Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Leafs v. Lightning

Bleh. That is all.

Sent from my iPhone

Monday, October 27, 2008

Body of a Canadian

Death has the ability to de-centre us. It knocks us off our normal equilibrium and undermines our stable foundations. It can do so in its magnitude, when thousands die or are killed for no reason we can fathom. More often, it does so when one light blinks out of our lives very nearby, leaving us with more darkness than before, unanswerable questions and a keen sense of what’s left behind.

I had the honour of duty to help a group of mourning family and friends say goodbye to someone this past weekend. I can’t shake the feeling that has plagued me for two weeks now that my core is misaligned. This is one of those occasions where the single life lost so close to you dwarfs the conceptual notion of thousands of deaths somewhere far away. After jealously guarding my composure throughout the service, often by not listening to the moving words of others, I let that off-kilter middle of mine wash over me and briefly felt the loss as intensely as anything I ever feel.

39. Dedicated father of one and a second expected within the month. Kind, gentle, patient, athletic, funny, and blessed with a smile that seemed to contain a nice thought just for you; my friend Wain is gone too soon.

He, I was reminded, was a fan of the show The Wire; a show I have come to love in a very childish way, which is the only way to love a very good TV show – jealously, like chocolate ice cream, in inexplicably large doses and somewhat clandestinely. In being reminded that he was also a fan, I realized how long it had been since I’d seen my friend because we had never fully discussed my own love of The Wire, which only came to bloom over the summer. Recently, we had missed many of our usual occasions to visit when we might have huddled off in the corner to gossip about McNulty, Bunk, Omar, the Barksdales, the Stanfield crew and the city of Baltimore. I would have told him how absolutely giddy I was to see settings from The Wire when I visited the city for a conference in June. I know he would have had insight into the show that I had never considered, especially about the soundtrack of the show. I’m sorry to have missed that conversation among the many unknown conversations I will now miss.

On The Wire, when one of the good guys passes, his colleagues get together to send him off with a proper police wake and The Song. Wain deserves The Song. Not many exemplify what a good guy is as well as he did. He is remembered. He is missed.

The Body of an American

The Cadillacs stood by the house
And the Yanks they were within.
The tinker boys, they hissed advice,
“Hot wire with a pin.”
And we turned and shook, as we had a look,
In the room where the dead man lay.
So Big Jim Dwyer made his last trip
To the shores where his fathers lay.

But fifteen minutes later we had our first taste of whiskey,
His uncle’s giving lectures on ancient Irish history.
The men all started telling jokes,
And the women they got frisky.
By five o’clock in the evening
Every bastard there was piskey.

Fare thee well gone away
There’s nothing left to say.
Farewell to New York City boys,
To Boston and PA.
He took them out with a well-aimed clout,
And they often heard him say,
I’m a free born man of the USA.

He fought the champ in Pittsburgh
And he slashed him to the ground.
He took on Tiny Tartinella
And it only went one round.
He never had no time for Reds,
For drink, or dice, or whores.
But he never threw a fight,
Less the fight was right,
So they sent him to the war.

Fare thee well gone away
There’s nothing left to say.
With a staunchy joe and an erin go
My love’s in amerikay.
They’re calling out the rosary,
Spanish wine from far away.
I’m a free born man of the USA.

This morning on the harbour
When I said goodbye to you,
I remember how I swore that
I’d come back to you one day.
And as the sunset came to meet
The evening on the hill,
I told you I’d always love you, I always did,
I always will.

Fare thee well gone away
There’s nothing left to say.
But to say adieu to your eyes as blue
As the water in the bay.
To Big Jim Dwyer, the man o’war,
Who was often heard to say,
I’m a free born man of the USA.
I’m a free born man of the USA.
I’m a free born man of the USA.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Capital Gs

Gambits

It seems clear that everyone agrees the Green Shift was not a good foundation on which to build a campaign. In life, you don't often win when your playbook consists of one play. (Although, ask the Miami Dolphins about having one *really* effective play and they might say otherwise.) The National Post in the linked editorial above say that the Green Shift was "the boldest policy gamble attempted by any major party since Canada-U. S. free trade." As we learned with Mulroney in the 80s, you win big with such a gamble or you lose big.

