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BQ is a toady for the airline industry?
November 24, 2009 - 1:28pm
More evidence of the rightwing side of the Bloc Quebecois. Is there any excuse whatsoever for this?
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/todays-paper/Tories+Bloc+join+forces+k...
Cue the usual BQ apologists who will tell us not to be so hard on Duceppe and the BQ since forcing the airlines to compensate passengers from cancelled flights the way the EU does would someone intrude on Quebec's jurisdiction (as far as I know provinces have no jurisdiction at all in this area)
excerpt: The Liberals supported Maloway's bill from the outset. Interesting.
The concept was first introduced in the House in June 2008 by a Liberal MP's motion, which passed unanimously. Source. Maloway introduced his private member's bill last February. The Conservatives opposed the bill and privately invited the airline industry to lobby against it. Until a few days ago, all three opposition parties were united in support of the bill. I have no idea what happened to make the Bloc vote as it did. Neither does Stockholm. But given his usual character, he is already baiting the "usual BQ apologists", in advance of hearing from them as it were. It will be difficult to find out the facts against the background of such noise, but it will be interesting to try.
Thanks for the info, Unionist. Good to know the facts.
There is only one fact that matters - the BQ cares more about airline industry lobbyists than it does about the rights of passengers. i guess that they must be spooked about losing the byelection in MIKR and have decided to swing to the right again to head off the Tories.
Good luck unionist trying to find some reason to defend your ebloved BQ. Even back when they shot down an increase in the federal minimum wage, they made some pathetic attempt to justify by claiming that it would intrude on provincial jurisdiction blah balh blah (I'm sure that for people in Quebec working in federally regulated sectors and making $8.50/hour - it must feel just great to know that the BQ is "standing up for Quebec; by making sure that their wages stay low all in the name of protecting Quebec's powers!)
How they will try to justify being toadies to the airlines industry will be fun to watch. I wonder Paille has any history as an airline industry lobbyist and is already making his influence felt. maybe we should check how many donations Air Canada executives made to the BQ this year?
See what I mean, Boom Boom? He actually thinks he's going to catch something here! He wants me to sputter: "But, but, I voted NDP in the last two elections, I'm innocent of this charge..." No. In fact, the more Stockholm rants against something, the more motivated I am to figure out why I misjudged that thing and didn't see the positive aspect.
As I predicted, however, Stockholm has no facts, no information, no clue, no interest, actually, in why this 7-4 vote actually happened in the committee, contrary to all the previous votes on the matter.
Is there anyone who knows the BQ's stated reason for voting this way? At least let's here that and judge if we think it is believable before starting with somethign else.
The BQ is definitely a coalition of voices who while they agree on one issue have a diversity of opinion with respect to any other. This collection of voices is one that can sit together in part because they know they will never have to sit on a government side of a legislature together. That said, I'd need more than an assertion to call them a toady for business and I'd want to hear their rationale for their vote first.
There might be a hint of the reason in the committee's report:
I wonder if anyone tried to amend the bill to expand liability to these other parties - or if that would have been possible under parliamentary procedure?
Source.
Ditto. I don't recall anyone calling those NDP MPs who voted against the long gun registry toadies of the gun industry.
I think more hints of the problem may be found in the committee proceedings of November 2, 2009.
The November 18 proceedings aren't posted yet.
Ok, I haven't read every word, but this may be the heart of the matter [Note: Mario Laframboise is the BQ transport critic]:
This short statement got my attention (from your link, Unionist):
Mr. Mario Laframboise (Argenteuil-Papineau-Mirabel, BQ): Thank you very much, Mr. Maloway, for your presentation.
You stated at the outset that your bill had obtained the support of the Bloc Québécois. You know, because of the speech that I made in the House of Commons, that we are in favour of having your bill studied by the committee to try to improve it. (bolding emphasis mine)
It appears to me that Stockholm's outage is a tad premature, and the thread title ought to be changed.
Ok, a bit more reading, and I think we're getting a lot warmer:
Question: was this thread started for any other reason than to attack other posters?
