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Ottawa: Anger as `stars' oust Liberal hopefuls

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  • Ottawa: Anger as `stars' oust Liberal hopefuls

    Toronto Star
    May 10 2004


    Anger as `stars' oust Liberal hopefuls
    PM's sincerity in doubt, says one Party defends

    appointments


    GRAHAM FRASER
    NATIONAL AFFAIRS WRITER


    OTTAWA—Paul Martin's designation of a Liberal candidate in Brampton
    puts in doubt his sincerity, a would-be Liberal candidate said
    yesterday.

    "For me, it says to me they have a very difficult time keeping
    promises," Andrew Kania told the CTV program Question Period yesterday.

    Kania said he had initially been told he could not run in Brampton
    Springdale.

    "Mr. Karl Littler, the Ontario campaign manager, specifically said
    to me I would not be allowed to succeed in that riding because I was
    John Manley's Ontario co-chair," he said.

    "I appealed to the Prime Minister, I wrote to him, and he approved
    me as a candidate."

    The approval did not last long: On Saturday, the Liberal party
    announced that Ruby Dhalla, a chiropractor and long-time Liberal
    activist, would be the party's candidate.

    The controversy has underlined the contradiction between Prime Minister
    Paul Martin's position earlier in the year and his recent actions,
    and the tension between his constant complaints about a democratic
    deficit in Parliament and his desire to name star candidates of
    cabinet quality.

    First, Martin insisted that the selection of candidates was a local
    matter and refused to intervene in the fight between his defeated
    rival Sheila Copps and Transport Minister Tony Valeri.

    But he or his representatives have subsequently intervened several
    times to block candidates who were seeking Liberal nominations,
    and appoint candidates of his choosing.

    Steve MacKinnon, deputy campaign director for the Liberal party, said
    that the decision to appoint candidates involved putting together a
    successful team for governing.

    "Dr. Dhalla is a very successful entrepreneur in the Brampton area,
    runs rehabilitation clinics and is a chiropractor and a very successful
    businesswoman," he said adding she was the first Sikh woman ever to
    run for the Liberal party.

    The Liberals also announced that the Liberal MP for Brampton-Centre,
    Sarkis Assadourian, was being named special adviser to Martin for
    Near Eastern and South Caucasus affairs.

    Assadourian was one of the driving forces behind the recent
    parliamentary vote to acknowledge the events that happened in Turkey
    in 1917-1925 as the Armenian genocide — a free vote that challenged
    the position of the government, and enraged the Turkish government.

    Dhalla is one of a number of Liberal candidates to have been designated
    by Martin, including former NDP British Columbia premier Ujjal Dosanjh.

    On Friday, Martin named Bill Cunningham, president of the Liberal
    party in British Columbia, as the candidate in Burnaby-Douglas,
    enraging Tony Kuo, who had publicly pleaded with Martin not to do this.

    Yesterday, Kuo called it a very sad day in Canadian politics.

    "It symbolized the death of democracy within the Liberal Party in
    Canada," Kuo said.

    "In particular, the Prime Minister chose power over democracy."

    He said that in five ridings, where Martin has designated candidates
    and short-circuited the local candidate-selection process, members
    of minorities cannot run and cannot vote.

    "This is not the Liberal party (that) has taken the proud traditions
    from (former prime ministers Lester) Pearson to (Pierre) Trudeau to
    Jean Chrétien, multiculturalism, true Liberalism, and the belief (in)
    the Charter of Rights and Freedoms," Kuo said.

    "It's a very sad day."

    MacKinnon said the power of designation has only been used in six
    constituencies across Canada out of 308, and that it was done to put
    together what he called "a team that we think is unprecedented in
    the history of the Liberal Party of Canada."
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