However, I fail to comprehend why smart pundits and commentators are not hammering Elizabeth May for her equally big and failed gambit. Running against Peter McKay was unconscionably dumb for the leader of a fledgeling party with some momentum. The Greens took 0.8% of the vote in the 2000 federal election (yes, less than 1%, that's not a typo). The preliminary results suggest that they took approximately 6.8% of the vote this time out. They have increased their vote total more than nine fold since 2000 - and they have yet to elect an MP. It's shocking. Maybe more galling since her inclusion in the debates was foreseeable. Maybe more so since she was taken seriously as a national leader despite agreeing not to run a candidate against one of the other federal leaders and going out of her way to praise him.

So, what would have been better for the Green Party, as a political party, for its leader who finished a strong second in a by-election in London-North Centre to run there again in the general election (where the candidate she lost to was defeated last night, btw), or maybe to run in a BC riding where the Greens have taken as much as 30% in a provincial election, or to sit the gallery of Parliament taking notes and promoting a new book? May should be turfed as fast as Dion will be, but alas I suspect that her popular persona will keep her around, thus ensuring we have yet another left-leaning political party with no hope of winning or successsful strategizing.

Green

That Post article makes the fantastically dubious claim that, "this vote will be remembered as a referendum on the Liberals' Green Shift...Canadians' passion for environmental causes has now been subject to a direct test...[i]t turns out that jobs and savings accounts still come first with the public."

First of all, what-the-fuck-ever on this referendum thing. Second, here is what the Post, the Globe and everyone is missing and which I only gripped moments ago - this election actually was a little bit about the environment, but not in some overarching, metaphorical, Oscar-winning, passionate-cause-ish kind of way. I've been arguing for more than a year now around the office (and to anyone else I can pin down to listen to me) that the party that best explains how solutions to environmental issues are to be accommodated in *the economy* wins. The fact is that in this election every party attempted to do so and the Conservatives convinced Canadians that they are the ones with the best plan at the moment. Enironmental activists may not agree and may not like it, but the Conservatives do have an environmental plan. It is timid, weak and unlikely to make any difference at all, but it is also a plan that you can use to convince Canadians that these things can be blended. The fact that the economy seemed to be under threat only worked to convince more people that thy should leave the Conservatives and their approach at the tiller. The other parties had their chances: the Green Shift is actually the best plan, but was explained as poorly as possible, Layton gave a speech in Novermber 2007 about "Green Collar Jobs," which had potential and this is what the Green Party is all about, but (I'm as shocked as you are) the Conservatives were the ones to get the tone right on this one. But, I believe this is the first step down this road, not the last, and everyone should be getting ready for round two.

Great expectations

I was at the convention that elected Jack Layton leader of the NDP. I voted for the man. I have not stopped feeling conflicted about him since.

The NDP's 2008 campaign was probably the best one in my memory (I don't remember much about the 1988 election except lecturing my vice-principal in the school yard one day about voting Tory, while leading a pro-NDP rally of school children who wouldn't be able to vote for almost a decade) and yet the expectations were even higher. Talk of besting the 1988 seat total was real and didn't seem totally far fetched. Despite taking the party higher than they have been since that time, despite important and impressive wins in Newfoundland, Quebec and Alberta, Jack looked disappointed while addressing the party faithful during his concession speech last night. Even the points in the speech when he tried to sound the defiant "conscience of Parliament" note were flat (to my ear anyway).

And, I think that this is the problem: Layton doesn't want to be the conscience of Parliament. Layton wants to win, but he can't. The NDP still can't build a big enough coalition. The NDP still can't get far enough away from its roots in socialism and the labour movement (in perception) to gain the trust of an inherently middle-of-the-road populace. It is, in fact, the same problem Stephen Harper has struggled with for more than a half decade: how to remain true to an ideology while persuading people who don't share to trust him.

Here are three areas I would suggest Layton address if we had 10 minutes to talk:

1) Policy - Not every platform can or should propose massive new programs run by a federal department that work almost exclusively in areas where the federal government cannot legislate. You acknowledged this tacitly in 2008 by proposing to expand the Conservative-initiated child benefit program. If you want to be about middle-class Canadians (or how about low-income Canadians) then offer them stuff without digging a hole that undermines important national programs. Stop pandering to interest groups and start thinking about what interests citizens. Offer a platform on which someone could govern and say "aww, fuck it" if someone else steals it in order to do so. Oh, and don't ever again let going after the Liberals or anyone else cause you to rule out a particular policy the way you did with a carbon tax. You should be for a carbon tax, especially one that would bring a commensurate reduction in income tax burdens for low and middle-income Canadians. That pisses some people off (see below).

