Things are getting serious, but as much as our political leaders beg people to stay home, the numbers continue to climb. Prime minister Justin Trudeau held his presser outside of Rideau Cottage once again today, a signal that he wants people to work from home where they can, and that he plans to do the same as much as possible (so we’ll see if he’s back in the Chamber during the last three sitting weeks of the year). And he said flat-out that we’re not going to have a normal Christmas this year, because we’re too far beyond that point. And while Quebec is trying to come up with a “moral contract” plan to allow people to celebrate – a plan which is just as likely to accelerate the spread of the virus in that province – the Toronto and Peel regions in Ontario are headed back into lockdown as of Monday, because Doug Ford finally decided to pull the trigger (far too late to do much good). The new federal supports which included additional lockdown supports received royal assent this week and people can begin applying for them on Monday, with the rent supports retroactive for a couple of months.
This having been said, the Conservatives have already been trying out new lines of attack, which Erin O’Toole debuted right after his meeting with the prime minister on Thursday, in which he lays the blame for the second wave at the feet of the federal government. These lines were repeated in Question Period yesterday, and when Conservatives appeared on the political shows, and include lines like “the lockdowns were supposed to be temporary to let the government find a solution.” Right – that was the point. And it was the premiers, whose jurisdiction testing, tracing, and isolation is in, who pissed way the summer and didn’t invest in increasing the capacity necessary to do that, and lo and behold, we are too late now. O’Toole and his MPs demand “better data” about outbreaks, which again, is supposed to be coming from the provinces, but most of them are falling down on that job as well. Much of the Conservatives’ rhetoric is aimed at the notion that rapid testing – including at-home testing (which has much lower sensitivity) will allow people to go to work and the economy to re-open, and they point to all of these other countries that approved rapid testing, either omitting that many of the approved rapid tests in places like the US had their approvals pulled because they turned out to be useless, or the fact that they are virtually all facing massive spikes of their own in the second wave, meaning that lo, those tests were not the panacea at all. Additionally, we had the Chief Medical Officer of Health in Alberta talking about how people were lying about symptoms or tests in order to visit people in hospitals, and continuing the spread, so how can we actually think that giving people at-home tests is going to be at all feasible if they are going to lie about their results?
Public health officials: STAY HOME!
Conservatives: We need rapid tests so that the airline industry can get back up and running.
🤔🤔🤔 https://t.co/OUOS3wxwpY— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) November 20, 2020
Manitoba Tory MP: Province much show data to justify hospital + biz restrictions; Ottawa to blame for second rise
(I am not clear if this means Liberals should have intervened in provincial realm… Pallister has not said Ottawa's financial help insufficient when we've asked) https://t.co/4R59H35XuN
— Dylan Robertson (@withfilesfrom) November 21, 2020
But this is about creating a narrative – one that absolves their provincial allies from responsibility, which relies on historical revisionism about the early days of the pandemic, and on wishful thinking around rapid tests. It’s also about disinformation, which is self-contradictory because of jurisdictional issues. And this gets added to other lies and disinformation they’re promulgating, like Pierre Poilievre walking right up to the line of conspiracy theories with the “Great Reset” sustainability initiative, where he is trying to play into NOW truthers under the “I’m just quoting Trudeau,” knowing full well how this stuff fuels the crazies. But they don’t care. They will be as irresponsible with this kind of messaging as possible because it’s only about scoring points, and they don’t care what they burn to the ground along the way. It’s a hell of a way to demonstrate how they would run the country if given the opportunity.
Good reads:
- Marc Miller had to intervene with his senior bureaucrats in how they planned to deal with a third party investigation into the Neskatanga First Nation’s water issues.
- While a transitional post-Brexit trade deal with the UK is imminent, it may not arrive in time for Parliament to pass implementation legislation.
- The two potential COVID vaccines may not work as advertised in the press releases, which could have implications for how they will work in the real world.
- A former civil servant’s evaluation of the “critical election incident public protocol” suggests the protocols should exist outside of the writ period as well.
- The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that someone who was ruled Not Criminally Responsible by way of mental illness for a sexual assault doesn’t need to register.
- Nineteen staff members at Global Affairs are doing part-time work on helping Bill Morneau secure the OECD Secretary General job.
- Now-former Liberal MP Yasmin Ratansi denies that she made racist statements about constituents in her office.
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The last two sentences you wrote should be incorporated into every blog. You nailed it!
Conservatives lie and people die. “That’s it, that’s the tweet.”