Who shops the most online, liberals or conservatives? – DigitalCommerce360

Consumers political preferences offer clues to how they shop, according to data from Infogroup, a provider of consumer marketing data and services.

Political moderates are the most likely to buy online, closely followed by liberals. And both groups shop frequently for womens apparel, home furnishings and childrens goods.Conservatives are the most likely to shop via catalogs. And they buy a lot of tools and auto repair products, books and music, and crafts items.

These conclusions are based on an analysis of 50,000 consumers from each of three categoriesindividuals who characterize themselves as conservative, liberal and moderateand then comparing those groups against all consumers in the Infogroup database. Infogroup says it has data on 300 million individuals in 184 million households compiled through its own research, client data and external sources.

Its especially important now, at a time of great polarization, that companies know who is responding to their messages, so they can align those messages with their goals.

Heather Winnicki, senior vice president of consumer transactional data

Infogroup

The analysis suggests there are other significant differences based on political affiliation. Liberals are the youngest and most likely to live in cities. Conservatives are the oldest, and more likely to live in suburbs and rural areas. Moderates have the highest income,are most likely to have a college degree and are the most likely to be married and have children in the home.

Why is it important to understand these connections between political leaning and lifestyle?

This kind of marketing intelligence influences the channels marketers decide to use to promote their products and serviceswhether it be particular radio outlets, Fox News vs. MSNBC, or particular print publications, says Heather Winnicki, Infogroup senior vice president of consumer transactional data. Its especially important now, at a time of great polarization, that companies know who is responding to their messages, so they can align those messages with their goals.

Winnicki notes that much of this data comes from direct-to-consumer retailers and brands, many of them selling non-essential items. That might skew the income and education numbers higher, as lower-income consumers might be less likely to buy products that are not necessities.

She also cant explain why moderates appear to be the most affluent and the biggest shoppers for discretionary items. We dont know the reason for the disproportionately high income were seeing among moderates, she says. Perhaps those who dont commit themselves to one side or the other are able to accumulate more wealth. We dont know. It may warrant an in-depth political study.

Here are some additional insights from the Infogroup report about the relationship between political preference and various shopping behaviors and demographic characteristics:

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Who shops the most online, liberals or conservatives? - DigitalCommerce360

Biden forges brand of liberal populism to use against Trump – The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) Joe Biden stood in a Pennsylvania metal works shop, just miles from his boyhood home, and pledged to define his presidency by a sweeping economic agenda beyond anything Americans have seen since the Great Depression and the industrial mobilization for World War II.

The prospective Democratic presidential nominee promised the effort would not just answer a pandemic-induced recession, but address centuries of racism and systemic inequalities with a new American economy that finally and fully (lives) up to the words and the values enshrined in the founding documents of this nation that were all created equal.

It was a striking call coming from Biden, a 77-year-old establishment figure known more as a back-slapping deal-maker than visionary reformer. But it made plain his intention to test the reach of liberal populism as he tries to create a coalition that can defeat President Donald Trump in November.

Trump and his Republican allies argue that Bidens positioning, especially his ongoing work with progressives, proves hes captive to a radical left wing. Conversely, activists who backed Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren in the Democratic primary were encouraged, yet cautious, about Bidens ability to follow through while conceding that his plans on issues including climate action and criminal justice still fall short of their ideals.

Bidens inner circle insists his approach in 2020 is the same its been since he was elected to the Senate in 1972: Meet the moment.

Hes always evolved, said Ted Kaufman, Bidens longest-serving adviser. The thing thats been consistent for his entire career, almost 50 years, is he never promises things that he doesnt think he can do.

Kaufman, who succeeded Biden in the Senate when he ascended to the vice presidency, said Bidens core identity hasnt changed: progressive Democrat, friendly to labor and business, consistent supporter of civil rights, believer in government and the private sector. Whats different in 2020, he said, are the countrys circumstances a public health crisis, near-Depression level unemployment, a national reckoning on racism and the office Biden now seeks.

If you want to get something done, encourage it, Kaufman said. What he learned over history watching campaigns is that you put forth a program, and then you come into office, and everybody involved knows thats the program youre offering.

Bidens evolution has been on display from the start of his campaign as hes tacked left both in substance and style while trying to preserve his pragmatist brand.

At the start of the Democratic primary, Biden was positioned as offering a moderate alternative to Sanders call for a political revolution and Warrens push for big structural change.

