On Families & Conservatives

From Judith Timson at the Globe and Mail.  Go Judith:

“Family is everything”?

Did Stephen Harper’s campaign actually say that at the start of the federal election? If so, I can only imagine that an interview with him describing how he juggles work and family as both a working dad and wannabe Conservative majority Prime Minister is not far behind.

After the media whirlwind that accompanied Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin, I intended to write about how we won’t see the same family circus – with all its messy high-wire acts – here. Canadian politicians don’t do family and politics in the same way. They don’t exploit their kids, they don’t burnish their image as a “hockey mom” or “family man.” They don’t audition to be “the first family.”

But in the arena of family and politics, it looks like we’re going down a different road this time, at least with the Conservative leader. And it may not be a good thing.

When it comes to manipulating a “perfect” family image, a politician can’t win. He will end up splayed across the front pages with his peccadilloes hanging out because families are actually the one thing we’re all experts at. There’s nothing mysterious and everything messy about family life, and every one of us has dressed our family to the hilt and taken a picture that would melt the heart of a nation. That’s why holiday cards were invented (although I oohed and aahed more over Stephane Dion’s dog, Kyoto, when I saw his holiday card last year than I did over his wife and daughter, who looked just fine to me.)

The fact is, these wonderful personal roles don’t have any bearing on how a person would govern the country. It’s an American model. And we’re different because, as Mr. Dion emphatically put it yesterday when told that Mr. Harper wondered aloud whether Mr. Dion was “a family man,” we have this wonderful thing called “privacy” here.

The only famous political kids we’ve all been aware of are Justin and Alexandre Trudeau, sons of the late prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, and Ben Mulroney, former Tory PM Brian Mulroney’s son – and only because these three young men chose to be in the spotlight, in politics, journalism and television entertainment, well after their fathers relinquished it .

I know the names of Barack Obama’s two adorable daughters, I have opened a separate file on 17-year-old Bristol Palin, but I would lose a bet if I was asked to name either Mr. Harper’s children or Mr. Dion’s daughter.

But if Mr. Harper hopes to “humanize” himself by trotting out his still young family, he should remember what happened last year when he tried to walk his young son – whatshisname – to school and shook his hand at the school gates. Shook his hand? What kind of dad doesn’t give his son a huge hug on the first day of school? Well, you get the picture.

Read the rest here

Yeah, that’s right.  I have no idea what the names of Harper’s and Dion’s kids are, even though I read the name of Dion’s daughter yesterday.  I read it in the context of a news report in which Dion noted that we have something called “privacy” in Canada.  I’m also not sure what the names of the Harper/Dion spouses are.  I know Jack Layton’s spouse is Olivia Chow.  Because she’s an MP.

Canada Goes To The Polls (sigh)

I don’t sense an abundance of excitement about the federal elections.  The most I can say is, at least we’ll be done before the US.  It feels as though their election has been going on for decades rather than years.  Look away for a moment and we’ll either have a new Prime Minister or we’ll be stuck with Stephen Harper for another 2 – 5 years. 

If Harper gets a majority, we’re in deep doo.  If he comes up with another minority government, it’s doubtful that much will change until the Liberals get a new leader who’s up to challenging the Conserve.  That is, unless the NDP come up with a larger share of the seats and can work out a coalition with the Libs that actually works the way coalition politics ought to work.  But, if the Liberals are all caught up in a leadership campaign, it’s unlikely they’ll have time for governing.  Sigh.

Of course, there’s the possibility that Dion comes up with a minority, but only the campaign will tell us something about the chances of that.  It’s not looking good just now.  Dion just hasn’t acted like a leader.  As well, he has the “problems” of his francophone background, his unskilled English and his hearing difficulties to overcome.  Rather large hurdles, unfortunately.

For the moment, it would appear that Harper and, to a certain extent,  Jack Layton are trying to push Canadians into an American style election, based on personality and “values”, with Harper coming out as the “family man” and Layton as the Canadian version of Barack Obama.  I don’t think it’s gonna work and frankly, I hope it’s not gonna work.  We’re not in quite the hole the US is in, but these are important and dangerous times everywhere.

I just don’t think the “politician as ‘family man'” meme works in Canada because people with families aren’t identified solely with the conservative electorate, as has been pointed out in the Globe and Mail:

Yesterday, Mr. Dion appeared surprised to hear that Mr. Harper had been somewhat dismissive of his family. Mr. Dion and his wife, Janine Krieber, have a daughter, whom they adopted from Peru in 1989 after they were unable to conceive. “Did he say that?” Mr. Dion asked.

