In @GlobeAndMail Re: #torcen @LindaMcQuaig There is one result - TopicsExpress



          

In @GlobeAndMail Re: #torcen @LindaMcQuaig There is one result that would truly shake up the status quo. If the NDP can pull off an upset in the Toronto Centre riding, the House of Commons will be graced by one of Canada’s outstanding public intellectuals, Linda McQuaig, long a fearless advocate for a more just and equal Canada. The Prime Minister has been getting much publicity and polite reviews for his new book on hockey in Canada way back a century ago. As it so happens, Ms. McQuaig is also something of an author, though I bet Stephen Harper could take her hands down on a quiz about the birth of professional hockey. She herself has rather different preoccupations, as you can judge by her nine books, seven of them best-sellers. In them Ms. McQuaig rather tramples on the PM’s turf, since he is a “trained economist,” if he says so himself. It’s a nice coincidence, really: Ms. McQuaig’s expertise is in shooting massive holes in the myths and dogmas of trained economists, especially those of the PM’s neoliberal school. To imagine her directly taking on Mr. Harper from across the aisle in Parliament makes one kvell with anticipation. NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair, according to The Globe’s authoritative John Ibbitson, is “the best politician in the House of Commons, right now, by a country mile.” Ms. McQuaig would take little time, I’d bet, to be seen as the best social-economist in the House by a country mile. What Ms. McQuaig knows, maybe better than any other Canadian, is how the system is rigged to help the privileged gain even more privileges. Her series of books documents the many ways in which the tax system benefits the rich, how the deficit is manipulated as an excuse to cut services, how our addiction to oil is jeopardizing our future. She knows her stuff, and she supports her conclusions with hard evidence based on extensive research. To make the contrast with Mr. Harper even more piquant, his speaking style and Ms. McQuaig’s could hardly be more antithetical. She’s a charismatic figure who speaks with scathing passion, withering humour, and yes, even an occasional expletive to make a point (which as an MP I’m guessing she may need to avoid). This does not precisely describe the Prime Minister’s style. Linda McQuaig’s the embodiment, in short, of all those critics the Prime Minister boasts he couldn’t care less about. And their confrontation in Parliament depends entirely on a by-election somewhere in the middle of Toronto on November 25. Gerald Caplan
Posted on: Sat, 16 Nov 2013 02:47:44 +0000

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