The former vice president countered their proposed universal government-funded health insurance with a government insurance plan that would compete alongside private insurance. Progressives wanted tuition-free public higher education; Biden offered tuition subsidies for two-year schools. Biden called the climate crisis an existential threat and offered a clean energy plan with a trillion-dollar price tag, but resisted the full version of progressives Green New Deal. He promised hefty tax hikes for corporations and the investor class but opposed a wealth tax on individuals net worth.

Biden noted that his health care platform put him to the left of 2016 nominee Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama, who had jettisoned a public option from his 2010 health care law, angering liberal Democrats.

And on race, even before the recent national uprising against police violence, Biden spoke often of the nations systemic failure to live up to the Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jefferson didnt, he said often in early speeches, alluding to the fact that the Declarations author and the third U.S. president owned slaves.

Still, Biden isnt immune from the kind of internal party tensions that cost Clinton progressive support in 2016, and hes spent the last three months shoring up his left flank.

Biden and Sanders created policy groups to write recommendations for Democrats 2020 platform. Those committees unveiled 110 pages of policy plans Wednesday, ahead of Bidens speech in Pennsylvania. They left Biden short of endorsing single-payer health insurance and the most aggressive timelines to achieve a carbon-neutral economy, but ratified his claims of a more progressive slate than his predecessors.

Further, Biden already had moved toward Sanders tuition position, endorsing four years of full subsidies for most middle-class households. He adopted Warrens proposed bankruptcy law overhaul and her ideas for a government procurement campaign to benefit U.S. companies.

Progressives promise continued pressure.

I think our job is really to sometimes push him, Washington Rep. Pramila Jayapal said. Jayapal, who helped lead the Biden-Sanders health care task force, said that means being alongside him, of course, and then sometimes be out in front.

Likewise, Varshini Prakash of the Sunrise Movement, a leading environmental advocacy group, said her group wont abandon the Green New Deal. But she credited Biden for embracing a level of public investment that would remake the energy economy during the pandemic recession.

Biden has managed party unity that wasnt present four years ago.

I dont consider Bidens proposals a political hat tip to progressives as much as rising to the moment were living in, said Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee and a Warren ally.

The former vice president also has amassed an impressive slate of endorsements and built a stable of regular campaign surrogates, including all his major primary rivals. Many of them held events in the hours and days following his speech Thursday in a show of force that Trump, even with his intense online presence and fervent base, would be hard-pressed to match.

For his part, Trump accused Biden of plagiarizing his economic populism but also tarred Biden as a leftist who cant win.

Its a plan that is very radical left, but he said the right things because hes copying what Ive done, Trump said Friday before departing the White House for Florida.

Kaufman said Biden will continue campaigning as a nominee unconcerned about such labels. Whats allowed him to survive all these years, Kaufman said, is that hes not into any of those characterizations.

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Biden forges brand of liberal populism to use against Trump - The Associated Press

Liberal Democrats MOCKED as Alok Sharma tells Remainers to ‘move on from Brexit’ – Daily Express

Mr Sharma said: "The honourable lady needs to move.

"The British people decided that we are leaving the European Union in 2016.

"We are implementing that vote."

The Liberal Democrats' 2019 manifesto contained a pledge to revoke Brexit should the party gain political power.

READ MORE:Liberal Democrat MP savaged by Brexiteer get a job with the EU!'

However, the election last December was a disaster for the party as they secured only 12 MPs.

The party's performance was made worse by the fact their former leader Jo Swinson lost her seat in the 2019 election.

Earlier this year the BBC's Andrew Neil brutally mocked the Liberal Democrats' election performance during an interview with Layla Moran on Politics Live.

Andrew Neil pointed out that due to their disastrous general election result the Liberal Democrats only have 12 MPs and questioned why it was taking so long to choose a new leader.

"There is a feeling in the party that whoever takes over now needs to be someone who is going to stay the distance."

The Liberal Deomcrats have yet to announce who will be the new leader of the party.

Ed Davey is currently the acting leader of the Lib Dems.

The party originally outlined a timetable to elect a new leader that started with nominations in May and that will conclude in July.

See the article here:

Liberal Democrats MOCKED as Alok Sharma tells Remainers to 'move on from Brexit' - Daily Express

Blindsided by the WE scandal, Liberal MPs wonder: How did Justin Trudeau get us into this mess? – Toronto Star

We is once again a touchy subject in Justin Trudeaus Liberal party.