But instead of taking the opportunity to present his own compelling family narrative, Mr. Dion stressed the importance of privacy.

“Well, we’ll speak about me. I’m a Liberal … and we believe in this beautiful word we don’t have in French, which is privacy, which is more than private life. It’s the distinction between public and private life,” he said, before finally allowing, “But I’m a family man. I love my mother, I love my wife. I love my daughter and my brothers, even my brothers.”

The role of the family in Canadian politics is starkly different than in the United States, where when conservative politicians start talking about family, it’s a safe bet they are trying to fire up their base and undermine the competition.

Christopher Waddell, associate director of Carleton University’s School of Journalism, said he believes the Conservatives are making family a campaign issue as a way to define Mr. Harper against Mr. Dion. But he does not think they intended to insult the Liberal Leader.

Most Canadians know Mr. Dion is a staunch environmentalist, Mr. Waddell said, an issue that the Liberals are likely to make central to their campaign.

Mr. Harper, by contrast, is understood as a proponent of tax cuts and smaller government, topics that do not exactly translate into sexy fodder for a general election campaign. Instead, he is being painted as a father and a patriot.

“It’s giving him some kind of personality and saying this is an issue that defines him like the environment defines Dion,” Mr. Waddell said.

Playing up his image as a dad will also play well in suburban areas where Mr. Harper needs to make electoral gains if he is to win a majority government.

But the problem with the strategy, Mr. Waddell said, is that having a family is not Mr. Harper’s exclusive domain, which Mr. Dion could have easily pointed out.

“He couldn’t say that Mr. Dion isn’t a family man,” Mr. Waddell said of Mr. Harper’s comments yesterday. “But if he said he was, that undercuts the whole image he’s trying to establish for himself.”

Ah Canada, where that “privacy” word still seems to mean something.  Being a dad will play well in the suburbs?  Yeah, right, city and rural people don’t have children.  If this works I’ll eat my dad’s frosted socks!  I think it’s just as well that Dion continue to ignore Harper’s attempt to play politics American style, just as he laughs at Layton doing an Obama.  Come on Jack, keep us on the issues!  Canadians are in a different political situation than Americans.  If we think we’re boring, perhaps that’s something to celebrate.  See how Waddell points out how Harper can’t play family man because Dion’s a dad too?  Well, guess what?  So is Barack Obama, as was plainly hyped up at the DNC.  But it doesn’t seem to be working for the guy, now that Sarah Palin’s on the scene.  And thank gawd that Elizabeth May is not our Sarah Palin:

Elizabeth has one daughter, Victoria Cate May Burton, born in July 1991. As well, she remains close to her three older stepchildren from Victoria Cate’s dad, their spouses, and loves spending time with her six step-grandchildren! Although she is a single mother, Elizabeth has worked hard to keep all the family links intact.

Woops!  They’d have a field day with this bio in the States!

And here’s Rick Mercer’s take (mind you, Mercer seems to think it’s Dion who’s trying to be Obama, who may be going over better here than in the US:

The race in Canada is not that much different. We can compete.

Sure, Stephen Harper wasn’t tortured for six years in a North Vietnamese prisoner-of-war camp the way John McCain was, but he’s angry enough that he could have been. In fact, on a good day the Prime Minister seems way more angry than Mr. McCain ever does. Like the Republican candidate, he, too, has pain and anguish in his eyes.

Mr. McCain suffered at the hands of a hostile enemy bent on breaking his body and soul, and he survived and triumphed. Mr. Harper, the story goes, suffered from adolescent-onset asthma and so was often picked last for team sports. This helps to explain his dislike for people in general. He also was startled quite badly by a clown at the age of 6, which explains his lifetime commitment to destroying arts organizations.

In America, presidential candidates spend a lot of time boring voters by telling them what they will do to improve their lives. Mr. Harper’s message will be far more exciting. He will spend his time telling people, “Don’t worry – no matter what happens, I can’t win a majority, so I won’t be able to do all the things I want to do that clearly scare you.”

This is an “only-in-Canada” scenario.

Just SEXISM

I think you could rack up 100 “sexisms” on the Palin sexism watch by now.  Many of the comments about Palin’s own pregnancy with her fifth child and the pregnancy of her daughter are simply beneath contempt.

Check the posts, and comments, at Shakesville, and Historiann for a better view.

And here’s what Obama said:

BO: I have heard some of the news on this and so let me be as clear as possible. I have said before and I will repeat again, I think people’s families are off limits, and people’s children are especially off limits. This shouldn’t be part of our politics, it has no relevance to governor Palin’s performance as a governor or her potential performance as a vice president. And so I would strongly urge people to back off these kinds of stories. You know my mother had me when she was 18. And how family deals with issues and teenage children that shouldn’t be the topic of our politics and I hope that anybody who is supporting me understands that is off limits.