2) Presentation - There is something about the way that you and the party use language that still resonates badly. The "kitchen table" stuff was used so much it was mocked and the syntax or grammar of it always made me think you were saying you could communion with tables. Referring incessantly to "ordinary Canadians" makes one wonder, am I part of that group or am I somehow exceptional, and which one is it better to be? (BTW- I really don't believe that people think of themselves as being "ordinary.") You still need to do something different in the debates. The zinger about the platform in the sweater was fine, but even seated at a table like a grown up you sometimes came across more like the high school debate team bully. For all his mistakes, Dion won his highest marks for his debate performances, which were described afterward using words like "measured" and "Prime Ministerial." Take note. Prepare your attacks and your defenses and deliver them like it's a "fait accomplis" that Canadians will get it and agree. Not arrogant, but smarter than the average bear. Spend the next two years building a narrative that can change, evolve and that plays to the aspirations of Canadians. Read, then watch video, of every speech Barack Obama has given since late 2007. You cannot be him, but he can learn a little something. Change can be a concept around which to build.

3) People - It is telling that your 2006 candidate in Toronto-St. Paul, Paul Sommerville, not only didn't run for you again in 2008, but he worked for the Liberal who beat him! I liked Paul Sommerville, both his substance and what he represented. The man was a banker for crying out loud! You need more people like him in your tent, not fewer. You need more people like me in your tent, not fewer. A lot of us feel like we've been chased away from the party with sticks and torches for not being ideologically pure enough. Many of us know policy well and we know when yours stinks. It's worth noting that while the federal party has yet to form government, NDP governments have been the norm in places like BC, Manitoba and Saskatchewan. Nova Scotia could elect an NDP government soon and Ontario did once upon a time. Those governments have learned about making choices and not trying to do everything at the same time. Yet, it feels like you haven't learned much from them. Sometimes when the base is upset about someone you bring in, that's a good thing.

This was likely the easiest it will get for the NDP for quite sometime. The Conservatives are the dominant party of the day. The Liberals will re-group, possibly with a leader who knows something about building the party and being a politician, and they don't tend to lose seats without coming to re-claim them. The Greens may continue to surge. The Bloc is, for now, alive and well in Quebec (good idea attacking their credentials as "un parti progressiste" though). No wonder Jack looked a little down last night.

To close off this marathon and random post...

"Capital G was down to his boxers."

- George Bluth explains to his son Michael that he couldn't meet him during a prison visit because he was in the middle of an intense game of strip poker.

The People

Wisdom from Adam Radwanski:

"[I]t may be time for all of us to be a little less breathless in our response to every last twist and turn, and try a little more often to put ourselves in the shoes of people who don't live and breathe politics."

It's a bit like when one guy won't stop talking about earmarks while the other guy is talking TO the middle-class.

It's Over! It Begins!

Well the federal election has ended with somewhat predictable results, a Conservative minority government will remain in power in Ottawa. There were some notable results in individual ridings. The Conservatives cleaned up in BC, the NDP won seats in Quebec and Alberta (!), the Bloc Qubecois is not dead, the Green Party is still not a real party (perhaps they should be dubbed the Pinocchio party) and the Liberals are looking weaker and weaker.

Of course, Stephane Dion will take the heat in the coming days, and well he should accept a lot of responsibility. Yet, I can't help but think that while there were evidently things he might have done differently, the Liberals really have bigger problems right now. They are not only reduced in seats, but it appears from here that they are, at best, the third best Canadian political party at doing the work of getting MPs elected. They obviously trail the Conservatives and (for all the doom and gloom) they are not as good as the Bloc (yes, I get that they have immense structural advantages by not running a national campaign). It's not clear at this point that they are really all that much better than the NDP.

Anyway, barring something truly strange the Liberals have this to look forward to in the next year. Good luck with all of that.