While the hits just keep on coming about Trudeaus connections to the WE charity, the controversy has touched off grumbling in Liberal circles about the lowercase we as in, how exactly did we get into this mess, and who is we anyway in the decision-making circle around the prime minister?

Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, the Liberal MP for the Toronto riding of Beaches-East York, says he was on the phone immediately after the news emerged about WE being chosen to hand out nearly $1 billion in pandemic relief to students. He placed a call last week to the office of Diversity, Inclusion and Youth Minister Bardish Chagger whos now gone silent with the media to get an explanation.

I was struggling to understand why it was being done this way, said Erskine-Smith, a rare MP willing to go on the record on Friday about his concerns with the entire WE affair.

He made the call before he knew all the details, which have been emerging daily, about how closely WE had been working with Trudeaus family, including nearly $300,000 in speaking fees paid out to Trudeaus mother and brother.

Had I known what I know now, I would have said this was too close to the prime minister, Erskine-Smith said.

Other MPs, preferring to talk off the record on Friday, said there has been a lot of chatter in the caucus over the past week about how this WE controversy has revived concerns about team culture or lack of it in Trudeaus government.

There arent a lot of relationships between the PM and caucus, one MP said. Now, he said, with most of caucus relations taking place remotely during the pandemic, there are even fewer opportunities for MPs to have contact with the PM and the tight team around him.

It is either ironic or fitting that WE has made the Liberal we annoyed and nervous.

One MP said he was surprised to learn from news reports first in the Star, as it happens that WE had been given a contract to do work that would normally be done by the public service.

This is a real head-scratcher for me and several of my colleagues, the MP said. I like to consider myself plugged in but the first time I heard of the WE contract was when I read the controversy in the papers. I know for a fact that I was not alone.

What baffled many MPs was why the government needed to do any contracting out at all, especially after months of proving that it was nimble and adaptable enough to get COVID-19 aid directly to citizens.

This was Erskine-Smiths main concern at first: the government has generous and effective programs in place already for students and summer jobs. MPs themselves, of all stripes, are often helpful in steering that help toward where its most needed in their ridings.

So, while Erskine-Smith didnt put it this pointedly, not only was the WE decision made without input from MPs, the plan itself which has now been reversed also kept MPs out of the loop.

Its just so frustrating, he said, citing all the good work the government has been doing to provide help to citizens in this crisis. Now this is taking up so much of the conversation. Erskine-Smiths own mother asked him on Friday why this was going on, though he says his office is not being inundated with complaints, at least not yet.

The exquisitely bad timing of this controversy has Liberals frustrated too. Not only is it happening during a pandemic, but also still in the shadow of the humbling the government received during last years election.

From all accounts, Trudeau had been making genuine efforts after the election, also after last years SNC-Lavalin saga, to forge some greater connections with the Liberal team. Just this week, Trudeau handed a major ambassadors appointment to former interim leader Bob Rae a decision seen as a symbolic olive branch to Liberals who had been kept at arms length from the PMO.

Make sense of what's happening across the country and around the world with the Star's This Week in Politics email newsletter.

But the WE controversy is viewed by some Liberals as being about how easy it is for Trudeau and his team to lapse back into old habits of keeping to themselves and giving access and benefits only to the small number of people they trust. Many MPs chose to speak off the record on Friday precisely because they were worried about reinforcing that outsider-insider culture.

None of the MPs or Liberals I reached were calling for Trudeau to resign, as his official opponents are. But there were suggestions that the PM had to surround himself with people who ask harder questions, who would have immediately spotted that WE would hurt the Liberal we.

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Blindsided by the WE scandal, Liberal MPs wonder: How did Justin Trudeau get us into this mess? - Toronto Star

NDP MLA calls for Liberal to be ousted from caucus after conversion therapy comments – CTV News

VICTORIA -- An NDP member of B.C.s legislature is calling on Liberal leader Andrew Wilkinson to boot an MLA who refuses to stop advertising in a socially conservative magazine criticized for being homophobic.

After the advertising in The Light Magazine was revealed, several Liberal MLAs expressed their concern and stated publicly their support for the LGBTQ2+ community.

Wilkinson said advertising procedures would be reviewed, and later tweeted, There is no room in the Liberal party for homophobia, transphobia or any other form of discrimination.