Also, and I'm just saying, if you're going to call the BQ a toady of the airline industry for this and use it in one of these nameless attacks on other posters, there are a lot of things you could call the NDP, especially provincial governments, a toady of.
Bingo!
If I was a BQ supporter I would find Stockholm's post somewhat offensive. There are a far more constructive ways to bring criticism forward.
(post removed since the thread title has changed somewhat)
How's the thread title now?
Slightly better. I'll remove my post complaining about it.
Very minimalist, Maysie - well done.
By the way, I'd much rather see the discussion go in the direction of the pros and cons of the bill, the underlying problems, how they should be addressed... than to embark on a wild-goose chase to find brown envelopes full of Air Canada cash left in Gilles Duceppe's mailbox.
I didn't see the original title, and leaving aside Stocks approach...
I think there are a lot of smoke and mirrors here, and that you have to really know the issue to wade through.
But it does look to me very likely that the BQ is shilling for Air Canada, and hiding behind 'there are other guilty players.' And people always say they want to 'improve legislation' when their object is to kill it or render it totaly toothless.
There are more mundane reasons for shilling than brown envelopes.
Bottom line: the same situation pertains in the EU where they have the legislation. I smell something, but you'd have to know a lot more or read a reasonably unbiased explanation of who is trying for what.
I just think that its further evidence that the BQ is a lot more rightwing than people like to believe. This isn't the first time that they've put corporate interests ahead of the people. As for gtheir claim that they just want to refer the bill to a committee to be "studied" further. Everyone knows that this is the equivalent of death for a private members bill and it sounds suspiciously similar to the rationale the Liberals used when they helped the Tories make sure that the NDP's climate change bill had no chance of being passed before the Copenhagen conference.
Last week it was headline news that the Tories had been secretely asking the airline industry to do a better job of lobbying against the bill because they were so afraid of it passing. I guess the airline lobbyists took John Baird's advice and called up Duceppe to make sure the BQ helped get rid of this this bill that would be ever so INCONVENIENT to both the airlines and to the Conservative government.
I like this suggestion, and wish the thread had gone this way in the beginning.
Obviously.
Also, I think the Liberals and NDP are shilling for the airport authorities, many of which are run by consortia of local right-wing businesses who took advantage of the Liberals' airport privatization of the 1990s and became overnight multi-millionaires at the public expense.
They're also shilling for Transport Canada, so they can protect all those cushy left-wing bureaucrats' phoney baloney jobs by diverting the blame away from the regulator and onto the struggling airline companies.
Yes, you got it. I'm kidding. The question is: Are you?
No.
Like I said, there can be lots of reasons for that kind of shilling. Local connections would be sufficient. Unless I'm mistaken, lots of Air Canada management spread around Montreal ridings.
I don't think the BQ would do it if industry unions were opposed, but this looks to me like it may be something where the unions have no horse in there. Granted, the relationships in the industry are incredibly complex. So I could easily have missed that some or all of the unions do have a stake in the legislation.
But if the unions don't have a stake, then it could be ripe pickings for a lobbyist looking to the BQ. I don't see them as immune.
Liberal MPs would seem a more obvious target, But lobbying is about relationships, and if there is no Montreal Liberal MP on the committee , which is probably the case, then the lobbyist has nothing to go on.
So Ken, have you read the bill? What do you think of it? Do the penalties seem reasonable? What about the exclusive focus on airline companies, and not on the other players?
I'd want to see a comparison to the EU situation.
There may be compelling practical reasons for only focusing on what the airlines do have control over [its not like they are going to be made accountable for every reason something goes wrong].
Without seeing the arguments around that, I'd have no basis for judgement. I would not reject out of hand legislation just because it does not go after the other players. And would definitely suspect what is going on when its the airlane lobbyists that are initiating that line.
I'm guessing this is Bloc retribution against the NDP for the Hochelaga campaign against Daniel Paillé.
There were a few Babblers that did, but perhaps not enough.
However, Gerald Caplan wrote a column earlier this month criticising the NDP (and the Liberals) for allowing some of its members to vote with the Conservatives on the gun registry.