Martin memoirs slamming Chrétien leaked ahead of election
07.10.2008 16:03
Arts
- Source: cbc.ca
About a week before the federal election, a Quebec newspaper has published leaked excerpts from former Liberal prime minister Paul Martin's memoirs detailing his bitter rivalry with Jean Chrtien. Martin’s autobiography,Hell or High Water, is expected to arrive in bookstores in three weeks, but Le Devoir obtained one of the book's final drafts and published its contents on Monday. The revelations from Martin, who reportedly has counselled Stphane Dion during the campaign, are likely to challenge the Liberal leader's assertion that his party is united heading into the Oct. 14 vote. The paper reports that Martin’s book details his childhood, his climb to the top job at Canada Steamship Lines, his years in politics, and how he and Chrtien disliked each other right to the end. According to the paper, Martin devotes several chapters to his bid to take over leadership of the party from Chrtien and the two years he served as prime minister, in which he accuses Chrtien of putting their rivalry ahead of the good of the party. Chrtien’s changes to party financing rules and the way he managed the sponsorship scandal also seriously hurt the Liberal brand, Martin is quoted as writing. Martin also writes the collateral damage victim of the war between the two men is Dion, as the Liberal party in Quebec is but a shadow of its former self. Sponsorship report a 'time-bomb' Martin goes on to write that one of Chrtien’s most inexplicable decisions was to cap donations to political parties at $5,000, which he said hurt a party that was used to generous donations from banks and larger corporations. Martin also writes that he was furious at Chrtien for proroguing Parliament in November 2003, thus delaying the "time-bomb" of the auditor general’s report into the federal sponsorship program until he took over the leadership of the party. That meant Chrtien avoided having to deal with the sponsorship scandal and left it squarely in Martin’s hands, he writes. If Chrtien had accepted the report while still in office, that would have shown a sense of responsibility and would have protected the future of his party, Martin wrote. "We ended up losing the communications battle on the sponsorship question. Honestly, I don't know if it could have been won," the paper quotes him as writing. But Martin writes he has no regrets doing his national "mad as hell" tour in calling for an inquiry into the sponsorship program. Zaccardelli slammed income trust probe's handlingMartin also offers scathing words for former RCMP commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli over the Mounties announcing a probe was being launched into the former Liberal government's handling of an income trust taxation decision in the middle of the 2006 federal election. Some analysts have said news of the investigation contributed to the defeat of Martin's Liberals at the hands of Stephen Harper's Conservatives in January 2006. In the end, the Mounties charged a senior civil servant in the Finance Department with breach of trust. Martin writes that the only question is whether Zaccardelli's action "can be explained by ineptness or whether it was a premeditated malicious act. "In my view, no one can be that inept," he writes. Earlier this year, the Mounties' complaints chair said he found no evidence to suggest Zaccardelli deliberately meddled in the last election, although the former commissioner refused to co-operate with the complaints body or shed any light to his motives for releasing sensitive information during the campaign. Zaccardelli resigned in late 2006 after admitting he gave misleading testimony to a House of Commons committee into the deportation and imprisonment of Maher Arar. Story Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: SMLXL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACKRelatedInternal LinksIN DEPTH: Canada Votes 2008$400M for tech funds said to be part of Tory platformConservative Leader Stephen Harper, under fire from opposition parties for what they say is his lack of vision regarding the economy, is set to release his party's election platform in Toronto on Tuesday, just a week before the Oct. 14 vote.Top scientists urge Canadians to vote for the environmentMore than 120 of Canada's top climate scientists have signed an open letter urging Canadians to vote strategically for the environment in next week's federal election.Harper will 'buy voters with their own money,' Williams says Canadians can expect to see an increasingly desperate Stephen Harper pull out alluring promises in the final days of the federal election campaign in a bid to form another Conservative government, Newfoundland and Labrador's premier said Tuesday. Martin memoirs slamming Chrtien leaked ahead of electionAbout a week before the federal election, a Quebec newspaper has published leaked excerpts from former Liberal prime minister Paul Martin's memoirs detailing his bitter rivalry with Jean Chrtien.Voter says RCMP helping out local campaignA voter in La Ronge, Sask., is concerned that a member of the RCMP was seen helping out a local political campaign. My Riding & Riding TalkJavascript must be enabled to use this feature. Have your say about what's important in your own riding. Read profiles about your candidates, get riding-related information and join the debate. Find My RidingEnter Your Postal Code SubmitList All RidingsBackChange My RidingList All RidingsCanada Votes FeaturesIN DEPTHClose contestsRaces to watchREALITY CHECKDown to the wireVoter turnout: democracy's dirty little secretYOUR INTERVIEWGlen MurrayPresident, Canadian Urban Institute takes questions on urban issues
|