The Light has published content against B.C.s Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI) policy in public schools. It has also published content opposing a ban on so-called conversion therapy, a discredited practice aimed at changing a persons sexual orientation.

Chilliwack-Hope MLA Laurie Throness said he would continue to advertise in the publication because it aligns with his Christian values.

NDP MLA Spencer Chandra-Herbert, who said he was hurt and disappointed to find out that advertising dollars were spent on the publication, is now calling on the Liberals to eject Throness from caucus. The member from Vancouver said if the leader had no tolerance for discrimination, he should eject Throness.

Chandra-Herbert said he has not had direct contact with Wilkinson. Yet he characterizes Throness actions as defying the Liberal leader.

The article the MLA was defending is an article arguing we shouldnt have laws to ban conversion therapy because it would be hurtful, Chandra-Herbert said. So that to me sounds like he supports conversion therapy.

CTV News requested an interview with Wilkinson. He appeared with Liberal caucus chair Jackie Tegart, who said, Discrimination of any kind does not have any place in our caucus. This issue has been discussed and agreed to by all members and will be adhered to.

When Wilkinson was asked if he was comfortable with Throness in caucus he said, We have an agreement within our caucus that there is no room for discrimination of any sort including transphobia and homophobia.

He took one question before leaving.

Andrew Weaver, a former Green Party MLA, introduced a private members bill to ban conversion therapy in British Columbia. Chandra-Herbert stood alongside him in support of the bill, yet the NDP government didnt pursue it saying it would be largely symbolic. Later, the province pursued a different avenue asking the federal government make conversion therapy a criminal code offense. The federal Liberals introduced legislation in March of this year that, if passed, would ban the practice in Canada.

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NDP MLA calls for Liberal to be ousted from caucus after conversion therapy comments - CTV News

Liberals’ revenue tripled their top adversaries’ – Whitehorse Star

The Yukon Liberal Party raked in triple the revenue of both the Yukon Party and the Yukon NDP in 2019, according to an Elections Yukon report.

By Gabrielle Plonka on July 15, 2020

The Yukon Liberal Party raked in triple the revenue of both the Yukon Party and the Yukon NDP in 2019, according to an Elections Yukon report.

The revenue report was released Tuesday by Maxwell Harvey, the chief electoral officer.

Access to no strings attached funding is critical to support outreach to the electorate to outline goals and policies, Harvey said in a press release.

Political financing regulation and disclosure requirements are designed to make political financing fair and transparent.

The total revenue for all four Yukon parties in 2019 was $257,740.

The Yukon Liberal Partys revenue for 2019 was $156,000.

The Yukon Partys revenue was $55,676, while the Yukon NDPs revenue was $44,543.

The Yukon Green Partys revenue was $1,520.

The Yukon Liberal Party saw 90 contributions total $49,415, with $22,195 in monetary donations. In-kind donations totalled $27,220.

Other revenue totalled $106,585. The partys president could not be reached for comment before press time to elaborate on this revenue.

In 2018, the Liberal party reported a total revenue of $51,020.

According to Elections Yukon, other revenue constitutes fundraising proceeds; donations received at meetings and rallies; membership fees; event registration fees; loans; or investment income.

According to Dave Wilkie, the assistant chief electoral officer, political parties are not required to itemize other revenue totals.

Other jurisdictions have more robust or tighter rules as far as requiring more information, but here other revenue is very non-specific, Wilkie said.

About $6,000 of monetary contributions was donated by eight of the 11 Liberal members of the legislative assembly.

Ranj Pillai, Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources, and Paolo Gallina, the MLA for Porter Creek Centre, were the largest donors contributing $1,500 and $1,000 respectively.

There are five donations under the name of Mostyn for $400 each.

The donors are Richard Mostyn, the minister of Highways and Public Works, Richard T. Mostyn, Shona Mostyn, Liam Mostyn and Peter Mostyn.

Ted Adel and Don Hutton are the only two Liberal members of the assembly not listed as party donors. Neither man is a member of the cabinet.

Larry Bagnell, the Yukons Liberal MP, donated $400 to the party.

Other major contributors were Nuway Crushing, a civil engineering company, the TD Bank and Susan Walton. Those three donors gave $1,000 each.

The Yukon Partys revenue of $55,676 saw 142 contributions totalling $42,711, with $32,211 in monetary donations. In-kind donations totalled $10,500.

Other revenue totalled $12,965.

