Evidently Conservative attack ads are not Bob Rae's only problem, according to this article which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the
National Post[/i}:
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/03/20/john-ivison-conservative-ads-could-force-bob-rae-to-make-decision-on-liberal-leadership/
Conservative ads could force Bob Rae to make decision on Liberal leadership
John Ivison
Mar 20, 2012
You can tell when Bob Rae is getting annoyed — the contrived chuckle is superceded by a sound like a sausage stewing in its own grease. When he was asked about the new Conservative ads that attack his record as Ontario’s NDP Premier on CBC’s Power and Politics, he started to fizz and pop.
The ads ask if Mr. Rae “couldn’t run a province, why does he think he can run Canada?” They have clearly chafed the interim Liberal leader. If the Conservatives are going to highlight all the bad news that happened on his watch, they should also mention the Toronto Blue Jays won two World Series, Nelson Mandela was released from prison and the Soviet Union collapsed, he told Evan Solomon. Eh? Maybe he’d been out in the unseasonally sunny weather too long without a hat.
“I’m not uniquely responsible” for the recession that sent unemployment and deficits soaring in Ontario in the early 1990s, he said. No — but the NDP government made the worst of a bad job, by the account of even the most charitable observers.
Mr. Rae now thinks the Liberal party has a “responsibility” to respond and defend his record as NDP Premier. The party is planning to raise new money in response to the ad and mount a counter-attack with those funds.
This has triggered a backlash from a number of Liberals I spoke to Tuesday, who are uncomfortable about the idea of squandering the party’s meagre war-chest to defend the man who is still, nominally, the interim leader.
In public, Mr. Rae dismisses the thought he might run to be permanent leader as “idle speculation.” But in his own mind, it seems, he already has the job. If you doubt this, go to the Liberal.ca website and scroll to the Meet Bob Rae section, where he is introduced as “Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada.”
“I became Liberal Leader to put my experience to the task of rebuilding our Party and defending the socially compassionate, fiscally responsible values that are at the heart of our vision for a Liberal Canada,” says Bob the Rebuilder. In line 27, you can find the word “interim.”
Senior Conservatives said last year that they weren’t planning to waste their time and money assassinating the character of a stop-gap leader. Perhaps they just got tired of waiting for it to become official.
Whatever the catalyst, it has resuscitated the deep uneasiness many Liberals feel about Mr. Rae continuing to act as interim leader while not ruling out his ambitions to run for the job permanently. In a report last year, former Liberal president Alf Apps suggested it would be unfair for the interim leader to run for the full-time job, given the in-built advantages of incumbency, such as control over caucus appointments and access to party funding and communications resources.
Either from fear or a genuine sense of party unity, none of the MPs or senior party figures who covet the permanent job are prepared to break ranks but neither are they impressed with the idea of spending party funds to defend Mr. Rae’s record as NDP Premier.
Unity is holding for now but pressure is building for Mr. Rae to make a decision: Either renounce any hopes of becoming permanent leader and stay as interim; or, declare his ambition and step down. “People want to know,” said one person with leadership ambitions. “It’s not personal but he’s put himself and the party behind the eight ball.”
Marc Garneau, the Montreal Liberal MP who is testing the waters for a bid of his own, said he would like Mr. Rae to make a decision by the fall. He said he wants to talk to his caucus colleagues before making any comment on whether the Strong Start fund, designed to pay for counter-attack ads, should be tapped to defend Mr. Rae’s record. “When we created the notion of a separate fund, it was for the [permanent] leader,” he said.
Yet Liberals say leadership is the subject that dare not speak its name — certainly not in caucus, where Mr. Rae has never raised it.
And why would he? There’s a chill running along the Liberal benches looking for spine to run up. Until someone forces the issue, Mr. Rae can continue to fashion the game to his own advantage.
National Post
jivison@nationalpost.com
The Liberal Party has some real leadership problems:
First: By long standing party tradition it is a
francophone's turn to lead (but need (s)he be a Québec
franco?). Rae is an
anglo Ottawa native who was raised and educated there and in Washington and Europe; he attended the University of Toronto and Oxford; that pedigree hardly puts him in the league of Laurier, St Laurent, Trudeau, Chrétien and Dion; and
Second: The party
may have seen the errors of its ways in having been focused too much in the leader and too little in the potential cabinet team. To be fair this problem is neither new nor uniquely Liberals.
As a card carrying, dues paying Conservative I rather hope Bob Rae becomes the leader - despite being smart, a good parliamentary performer and, even, charming, I am 99.99% convinced that he cannot lead the Liberals back into power in 2015, and either or both of age and Liberal long knives will deny him an opportunity to do so in 2019.