Jeff Zeleny: an unnamed McCain advisor as reported on Reuters that the despicable rumors have been spread on blogs some even with Barack Obama’s name on them.

BO: I am offended by that statement, there is no evidence at all that any of this involved us. I hope I am as clear as I can be. So in case I am not, let me repeat, we don’t go after people’s families, we don’t get them involved in the politics, it is not appropriate and it is not relevant. Our people were not involved in any way in this and they will not be. And if I ever thought it was somebody in the campaign that was involved in something like that they would be fired. Ok. Alright guys. Thank you.

Thank gawd.

UPDATE:  And see Zuzu’s post at Shakesville and Melissa McEwan at The Guardian’s Comment is Free, titled, “Pregnancy is No Political Football”  Right.  That.

UPDATE II:  And the inimitable mattt bastard, here and here

And BTW here’s what I said, buried in this post on Friday, before this had all gone quite so crazy as it’s gone now

UPDATE III:  I can’t believe AlterNet post this piece of crap from the Big Orange Satan

UPDATE IV:  Holy crap, Sally Quinn

And a big thanks to Atrios:

K-Tee asks:
Would Sally Quinn write this if the candidate in question were the father, not the mother?

No.This has been another edition of of simple answers to simple questions.

And Riverdaughter

Virtual Strip Search

Uhhh, no, not today thanks.  It’s looking a bit too close to the mammogram position for me:

The airport in Kelowna, B.C., will be the first in Canada to test a new type of passenger scanner that creates a three-dimensional image of people’s bodies.

The new body imager unveiled on Thursday uses high frequency electromagnetic waves known as millimetre waves to create a detailed 3-D image of what a person looks like underneath their clothes.

The security guard operating the machine only sees a simplified image on a computer screen that indicates where ceramic weapons and plastic explosives or other suspicious items might be concealed.

But in a separate, private room, another officer sees the full detailed black and white image of the person’s body.

To be scanned, a passenger simply steps inside a glass pod the size of a large phone booth and puts up his arms above his head.

“The paddles rotate around the body. The radio frequency penetrates the clothing … bounces off the skin and gives … a 3-D holographic image of the body,” said Ian McNaugton, the National Sales Manager for L3 Communications, which makes the machines.

If any suspicious items are identified, the passenger is then checked with a conventional security pat down, McNaughton said.

Ron McAdam, who manages technology and testing for the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority, spent months working with Canada’s privacy commissioner to make sure the scanner complies with privacy rules.

“The images themselves are not saved…. They are deleted immediately once the passenger is cleared,” said McAdam, who added that the security guard who sees the detailed image never sees the actual passenger.

In addition, passengers don’t have to use the machine, McAdam said. If they have concerns, they can use regular screening lines instead.

Operation Rescue

Anti-choice tactic based on a 19th C. law:

… a Wichita grand jury, investigating whether [Dr. George] Tiller had violated Kansas abortion laws, … subpoenaed the private medical records of approximately 2,000 patients who had visited Women’s Health Care Services over the previous four and a half years. The grand jury had been convened as a result of a petition drive by Kansans for Life and the extremist anti-abortion group Operation Rescue, who gathered more than the roughly 4,000 signatures required under an 1887 state law that allows citizens to empanel grand juries.

[…]

Operation Rescue is also trying to insert itself into the current grand jury investigation: When the organization’s president, Troy Newman, testified before the grand jury, he offered photographs of patients taken with a high-powered lens as they entered Tiller’s clinic. He says he urged the grand jury to subpoena and examine Tiller’s patient records from a four year period, between 2004 and 2007. Shortly after his testimony, the grand jury issued its subpoena of the patient records.

emphasis mine

see the rest of this article   here

Your Fingerprints Aren’t Private

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff has badly stumbled in discussing the Bush administration’s push to create stricter identity systems. Chertoff was recently in Canada discussing, among other topics, the so-called “Server in the Sky” program to share fingerprint databases among the U.S., Canada, the U.K., and Australia.

In a recent briefing with Canadian press (which has yet to be picked up in the U.S.), Chertoff made the startling statement that fingerprints are “not particularly private”:

QUESTION: Some are raising that the privacy aspects of this thing, you know, sharing of that kind of data, very personal data, among four countries is quite a scary thing.

SECRETARY CHERTOFF: Well, first of all, a fingerprint is hardly personal data because you leave it on glasses and silverware and articles all over the world, they’re like footprints. They’re not particularly private.  rinf.com more here