Four of the Yukon Partys six elected members donated a total of about $4,500.

Stacey Hassard, who was the Yukon Partys interim party leader from late 2016 up until Currie Dixons election to the role in May, donated $1,798 to the party and was the largest individual donor. Dixon contributed $900.

Brad Cathers and Geraldine Van Bibber are the only two Yukon Party members not directly listed as donors.

The Yukon Party saw more donations from businesses than the Liberals in 2019.

All In Exploration, Big Bear Donair, CAP Management Services, Kluane Drilling Ltd., Nickel Creek Platinum, Pelly Construction Ltd., Pembridge Resources and the TD Bank all made donations.

The largest corporate donors were the TD Bank and Pembridge Resources, which contributed $1,000 each.

The Yukon NDP had the highest number of donors, with 208 contributions totalling $42,742.

In-kind donations added up to $1,446 and other revenue totalled $1,802.

The party did not receive any corporate donations in 2019.

The NDPs two elected members, leader Kate White and Liz Hanson, donated $1,250 and $1,100 respectively.

Skeeter Wright, a previous NDP candidate, was the largest donor, contributing $1,840.

The two other donors contributing more than $1,000 were Max Fraser, a local filmmaker, and Lesley McCullough, acting deputy Justice minister from 2016 to 2019.

Fraser and McCullough donated $1,275 and $1,100 respectively.

Karen Barnes, the recently-retired Yukon University president, contributed $600.

The Yukon Green Party, which doesnt currently have any elected members in the legislativeaAssembly, reported three contributions in 2019 totalling $1,500.

Mike Ivens, the Green Party president, donated $1,300.

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Liberals' revenue tripled their top adversaries' - Whitehorse Star

7 reasons you should pursue a degree in Liberal Arts from Bennett University – Times of India

The last few months have proved that you need education that empowers you in this rapidly changing society and economy; and not something that will become obsolete tomorrow. This is where a three-year Degree course or a one-year Post Graduate Diploma in Liberal Arts education from Bennett University will come in handy and prepare you for any contingencies that may arise in future.

To broaden your horizons, at Bennett University you will be exposed to fundamentals of ten varied disciplines namely Psychology, Philosophy, Business Studies, Marketing, Journalism, Advertising & Public Relations, Economics, Political Science, English Literature and Finance in the first year and you can Major in any one of your choice.

Here are 7 reasons why you should pursue a degree in Liberal Arts from Bennett University (a top private university from The Times of India Group)

1. Bennett University also offers Business oriented Majors with Liberal ArtsHaving a choice to select a Business Major while pursuing a Liberal Arts degree is common in other countries, but in India, very few colleges offer such a varied bouquet of business oriented options that include finance, marketing, business studies, advertising and public relations. Bennett University is the countrys first that allows you to do so. However if you are in favour of Humanities over Business Major, you are welcome to choose from Psychology, Philosophy, Political Science, etc. Hence, the program is unique and designed in such a way that it enables a student to study multiple courses from different fields to get a holistic, inter-disciplinary education that helps develop all-round personality, making one a desirable candidate during corporate hiring.

2. Much better value for money compared to other similar programs being offered at other universitiesBennett University offers this course at a very good value for money proposition. Not only is the program being offered at Bennett University very exhaustive, it also has lower fees as compared to similar programs being offered by other Universities in India such as Ashoka University or OP Jindal University.

3. Options to design your degree and your elective mix.Students have the flexibility not only to choose their own curriculum with the help of the esteemed faculty, but also to change the basket of electives if they prefer some other courses being offered on campus. Hence, the program is unique and designed in such a way that it enables a student to study multiple courses from different fields to get a holistic, inter-disciplinary education that helps develop all-round personality, making one a desirable candidate during corporate hiring. The electives also include courses in Family Business and Entrepreneurship, which help impart requisite skills to expand a family business or launch a new start up.

4. In-depth, exhaustive learningAt Bennett University most of the Majors that can be selected in the Liberal Arts program are also being offered as full time degree programs there. Hence, any discipline that a student opts for, will have more depth, and the quality of education will be much higher as compared to any other university.

