e-mails from around the world, usually one or two a week. Many quote from the erroneous letter to the editor, expressing varying degrees of curiosity, dismay, envy or anger. “Let’s send this to all Canadians,” one e-mail roared, “so we can all be p—– off and maybe we can get the refugees cut back to $1,012 and the pensioners up to $2,470 and enjoy some of the money we were forced to submit to the government over the last 40 or 50 years.” In hindsight, the ombud now wishes he’d issued a speedy clarification to help set the record straight. But with information (and misinformation) moving at warp speed on the Internet, I doubt there was a silver bullet for the problem. Maybe this column can help dispel a damaging misperception about refugees and pensioners. Please tell your friends.”  (Toronto Star, Nov. 27, 2004.  Reproduced with permission – Torstar Syndication Services).


One version of the email reads as follows:

Only in Canada.

Do not apply for your old age pension. Apply to be a refugee. It is interesting that the federal government provides a single refugee with a monthly allowance of $1,890.00 and each can get an additional $580.00 in social assistance for a total of $2,470.00.

This compares very well to a single pensioner who, after contributing to the growth and development of Canada for 40 or 50 years, can only receive a monthly maximum of $1,012.00 in old age pension and Guaranteed Income Supplement.

Maybe our pensioners should apply as refugees!

Let’s send this thought to as many Canadians as we can and maybe we can get the refugees cut back to $1,012.00 and the pensioners up to $2,470.00, so they can enjoy the money they were forced to submit to the Canadian government for those 40 to 50 years.

Please forward this to every Canadian you know.

Stephen Harper asks governor general to dissolve parliament, kicking off long election campaign

The Canadian Press | August 2, 2015 2:12 PM ET

Prime Minister Stephen Harper holds a press conference after visiting Governor General David Johnston to dissolve parliament and trigger an election campaign at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Sunday, August 2, 2015.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin TangPrime Minister Stephen Harper holds a press conference after visiting Governor General David Johnston to dissolve parliament and trigger an election campaign at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Sunday, August 2, 2015.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he has asked Governor General David Johnston to dissolve Parliament, touching off an 11-week campaign in advance of an election Oct. 19.

He was quickly peppered with media questions about why he was subjecting Canadians to a campaign that promises to be the longest in more than a century and the costliest in the country’s political history.

Simple, Harper replied: Conservative rivals are already campaigning.

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Federal Election 2015: Costly Campaign All About Saving Taxpayers Money, Harper Says

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Conservative Leader Stephen Harper says a desire to save taxpayers’ money motivated his decision to call an 11-week campaign that will actually cost taxpayers millions of dollars more.

Outside Rideau Hall on Sunday, Harper said it was “essential” to start the campaign in the first week of August ahead of a vote on Oct. 19. The 78-day campaign will be the longest in more than a century and, almost certainly, the costliest in Canadian history.

“As it my intention to begin campaign-related activities and it is also the case for the other party leaders, it’s important that these campaigns be funded by the parties themselves, rather than taxpayers,” the Conservative leader said.

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