Tuesday 5 March 2013

Column on Philippe Couillard proves Don Macpherson needs a break

The Montreal Gazette's Don Macpherson, on a bad headdress day




Don Macpherson must need a break--and badly. That's the only explanation I can come up with on the heels of his scurrilous article in Saturday's Montreal Gazette. In "Are Quebecers ready for him?" Macpherson compares Philippe Couillard, Liberal Party leadership aspirant, and André Boisclair, the disgraced former Parti Quebecois leader. Macpherson discusses both men's political positions and draws parallels to their "scandals."

But there is no comparison.

May I remind Gazette readers that Mr. Boisclair's chief of staff, Luc Doray, become the fulcrum of a drug and embezzlement scandal? Mr. Boisclair, a reputed "party animal," according to The Globe and Mail, though never charged with a crime, later admitted he used cocaine while a sitting MNA. Mr. Doray pleaded guilty to defrauding the Quebec government; court testimony revealed that Mr. Boisclair had authorized some of the expenses in question.
Journalmetro.com

Let's compare them a bit more: Mr. Boisclair was first elected to the National Assembly at the ripe old age of 23, and has, to date, spent most of his life in politics, where he served, variously, as minister of citizenship and immigration, social solidarity, and environment. Philippe Couillard, on the other hand, was an eminent neurosurgeon before he became minister of the most challenging of Government of Quebec portfolios, health.

While most of us would say, in reference to something simple, that it wasn't "rocket science" or "brain surgery"--meaning, of course, that both such endeavours are eminently challenging--Philippe Couillard has been known to say, "brain surgery is easy. It's politics that's difficult."

Macpherson's column is Couillard's exhibit A in this regard.

How are we ever to expect people of quality to continue to stand on their hind legs and publicly declare themselves political candidates under the onslaught of articles such as Macpherson's?

André Boisclair disgraced himself by using cocaine for seven years while a Quebec cabinet minister; Philippe Couillard, according to Macpherson, "trails a whiff of scandal" because of his "association with Dr. Arthur Porter."

Let's face it: between Boisclair and Couillard, there is no comparison.

And so, I am moved to inquire of Mr. Macpherson: is every person who shook hands with Arthur Porter (or went into business with him) now to be presumed a criminal? Where is Macpherson's sense of proportion? Where is Macpherson's sense of justice?

Where is Macpherson's editor?

If Macpherson has any evidence of Couillard wrong doing, let him speak now, or forever hold his peace. Because this kind of innuendo is out of place in a newspaper of record that The Montreal Gazette purports to be.

In fact, this column smells so bad, it reminds me of Jan Wong's odious, misbegotten analysis of Quebecers' supposed notions of ethnic and racial purity, part of her--and The Globe and Mail's--original "explanation" for Kimveer Gill's--and Marc Lepine's, and Valery Fabrikant's--murderous rampages.

Are Quebecers ready for Philippe Couillard? Who knows? Certainly, as far as this column makes clear, not Don Macpherson.

I hope le bon docteur Couillard--and the other two candidates, Raymond Bachand and Pierre Moreau--continue their campaigns in all serenity, and that the Liberal membership, of whom I am proud to call myself a member, chooses the best possible person for the tough job of defeating Premier Marois, and soon, before she completes the utter shambolization of our beloved Quebec.

Friday 1 March 2013

CBC Radio's "C'est la vie" episode this week featured Quebec Anglos talking about language


CBC Radio's "Cest la vie" episode this week featured Quebec Anglos talking about language. Three very different Montrealers are in the first segment, with very different experiences, and I'm one of them!

Enjoy learning about the Parti Quebecois' "Anglo sock puppets" (my words), and hear about the experiences of transplanted Vancouverite James Roberts, Montrealer Samia Marshy, and others.

C'est la vie | Mar 3, 2013 | 27:30

Quebec anglophones

Meet some Quebec anglophones. Some were born and raised in the province. Others have moved there. And all have different life experiences. Hear their stories.

"We're here because we like being here. Don't forget.  Don't think we were trapped here. Because we're more mobile than most other people in Quebec. So if we're here, it's because we like it." ~ Beverly Akerman