Left to Right: Bill Doody, Brian Peckford, John Crosbie, Jane Crosbie, and Beth Crosbie at the 1983 federal PC leadership convention |
The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
13 January 2020
John Crosbie #nlpoli #cdnpoli
08 April 2019
The Atlantic Accord: background to the 1985 agreement #nlpoli
The Atlantic Accord functions in Newfoundland and Labrador politics in two ways. There is the agreement between the Government of Canada and the provincial government that established the joint management framework for the Newfoundland and Labrador offshore. At the same time, there is the political prop and the associated mythology that has, in largest measure, replaced the actual agreement in both the popular and political/bureaucratic understanding of it.
22 June 2010
Today in history
June 22, 1990.
The Meech Lake Accord died.
In Manitoba, Elijah Harper refused to give the consent needed to bring the Accord to the floor of the legislature for debate.
In Newfoundland and Labrador, and after a last-minute effort at further manipulation by the Mulroney administration in Ottawa, Clyde Wells spoke at length in the House of Assembly before adjourning debate on the Accord.
Some predicted the country would fall apart.
It didn’t.
The finger pointing continues to this day, as Deborah Coyne concluded her memoir of the affair: Roll of the dice. Brian Mulroney’s 2007 memoir is full of vitriol and a unhealthy dose of misrepresentation about the Accord debate.
Jean-Francois Lisee used exactly the same sort of fabrications as Mulroney to begin his blog series on the 20th anniversary of the Accord’s demise. Then again, the premise of the Accord was a fabrication, a falsehood, a blatant lie so it’s really not all that surprisingly that some of its proponents still rely on falsehood to argue for their case.
Meanwhile, in another corner of the universe, Gil Remillard, Quebec’s intergovernmental affairs minister at the time thinks:
<<L'entente du lac Meech aura servi à préparer le terrain et 20 ans après, on se rend compte que maintenant, nous faisons beaucoup de choses comme on voulait que ça soit fait lorsqu'on a discuté de Meech.>>
For the most part, though, only a few people in the country have even noticed the anniversary slip by.
-srbp-
13 May 2009
Nose-puller alert: Frank and Brian never spoke after 1987
Via the National Post, a description of a bit of Brian Mulroney’s testimony at the inquiry into the whole Airbus mess:
His relationship with Frank Moores, at one time a great friend, was “nonexistent” after 1987, when Moores trashed Mulroney’s government. “I simply severed communications with him completely.”
Does anyone else find it hard to believe that Brian Mulroney and Frank Moores didn’t speak – even once – during the period after 1987?
Like say, maybe around the time of Meech Lake?
Maybe September 1990? Frank was here for the Hibernia signing but the poor old e-scribbler brain can’t recall if the Prime Minister at the time made the trip as well.
-srbp-