5. State-of-art InfrastructureIn addition to the in-depth curriculum taught by a richly experienced faculty team, Bennett Universitys 68-acre campus has cutting edge technology & state-of-art infrastructure. The beautiful, campus of this University - located in Greater Noida and part of the National Capital Region has all the modern amenities including ultra-modern AC classrooms and hostel facility; a world-class sports centre that includes air-conditioned badminton, squash, table-tennis and basketball courts and also tennis, volleyball, soccer courts, to name a few. You can gain credits in your course by playing sports, ensuring an all-round development. It also houses an ATM, food courts, mess, dispensary, gym, along with two libraries within the premises that help provide a global learning and living experience to all the students.

6. Get unparalleled exposure: Meet industry leaders and celebrities who frequent the campusBeing a student at Bennett University has its own advantages. Not only one gets a chance to meet and interact with industry leaders that the Times of India Group has regular access to, but also celebrities who visit the campus frequently for movie promotions. Students also get exposure to the iconic path-breaking Times Group events held in Delhi and Mumbai like the, Filmfare Awards, Femina Miss India, Mirchi Music awards, Delhi Times Fashion week, music concerts; and also ET & Times Now events.

7. Make friends from different walks of life The range of electives and course options being offered by Bennett University is unmatched in India. Bennett University has multiple faculties including Technology, Law, Media and Management, and can provide the best opportunity to mingle with some of the best brains in different domains; and make friends from diverse fields and not just Liberal Arts.

Originally posted here:

7 reasons you should pursue a degree in Liberal Arts from Bennett University - Times of India

Ford’s plan to build new long-term care beds is re-announcement of Liberal promise – CTV News

TORONTO -- Ontario Premier Doug Ford's recent announcement to build nearly 8,000 new long-term care beds is a re-commitment of promises made by the former Liberal government, CTV News Toronto has learned, despite the premier presenting it as new information.

Ford, on Wednesday, touted an "historic investment" of $1.75 billion to "kick start the development of long-term care beds" over the next five years.

"Today's announcement will result in an estimated nearly 8000 new Long Term Care beds and 12,000 redeveloped Long Term Care beds," Ford claimed.

However, sources in the Ministry of Long-Term Care confirmed the government re-announced commitments that had been made by the former Liberal government and beds that were allocated over the course of the past two years.

Of the 7,889 new beds Ford promised to build, roughly 6,000 were allocated by the Wynne government in 2017 and 2018, and the remainder was allocated by the Ford government in 2018 and 2019.

Merrilee Fullerton, Minister of Long-Term Care, was first to reveal the government's plan for 8,000 beds in November 2019 during Question Period.

"Our government... is investing $1.75 billion to create 15,000 new beds and redevelop another 15,000 in five years," Fullerton told the Ontario Legislature. "Weve already got almost 8,000 beds allocated this year so far, 50% of the requirement."

"This year alone, we have allocated 1,814 new beds and reaffirmed our commitment towards building 6,085 previously allocated beds," Fullerton said.

Government sources told CTV News Toronto on Wednesday that the ministry will be able to build and re-develop just 4,000 beds in 2022, as the province offers developers new incentives to recoup their investment earlier in exchange for fast-tracked construction.

In a statement to CTV News Toronto, a spokesperson for Minister Fullerton didn't address Wednesday's re-announcement, but emphasized the changes to the construction funding model would "kick-start construction."

"Our government consulted with the sector to understand what was needed to encourage rapid development and our modernization of the way government funds the development of long-term care beds will do just that," the statement reads.

"Yesterdays announcement means that thousands of long-awaited beds will finally get built."

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Ford's plan to build new long-term care beds is re-announcement of Liberal promise - CTV News

Reasonable Liberal Up for Adoption – Lynchburg News and Advance

Another, #TrumpIsNotWell, taunts Trump as shaky, weak and babbling. Why isnt the press covering Trumps secretive midnight run to Walter Read Medical Center? the ad asks, addressing the Trump base with a clever (though inaccurate) hit on the media.

Mourning in America portrays a heartland of empty factories, dilapidated homes and broken people. Under the leadership of Donald Trump, our country is weaker and sicker and poorer, the voiceover says in sorrow. Americans are asking, If we have another four years like this, will there even be an America?

The Lincoln Project managers were sure to have the ad aired on Tucker Carlsons Fox News program.

In Betrayed, an angry ex-Navy Seal rails against Trumps nonresponse to reports of Russians paying the Taliban to kill American soldiers. Any commander in chief with a spine would be stomping the living s out of some Russians right now, Dr. Dan Barkuff says. He calls Trump a coward and draft dodger, and Barkuff adds in passing, Im a pro-life, gun-owning combat veteran.

