In Brief

Olympic daydreams from beautiful BC .. Michael Byers’ cease-fire proposal could still make Stephen Harper toast

Feb 14th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

So … it could be that minority Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s late winter 2010 Con game is working at last. The death of the Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili was tragic. And the failure of the fourth indoor torch arm to rise was vaguely unfortunate. But otherwise the official opening of the Vancouver Winter Olympics was […]



So how is Dalton McGuinty doing now (and does he even know about the latest Senate reform poll in Ontario)?

Feb 9th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

For those who may actually be interested, our resident Ontario historian Randall White has now unburdened himself on the Toronto Centre by-election in Ontario politics last week. He also offers some hard and soft information on the March 4 Ontario provincial by-elections, in Leeds-Grenville and Ottawa West-Nepean. CLICK HERE for the complete article, or see […]



Is the end of the age of crazy tax cuts at hand?

Feb 7th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

Who just said: “I think the lesson of the last 25 years is that it doesn’t work …  Taxes are going to have to be raised. … The Republicans think their mission in life is to cut taxes. Sorry … game over. We’re now in the tax-raising business. And we’re going to be in the […]



Why no one in Calgary today is taking off clothes for a provincially equal Senate

Feb 5th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

More than 60 years ago Harold Innis, the almost-great Canadian historian (or economist, or economic historian, or communications theorist who inspired Marshall McLuhan, etc, etc), lamented the “futility of political discussion in Canada.” And it is sobering to think that in this respect at least not much has changed since the late 1940s. Take, for […]



Catching up with Canadian politics .. and the death of Holden Caulfield’s dad

Feb 1st, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

You of course hear nothing about Canadian politics via the ordinary media in Florida, where I spent the counterweights late January prorogue. And I didn’t take a laptop computer with me. On the theory that a week is a long time in politics, one of my first tasks on returning to the northern deep freeze […]



counterweights prorogued until February 1

Jan 24th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

As a sign of sympathy with the No Prorogue protests right across Canada yesterday the management has decided  to prorogue counterweights for one full week. We will return on Monday, February 1, 2010.



Listen to the nation .. stop the prorogation

Jan 24th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

Just after noon yesterday I set out with a few of the hardier counterweights editors to join our local area demonstration against minority Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s prorogation (or “suspension” or even just “shutdown”) of the Parliament of Canada until March 3. Our local area happens to be the most hated city in the country, […]



Did Massachusetts vote again for change it still hasn’t seen?

Jan 20th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

“History has many cunning passages,” T.S. Eliot from St. Louis, Missouri said about 90 years ago (by which time he was already living in London, England). But having a Republican like Scott Brown deal “a devastating blow to President Obama’s domestic agenda Tuesday night by capturing the Senate seat of the late Edward M. Kennedy” […]



Just how bad (er .. make that good) is the political amnesia of the Canadian people?

Jan 18th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

“The Conservatives,” John Ivison at the National Post wrote this past Friday, “think an election is probably at least a year away and are trusting in the public’s political amnesia … They believe the only question that will matter by then is: Who do you trust to lead the country through a period of fiscal […]



Has the prorogation protest peaked .. could be a good question for Karen Alloy?

Jan 15th, 2010 | By | Category: In Brief

Dr. Randall White’s deep-background (and apparently appallingly detailed and lengthy) investigation of the current great Canadian prorogation debate is now said to be almost complete. It will be posted without fail at some point this coming weekend – probably just before midnight, Sunday, January 17. Meanwhile, others among us are starting to wonder whether the […]