Global Research News Hour - 06/17/13

Published: June 18, 2013, 6:48 p.m.

b'Canada Politics: Deception and Betrayal in the Conservative Party\\nThis week\\u2019s programme looks back ten years to the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada\\u2019s leadership race of 2003 which turned out to be the party\\u2019s last before it merged with the rival Canadian Alliance, led by leader Stephen Harper.\\n\\n\\nThe current Conservative Party has been racked with accusations of scandal and corruption. At least three Canadian Senators, hand-picked by the Prime Minister, are having their housing and living expenses reviewed, two Conservative Members of Parliament are being taken to task for improper accounting of their election expenses, and a court case recently determined that \\u201cthere was an orchestrated effort to suppress votes during the 2011 election campaign by a person with access to the CIMS database\\u201d which is \\u201cmaintained and controlled by the CPC (Conservative Party of Canada)\\u201d. [2][3][4]\\n\\n\\nAnd notoriously, one of the Prime Minister\\u2019s staffers cut Senator Mike Duffy a personal cheque for $90,000 to make up for the funds the Senator owed. [5]\\n\\n\\nThis is astonishing behaviour for a political party which rose to power in 2006 promising accountability and integrity in office. [6]\\n\\n\\nBut David Orchard and his supporters questioned the ethics of the party a long time ago. Orchard contested the leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party back in 2003. Orchard relied on the support of grass-roots people, myself among them, who were opposed to government policies on free trade, environmental neglect, and Canadian support for imperial wars abroad. [7]\\n\\nIt was through Orchard\\u2019s support that Peter Mackay became leader of the party. Mackay then betrayed the condition of Orchard\\u2019s support by orchestrating a merger with the right-wing US-Republican style Canadian Alliance Party, which was then led by Stephen Harper. [8]\\n\\n\\nThis betrayal, in addition to some of the other shenanigans which played out in the months during the leadership campaign and leading up to the vote to merge the parties in December provides a critical context for assessing this party\\u2019s commitment to ethics, responsible conduct and fair play.\\n\\n\\nOrchard, and many other traditional Progressive Conservatives, saw the Canadian Alliance as out of sync with the traditional trajectory of the PC Party, the Party which established Canada as a nation in 1867. The PCs historically championed Canadian sovereignty. The Canadian Alliance advocated closer political and economic ties with the United States.\\n\\n\\nThe Canadian Alliance boasted a much larger membership than the Progressive Conservative Party in 2003. Through no great surprise therefore, the leader of the Canadian Alliance, Stephen Harper, easily secured the leadership of the merged Conservative Party, which went on to power in 2006. [9]\\n\\nOrchard\\u2019s political advisor, campaign manager and long-time associate\\xa0Marjaleena Repo speaks to the Global Research News Hour about the campaign, the issues, the subsequent legal battles and where she believes the Campaign for Canada needs to focus its energies.'