The media is calling it a “political earthquake”, but those who have been watching Israeli politics have seen this coming for a while: Ariel Sharon has left the Likud party to form his own new centrist party. Most likely, the Knesset will be dissolved and elections will be called within 90 days.
Sharon has been fighting the hardline faction in his own party for quite some time, ever since he moved ahead with the bitterly contested Gaza withdrawal. It’s been clear for a while that Sharon has more support among the general Israeli public than within his own party. And with the Labour party moving further to the left with the election of new leader Amir Peretz, there is room in Israel for a broad-based centrist party.
For those who are thinking that Sharon has just committed political suicide, remember that he’s the proverbial cat with nine lives in Israel, and he’s only used up about three or four of them. He enjoys massive personal popularity and those who underestimate him tend to end up picking up the pieces of ruined careers. I wouldn’t count him out just yet.
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Iran has resumed its nuclear activity because it knows full well that the U.N. will always swerve first:
Iran has begun processing a new batch of uranium despite Western pressure on it to halt sensitive atomic work, possibly harming attempts to defuse a standoff over its nuclear aims, a diplomat said on Wednesday.
[ . . . ]
Western countries suspect Iran of seeking nuclear weapons under the cover of a civilian atomic program, which Tehran vehemently denies, saying it only wants to generate electricity.
Yeah, right. And hell is just a sauna.
Somehow I don’t think Iran is planning to wipe Israel off the map using mere electricity.
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Kovalev is sidelined with a knee injury, Habs win anyway… again by the skin of their teeth. And we still have yet to figure out how to play a good game for 60 minutes. *Sigh*.
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Does he actually think he can win a federal election??? Or is he just bringing down the Liberal government because he can?
Canada’s opposition is set to bring down the minority Liberal government on November 28 and force a January election, Conservative leader Stephen Harper said on Wednesday.
Harper said he would prefer to move earlier but would stick to a timetable agreed on Sunday with the two smaller opposition parties.
I can understand why the Bloc is doing it. They expect to gain seats in Quebec in a federal election, and the momentum will be useful for an upcoming provincial election and sovereignty campaign. Sovereignty is of course the primary goal of the BQ so it makes sense.
I can even understand why the NDP is joining in. Their arrangement to prop up the Liberals was contingent on them being able to blackmail the Liberals to get policy concessions. Martin finally stood up to Layton, and this is his payback. Besides, the NDP never had the goal of actually getting elected; they just wanted to broaden their base and get their message out there. An election will help those goals.
But Harper? Is he seriously delusional enough to think that he can win this election? Even with the sponsorship scandal, the Liberals’ numbers are ahead of the Tories’. And Harper’s election goal is nothing short of a win; another loss should essentially finish his political career.
So, as they say in police work, cui bono? Who benefits from bringing down the Liberal government and forcing an early election, when all indications point towards a re-election of another Liberal minority government? Unless Harper has some as-yet-unseen tricks up his sleeve (highly doubtful, or else he would’ve used them in the last election), I just don’t get what he possibly hopes to gain from this?
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Our likely next Premier of Quebec is 39-year-old Andre Boisclair, who beat out rivals including Pauline Marois for the leadership of the Parti Quebecois, despite the media attention given to his past cocaine use:
Boisclair faces high expectations. Charest has been stuck at staggering levels of unpopularity since shortly after coming to power in 2003. The PQ expects to beat the Liberals and snap Quebec’s 35-year tradition of electing governments to two terms.
Considered a relatively soft sovereigntist and a right-winger in a party of progressives, Boisclair must unite a party whose hawkish elements have taken down Bernard Landry, Bouchard and even Rene Levesque for showing hesitation on independence.
This isn’t good news for federalists. Boisclair, despite his battle to get elected, is just the kind of young, charismatic leader that can recruite “soft nationalists” and increase support for sovereignty. It will remain to be seen what changes he brings to the PQ platform, but one thing’s for sure: he has an excellent chance of steamrolling to victory in the next provincial election.
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This time the snow is real. It’s falling and sticking to stuff. We’re expected to accumulate about 5 centimeters when it’s all over.
Of course, that’ll all wash away this afternoon when the temperature climbs and it changes to rain… but that’s a good thing, cause this procrastinator hasn’t yet changed her tires. (Yeah, I know, spare me the lecture).
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Yes, it’s snowing.
Winter’s officially here.
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Looks like a February federal election is in the cards… maybe.
This is a colossally stupid move on the part of the three opposition parties. The Liberals are still leading the polls despite the Gomery inquiry, and it’s unlikely to change between now and February. Moreover, the Liberals themselves had promised to dissolve Parliament by March anyway. What’s to be gained by re-electing a Liberal minority – essentially the status quo – two months earlier?
You know, American-style fixed election dates are starting to look like a better and better idea.
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Now here’s a real heartbreaker: Michael Jackson doesn’t want to live in the US anymore:
The superstar now lives in Bahrain and his lawyers have said that he no longer considers his Neverland Ranch in California as his home.
“They didn’t treat him right here. I know if I was him, I wouldn’t come back,” his father said.
You mean, it’s not just that he ran out of innocent kids to prey on in the US and has decided to go international? Or maybe he just realized that the only people buying his records anymore are overseas. Either way, I don’t think too many Americans will cry about his snub. If Bahrain wants him, they can have him.
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