Here's my take; if Stephane Dion is, in fact, truly a leader - I don't meant of the Liberals, although that too, but of people - he will immediately convene some sort of committee or advisory group of smart people (both inside and outside the party) to figure out what's wrong and how to fix it. This is the third election in a row in which they have lost seats and votes. This is much bigger than M. Dion, or even Mr. Martin or M. Chretien. Until the Liberals do this, until they stop thinking of themselves as being at the centre of Canadian political life, they should expect many more nights like last night.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Me, The Voter

I voted in yesterday's federal election. Yes, this qualifies as news today. Here are a few stats about me as a voter (I put them out there because they kind of surprised me):

Percentage of federal elections in which I have voted since reaching age of majority: 40% (2 of 5, I think. I can't remember if I voted in 2004.)

Percentage of times I have voted for the winner in an election: 50% (1 of 2)

Percentage of times I have voted NDP: 0%(!) (This is remarkable to me and I feel is a reflection of the candidates I have had to choose from.)

Percentage of times I have voted for a candidate who got absolutely waxed by the winner: 50% (Laurier-Sainte Marie is solidly behind M. Duceppe to the tune of 54%.)

Percentage of times I have been disappointed by the results of the election, various reasons: 100%

Monday, October 6, 2008

Access to Post-secondary Education

Access to post-secondary education (PSE) is a subject near and dear to my heart. This issue is what I work at professionally (to the extent that I'm professional about it). When I was a student government hack in university it was the core issue that I tried to work on. I think that it is a crucial and totally slept-on issue in Canadian society and our politics. I think that when we do look at it, we often do it through the wrong lens, missing the very people who matter in the access conversation - those who do not currently make it to PSE, for whatever reason.

Vincent Tinto, from Syracuse University, does a very nice job of presenting another part of the access story in this article for the Carnegie Foundation: persistence and completion. Tinto is well recognized as a leader in the field of PSE research.

So, to be clear, access can (and should) mean the following: getting students in the front door (amdissions) and out the back door (degree, diploma, certificate in hand).

(H/T to Dale Kirby)

Green Shift?

Campaign signs for the Green Party candidate in my riding (Laurier-Ville Marie) went up over the weekend. This is totally insignificant electorally, since the sitting MP is Gilles Duceppe, who won last time by approximately 2b votes and who, as far as I know, hasn't set foot in the riding since the writ drop. What is interesting about the local Green candidate's appearance little more than a week before the election is the slogan on his signs. M. Dylan Perceval-Maxwell is running with the catchy slogan, "La souveraineté personnelle" - personal sovereignty or independence. This is remarkable, not just because the regular old signs of the Green Party have a difference slogan ("La politique différemment"), but because I'm astounded that it's the Green's who have chosen to inject a little sovereignty spice into this election campaign. Even the Bloc has been relatively quiet about the subject (not counting the discontented former members, anyway).

It's highly probable that this will go totally unnoticed since no one will challenge M. Duceppe, let alone the Green candidate, in this particular riding. It is worth taking note of, however, if, as everyone else seems to think, the Greens will move from simply en vogue to a real fifth column in Canadian federal politics. Unlike the other parties, they have not yet had to define their position on the unity of the federation in the public spotlight, but should they continue to rise they will have to, and it will be interesting to see the degree to which the Quebec Greens hold fast to notions of sovereignty - personal or otherwise.

Update...

So, no photos yet, but since I was feeling a bit frisky about all this I emailed the Perceval-Maxwell campaign to ask about the slogan. Below are the questions and reponses (all non-capitalized letters came from them). I leave it to you to judge them yourself:

What does this slogan mean to you?
it means personal freedom

Why have you adopted a different slogan from the other slogan used onGreen Party signs, "La politique differement?"
it is complementary to theother slogan as we believe in giving the power to you the people rather than keeping it for ourselves

What is the Green Party position on Quebec independence?
we believe incoming together rather than breaking apart, but also we believe in decentralization of power not just from Ottawa to Quebec city but to the people

What is your position on Quebec independence?
I am not supporter of Quebec separating from Canada

Sarah Pallin is the best thing...

...to happen to SNL since Gerald Ford tripped.

That sketch is 11 minutes long!

It has Queen Latifah doing a cameo!

It keeps Tina Fey in the running for more Emmys!