In need of new video clips for their socials, the Conservatives have decided that they need to call an “emergency” committee meeting about the $9 million purchase of a new condo for the Canadian consul general in New York, because if anything is guaranteed gold for them on social media, it’s clips that will be edited in a way to drive anger and outrage, because that’s their whole game. And if you thought that either of the other two opposition parties were going to be grown-up enough to see through this ploy, well, you’d be wrong, because they also signed right up to put on this dog-and-pony show.
Again, this is stupid posturing—a dog and pony show.
This is about the Conservatives hauling Clark before cameras to call him a “Liberal insider” for clips for their socials when this was entirely a departmental decision. https://t.co/o7mkqfSvgf— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) July 24, 2024
Because Parliament is no longer a place for serious discussions, the Bloc decided they needed to sign onto this farce because $9 million is more than some people earn in a lifetime, which I’m not sure how that’s relevant to the price of real estate in New York, but they apparently want to make a point. The NDP, quite predictably, wants to make this about affordability for all Canadians and not just some political appointees, which again, is irrelevant to the discussion because it’s an asset and not something that said consul general is keeping when his appointment comes to an end. Because nobody can grasp that this is both the going price of real estate in New York (which will increase in value), that the existing residence is being sold to cover these costs, that the new residence will be a net savings, but most importantly, that we need a place for the consul general to host politicians, diplomats, and business leaders, and that place needs to reflect well on Canada, which a bedsit in the outer Bronx is not going to do.
The other really stupid aspect of this is that they plan to call the consult general, former television journalist Tom Clark, to testify at the committee, even though this is not his decision, but one of the department, because it’s their asset. This is not accidental or because they don’t understand—it’s deliberate, because the Conservatives want to harvest clips of them calling him a “Liberal insider,” or a “media buddy,” trying to humiliate him by telling him to his face that Pierre Poilievre has promised to fire him as soon as he forms government, and generally denigrating him and his position—which is a tactic straight out of the authoritarian playbook, for the record. Clark, being in New York, is immune from a summons and should ignore it, because the only person the committee should hear from is the deputy minister, and possibly the minister, as she is politically accountable. But summoning Clark is beyond the pale, and they know it, but that doesn’t stop them from planning a social media campaign around it, because that’s what the House of Commons and its committees has become.
Ukraine Dispatch
Russian missiles struck the headquarters of a Swiss mine-clearing NGO in Kharkiv, killing six. Russian drones also hit the Danube port of Izmail, wounding there others. Here’s a look at the people in Mykolaiv in the south, who have been under constant Russian attack.
Day and night, following Russian strikes and tragic events, we can always count on those who will definitely be there and ready to help. No matter when or where it happens—near the frontlines or in every city and region across our country.
I extend my gratitude to all those who… pic.twitter.com/DdUjSIpHK4
— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) July 24, 2024
⚡️Russia targets Kharkiv with cluster munitions in 'double tap' strike, police say.
"We are absolutely sure that the second time they used cluster munitions to hit the rescuers and police officers who were there."https://t.co/knvVBET6ja
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) July 24, 2024
Good reads:
- Marc Miller sits down with the Star about the challenges in the immigration and refugee portfolios, a year into his time in the portfolio.
- The federal government has hired outside counsel to conduct a review into the appointment of the Canadian Human Rights Commissioner.
- The Ethics Commissioner determined that one of the two former executives from Sustainable Development Technology Canada had conflicts of interest.
- The Privacy Commissioner has opened an investigation into complaints that Loblaws won’t let people delete their PC Optimum accounts.
- The Bank of Canada’s Monetary Policy Report made note of the challenges in reining in the influx of temporary residents.
- The Competition Bureau is investigating whether an analytics company has been helping gas stations juice their prices.
- Kevin Carmichael parses the Bank of Canada’s thinking with yesterday’s rate cut announcement, particularly with the changing economic direction.
Odds and ends:
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