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       Tom Mulcair: Trudeau Liberals showing clear signs of desperation
        
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       When all hell broke loose in the House last week, those of us who have
       experience as parliamentarians simply couldn't believe our eyes.
       Speaker Greg Fergus had tossed out the Leader of His Majesty's Loyal
       Opposition, Pierre Poilievre, on the flimsiest of pretenses.
        
       Fergus is highly partisan. We all knew that when Trudeau backed him in
       the election to replace Anthony Rota, who'd been forced to step down
       after introducing a former Nazi soldier in Parliament.
        
       When Fergus got caught making a partisan video for an Ontario Liberal
       colleague, there were many calls for him to resign. He had indeed
       egregiously breached the most basic rules requiring neutrality in the
       chair. He'd even made the video in his Parliamentary quarters, wearing
       his robes of office.
        
       I pleaded that while his error was serious, it was a rookie mistake
       and he deserved a second chance. Watching his dreadful performance
       with Poilievre last week, I regretted defending him.
        
       After the ejection of Poilievre, it was gloves off for Trudeau and
       company. They put on a full court press worthy of a war room in the
       middle of a campaign. Other pundits that I spoke with were dutifully
       spun by whatever Liberal had contact with them. They clearly thought
       they had finally caught a break in their Holy War against the evil
       Poilievre.
        
       The usual Liberal supporters were out there spinning that Poilievre
       had done it on purpose to get thrown out. That was clearly nonsense as
       it was unpredictable that someone who'd "simply withdrawn" the word
       "wacko" -- as requested by the Speaker -- would nonetheless be turfed.
        
       It was absolutely unprecedented to throw out the Leader of the
       Opposition without a clear final warning and unambiguous instructions,
       especially after Trudeau had called Poilievre "spineless" with
       impunity.
        
       Speaker of the House of Commons Greg Fergus gives a call on time as a
       member asks a question while during his first question period in the
       House of Commons on Parliament Hill on Oct. 3, 2023 (Sean Kilpatrick /
       THE CANADIAN PRESS)
        
       If anything, getting Poilievre turfed seemed to have been concerted
       and planned, not by Poilievre, but by the Liberals in cahoots with
       their speaker.
        
       My vantage point into that desperate, full-bore Liberal effort to spin
       this against Poilievre came in the form of an early morning call from
       a senior Liberal minister. In my line of work, as an observer and
       analyst of the political scene, knowing and being able to speak with
       ministers is part and parcel of doing your job well. Being able to
       call us, in return, is no doubt also part of theirs.
        
       My interlocutor quickly understood that with my years of experience,
       no one was going to convince me that Fergus was right. I was elected
       for three mandates to the rough and tumble National Assembly in Quebec
       City where I served as Deputy House Leader, both in opposition and in
       power. I also served as Official Opposition House Leader in Ottawa
       prior to assuming the same role that Poilievre has today: Leader of
       the Official Opposition.
        
       I mention all that only to reinforce the fact that I know the ropes
       and the important institutional roles involved. My senior Liberal
       changed tack when it was clear I thought Fergus had to go. They went
       all-in, doing a negative and personal attack against Poilievre. It was
       brutal and came off as orchestrated, if not contrived.
        
       It was not just an attack on Poilievre, personally, it was a plea for
       me to acknowledge just how awful he was. That he represents a clear
       and present danger for our institutions. It had an air of _fin de
       régime_ , the end of the political era of Trudeau, and it wasn't going
       out on a high note.
        
       It may indeed mark the beginning of the end but Trudeau isn't about to
       leave simply because Canadian voters have decided to give him his pink
       slip. He has options and he knows it. Sure, hardly a day goes by
       without an article detailing the plans of one cabinet minister to
       replace Trudeau or an outside potential successor giving an eloquent
       speech to the Liberal faithful.
        
       Polls are being published showing which possible new Leaders have the
       most public favour. All of this against a backdrop of Trudeau still
       lagging 20 points behind with nothing to show for his mammoth pre-
       budget tour or from the budget itself.
        
       But Trudeau still holds many good cards in his hand. He brought the
       Liberal Party back to life after the Ignatieff debacle. They owe him
       everything. He's not about to be given the boot. He'll be the only one
       to decide when and, especially, if he'll leave. He's won three
       elections in a row but he should have taken more heed of the fact that
       Canadians cast more votes for the Conservatives in both the 2019 and
       2021 campaigns. The writing was already on the wall he just couldn't,
       or wouldn't, decode it.
        
       I personally know several senior Liberals, both high level volunteers
       and MPs with access to Trudeau who have been encouraging him to
       consider this is his 'legacy mandate,' to be graceful and leave his
       place to someone else so that the party still has the time to give a
       new leader a chance in the next election. All say that Trudeau refuses
       to even admit that he may be the problem, much less listen to their
       heartfelt advice.
        
       Of course, it's not in Trudeau's nature to admit he and his hapless
       administration of Canada could be to blame. The question is, now that
       the proof is in front of him daily in the polls, how long can he keep
       denying the obvious?
        
       The writing may be on the wall, but it's important to remember that
       Trudeau could still decide tomorrow to walk across the lawn from
       Rideau Cottage, where he lives, to Rideau Hall and ask Gov.-Gen. Mary
       Simon to call an election and she'd have no choice but to do so.
        
       Those senior Liberal organizers know it as well. The longer Trudeau
       dithers, the less likely there will be a push by frustrated potential
       successors to drink from a poisoned chalice. With no time to fully
       present themselves to Canadians, much less organize properly for an
       election, they'd be cannon fodder for Poilievre's Conservatives.
        
       Liberals I speak with still clutch at the hope that a lot of Singh's
       NDP vote will drift over to them when progressives sense the impending
       doom of a Poilievre Conservative victory. The fact that a considerable
       cohort of NDP MPs have either quit or announced their intention not to
       run, tends to indicate that there may be far fewer votes to purloin
       than there may have been before the NDP-Liberal deal and prior to the
       ascendancy of Poilievre.
        
       In the meantime, if last week's shenanigans are any indication,
       Canadians can expect a brutal, personal knock-down, drag-out fight
       between the leaders of the two parties that have governed Canada since
       Confederation. It's going to get ugly.
        
       _Tom Mulcair was the leader of the federal New Democratic Party of
       Canada between 2012 and 2017_
        
        
        
        
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