by Dana Osiowy
It was a poor showing for a rare opportunity in this riding
– a visit from a Federal leadership race candidate. We had Martha Hall Findlay
in our community on the weekend, and one can examine the poor showing as being
a result of a Conservative entrenched federal riding or as a sign of systemic
lack of engagement in our community.
Either way it was a great opportunity for those of us who showed up to
meet with her. There were attendees at the luncheon who were radical Québécois
separatists and embattled Liberals who are waiting for the second coming and
everyone was enamoured with Hall Findlay and the “celebrity-free” approach she
is taking to the leadership race. She asked for a round table of introductions
and for all there to elaborate on what the do and what they are interested in,
she then gave a brief overview of her platform and opened to a wide range of
questions.
When discussing the free-fall of the liberal party she
touched on the fact that the environment is a hot button issue and yet in the
2008 election when the Libs ran an entirely environmental platform the
electorate either voted elsewhere or stayed home. This was a segue into
discussing voter engagement, women in politics and whether or not Canada is
ready for a female Prime Minister. To the last question the response from the
attendees and Martha was “Why are we still asking that question?”.
Hall Findlay relayed stories of her ski racing days and even
had an elaborate metaphor for ski racing being like politics – although it
isn’t always like crashing at 120 km/hr!
The culture of campaigning in Canada today was brought up
when we discussed how the attack ads on Stephane Dion and Michael Ignatieff
were not addressed. As a country we always say that we loathe those kinds of
ads but they work! The narrative around Michael Ignatieff was that he was only
here for a short time. Another
opportunity gap was for the Liberals to rally around the NDP to protest the
abolishment of the long-form census – that will be a heritage of missed data
and a struggle for statisticians and historians trying to study the real state
of the union.
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