First Tory Ad Released

Presented without comment, here’s the gist of the first so-called “pre-writ” advertisement for the Conservatives:

Rather than attacking Liberal Leader Stephan Dion, the commercial features Canadians describing what they like about Prime Minister Stephen Harper. It seems designed to portray a kinder, gentler side of the prime minister.

“Stephen Harper’s the kind of person who knows where he stands. He’s a straight up guy,” says one man.

“He’s doing a good job,” another says. “He’s the steady hand we need when the world’s economy is so uncertain.”

“I like the idea that he’s a family man with young children,” a woman says. Another says she feels Harper has toughened the justice system.

A younger woman also joins the chorus: “I’ll be voting for the first time, and I’ll be voting for Stephen Harper,” she says.

The commercial ends with what may well become Harper’s election slogan: “Stephen Harper. Strong leadership on your side,” a voice says over a picture of a relaxed-looking Harper smiling at the camera.

Heh. Oops. I guess that’s a comment, isn’t it?

Update: Maybe one of our conservative friends could let me know when this hits YouTube so we can all soak at length in the warm glow of the “nice family guy” and comforting “Daddy knows best” vibe. (Meanwhile, the one described above featuring “real Canadians” can be viewed here.)

Update2: Zing! In addition to highlighting the laughability factor involved in portraying the Conservatives as a “kinder, gentler party” in view of Tony Clement’s recent callous hijinks, KNB makes a good point about these ads having been produced some time ago, although that in itself isn’t necessarily indicative of anything given it sounds as though because they’re the quintessence of what one might call “generic branding” of the Dear Leader.

Update3: Danielle Takacs laces into the underlying premise of the ads, mercilessly ripping it to shreds while excoriating our “liberal media” for getting sucked in. Yikes! Also, there’s a great article by Prof. Errol P. Mendes reprinted in the comments here that’s definitely worth a read.

19 Replies to “First Tory Ad Released”

  1. Lucky you. We don’t have that option out here.

    I always used to love reading the results after an election and seeing how well the Rhinos did in Quebec.

  2. Oh, they weren’t just in Quebec. Remember when the Rhinos ran a guy named “John Turner” in, um, John Turner’s riding back in ’88? I think the local Grit election signs all had “John N. Turner”, with the “N” in green.

  3. Yeah, there was a small contingent out here in B.C., but nothing like the almost kinda “viable” entity the party was in Quebec, where they handily beat out the NDP in some ridings as I recall.

  4. The difference between Stephan Harper and Stefan Dion is this. Stevie likes to watch hockey – he’s a fan (awwww). Stefan plays hockey.

  5. The bigger difference between the two is that Stevie is PM , Stephie will only ever get to watch .

  6. Mark my words . This will go down as the strangest election in Canada’s history .

  7. “I like the idea that he’s a family man with young children,”

    or: “I like it that he and his wife are fecund; that he produces sperm and she ovulates and that they’ve had congress…twice. That means a lot to me.”

  8. Well, isn’t that amazing – the PM is married with kids…..

    The last single PM I can think of was MacKenzie King.

    They forgot to mention he likes little things like kittens that he can lord over.

  9. They forgot to mention he likes little things like kittens that he can lord over.

    Did they mention just how good kittens are barbequed ?

  10. “I like the idea that he’s a family man with young children,”

    Exactly, I hate politicians with old children. That is the reason why I support Obama over McCain. And Obama over Hillary Clinton.

  11. The party of law and order?
    Playing by the rules?
    Yeah, right.

    Deceivin’ Stephen doesn’t even follow His own laws.
    ———————————————————————————–

    Errol P. Mendes . Harper Is In A Fix
    The prime minister’s claim that he can ignore his own fixed election date is legally dubious and morally even worse
    The Ottawa Citizen
    Errol P. Mendes, Citizen Special
    Published: Thursday, August 28, 2008
    It now seems almost certain that Stephen Harper will visit the governor general just after Labour Day to seek an early election. This is despite the fixed election date of October 2009 which was established by a law that his own government was eager to pass as a demonstration of political fairness, accountability and transparency. It was also a key Reform party core belief and part of the Conservatives’ 2006 election platform.

