<i>Finally!</i>
We're Off, Like a Herd of Turtles
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Ian Welsh, the moderate conservative blogger at Tilting at Windmills and BlogsCanada eGroup, offers these thoughts as the election begins:
For several years my father covered Toronto as a national reporter for the CBC. He didn't spend a lot of time on "city" issues. I mean two subways crashing into each other, that's a story, but waterfront development doesn't exactly lead the national news. The one big exception was Jack Layton. On national issues, like homelessness and the environment, Layton always had a story to put the story in prespective (or, at least, his side of it anyway). Maybe Welsh has just let us know how Layton got them all. (By actually listening to people?! My God!) In 2000, while I was home for Christmas, my father and I were talking politics -- as we pretty much always do. Somewhere between discussing how long it would take Martin to overthrow Chrétien, or if the right would ever unite, he mentioned Jack Layton. While my father isn't a New Democrat (or anything else for that matter), he thought Layton could very well be the next leader of the NDP. When I said this to Layton at the NDP leadership debates in Newfoundland more than two years later, he said that he hadn't even contemplated a run for the leadership that early. He hadn't, but clearly others had. Some simply delight in pigeonholing Jack Layton as 'ambitous'. They're not wrong, but, as trite as the question may seem, can't a great leader also be a decent man? Jack Layton isn't perfect -- and it certainly remains to be seen whether he'll be great. But it's been to long a time since any Canadian political party has even had reason to hope. Today I watched Jack Layton launch his first national campaign. It sure wasn't perfect; to a trained eye it was downright sloppy in places. But don't tell me for a second that it wasn't passionate and honest, don't tell me for a second that it wasn't real. And don't tell me that we don't even have reason to hope. |