    He will claim the right to do so on two grounds. First, he will claim that he is legally able to do so despite the law he championed. This is because he will claim the law, which is a minor amendment to the Canada Elections Act, still gives the governor general the right to dissolve Parliament on the advice of the prime minister. Some experts claim that the prime minister would only be bound by a constitutional amendment that entrenches a fixed date for elections. The experts could well be wrong.

    Much of the powers of the prime minister and the governor general are governed not by the written Constitution, but by constitutional conventions, including who has the right to dissolve Parliament and call for elections. Constitutional convention gives the prime minister only the right to advise the governor general to call for dissolution of Parliament and thereby trigger an election. The governor general has an uncontested residual power to deny a prime minister’s request for dissolution.

    Constitutional conventions can be both entrenched in and overridden by statute law. That is precisely what the Conservatives did when they decided to constrain the conventional power of the prime minister to seek dissolution whenever he smelled political advantage to do so.

    However, the fixed election law does not constrain the residual power of the governor general as it expressly stipulates that “Nothing in this section affects the powers of the governor general, including the power to dissolve Parliament at the governor general’s discretion.”

    Historical precedent demonstrates that the use of the conventional residual power by the governor general contrary to the advice of the prime minister has the potential to cause political controversy and create trouble for the Crown in Canada. In the 1926 King-Byng affair, governor general Lord Byng refused William Lyon Mackenzie King’s request to dissolve Parliament after losing a confidence vote and called on the Conservative opposition leader Arthur Meighen to form the government. When Meighen could not gain the confidence of the House, Lord Byng granted dissolution of Parliament and Mackenzie King won a majority government, in part by campaigning against the decision of Lord Byng. This precedent, while not a constitutional convention, would present a serious political hurdle for a governor general to refuse to grant the request of a prime minister for dissolution, no matter how contrived.

    Even if the fixed elections law does not constrain the governor general’s discretion to grant dissolution of Parliament, one could argue that the law constrains the prime minister’s power to ask for one until October 2009. Hiding under the political constraints of the governor general’s residual power is nevertheless a violation of a statute. Some aggrieved citizen may even consider seeking court action to stop this legally dubious move.

    The imminent violation of the fixed elections law is even more distasteful when one considers the second reason for Mr. Harper’s claim to ignore his own law. He claims that he may seek the dissolution because Parliament is dysfunctional and will continue to be so with the next session to start soon after Labour Day.

    Ignoring the fact that most of his agenda has passed through Parliament and become law, Mr. Harper and other Conservatives point to the dysfunctional nature of parliamentary committees such as the one examining whether the advertising expenses practices of the Conservatives breached the Elections Act. The parliamentary channel’s coverage of the proceedings has revealed that it was primarily the disruptive antics of the Conservative party members on the committee and the failure of Conservative witnesses to appear before the committee that was the cause of the dysfunction of this committee. The secret, 200-page Conservative guidebook to disrupt and manipulate parliamentary committees — including chairs storming out of meetings — is proof that it is the Conservatives who are orchestrating the dysfunction in Parliament and then blaming it on the opposition parties.

    It is as if this Conservative government is convinced that opposition parties have no right to object and oppose policies and practices that they may find repugnant.

    There is also the damning logic of Mr. Harper’s own admission that any election will result in another minority government. So why call it now if that is the case? To continue the alleged dysfunctional Parliament with a new minority government at the cost of almost $200 million to the Canadian taxpayer? Or is it to put off more scrutiny on the alleged wrongdoings of the Conservatives that fly in the face of their promise of transparency, honesty and accountability?

    If the prime minister does decide to ignore the fixed election date and ask the governor general to dissolve Parliament soon after Labour Day because it is dysfunctional, it would be akin to a person who has blown up his own house asking the rest of us to build him a new one.

    If not the rule of law, a most basic sense of political morality should make the prime minister think twice about breaking his own law.

    Errol P. Mendes is a professor of international, constitutional and human rights law at the University of Ottawa and editor-in-chief of the National Journal of Constitutional Law.

  12. it would be akin to a person who has blown up his own house asking the rest of us to build him a new one.

    You have no idea how funny that statement is .

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