The brains behind these videos, Wilson and Lincoln Project colleagues George Conway, Steve Schmidt, John Weaver and others, are on my side. They remind people they used to campaign against there are patriotic Republicans who still put their country above party.

I dream these never-Trump Republicans become not a third party but one of the two parties a replacement for the shabby Trump cult now called the Republican Party. They might even change their name to the Lincoln Party.

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Reasonable Liberal Up for Adoption - Lynchburg News and Advance

Liberals seek to recall House of Commons for new COVID-19 legislation – Kamloops This Week

OTTAWA The Liberal government is seeking to recall the House of Commons to pass another round of measures to deal with COVID-19.

Opposition parties were notified Thursday of the new legislation and the potential for the Commons to deal with it early next week.

Among the items hanging on the government's agenda is a promise to provide one-time payments to some Canadians with disabilities to help cover additional costs incurred during the pandemic.

The Liberals tried to pass a bill last month that would set up the payment but the opposition refused to support the legislation as it contained other measures they found objectionable.

A spokesman for Liberal House Leader Pablo Rodriguez would not divulge the contents of the latest bill; it has not been officially tabled in the House of Commons.

But Simon Ross says legislation has been drafted and shared with the opposition so that Canadians can get more help.

"We will continue to collaborate with the opposition, because that's what Canadians expect from all of us," he said.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has also promised to provide details this week of how the government intends to extend the federal wage subsidy program to the end of the year.

When it was first announced, the program was to expire the first week of June, and was then extended into early fall.

The program pays up to 75 per cent of salaries for certain companies whose revenues have declined a specific amount.

There have been calls for it to be restructured to take into account the slow recovery of the economy.

The government's fiscal and economic "snapshot'' last week boosted the expected cost of the program from $45 billion to $82.3 billion, taken as a sign of impending changes to the thresholds.

The House of Commons is adjourned until fall, though a special committee continues to meet in its stead over the summer months to debate COVID-19 issues.

While that committee is scheduled to sit next week, to pass legislation the government must formally recall Parliament.

The Liberals have done so several times in the past, with MPs gathered in person in the minimum number required to allow for votes to be cast on bills.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 16, 2020.

Continued here:

Liberals seek to recall House of Commons for new COVID-19 legislation - Kamloops This Week

Young conservative women who went viral for standing up to liberal mob say they’ve received death threats – Fox News

Savanah Hernandez, who was targeted by Black Lives Matterprotesters when she showed up to a rally with a sign that readPolice Lives Matter, told The Ingraham Angle on Monday that she was viciously attacked and has gotten deaththreats from people on the left because theydont like her message.

On Monday, Hernandez tweeted a picture of herself at the rally in Texas and wrote, I get a lot of hate for the sign, but imagine being the person whose actually in the uniform. Thank you to the police who care about keeping our communities safe. #PoliceLivesMatter.

I waswatching so many videos onTwitter of police officers, especially black police officerswhove been the subject of so much racism because of the radical left and everything that has been going on andit really enraged me so I wantedto go stand up with a Police Lives Matter sign, Hernandez explained.

She noted that on the other side of the sign she wrote the name of retired St. Louispolicecaptain David Dorn, who was shot and killed by a looter during protests over the death of George Floyd.

I went and I stood there, I didnt chant, I didnt go infiltratetheir rally at all, Hernandez said. I stood on a busy street cornerand I held up my sign because Iwanted police in my city to know thatthey were supported and I was immediately attacked.

She said thatone BLM supporter actually supported myFirst Amendment right, which is not something that we typically see, so I wasvery appreciative of that.

DAVID DORN SHOOTING: ARREST, MURDER CHARGE ANNOUNCED IN KILLING OF RETIRED ST. LOUIS POLICE CAPTAIN

But its ridiculous that I cant go stand up with a sign onmy own street, in my own citywithout being attacked, viciously attacked, severaltimes, Hernandez continued.

She noted that since the rally she has received death threats from people on the left, which she said only emboldens me more tostand up for our police whoprotect our communitiesevery single day.

Host Laura Ingraham asked Hernandez whatis her message to young womenwho are conservative like her and are tiredof being pushed around.

I am not a spectacular humanbeing, Im a regular girl If I can stand up and makebig waves with a $5 poster boardand a message, then anybody can, she said in response. So stand up. Nows the timeto do it.

An incoming college freshman who claimed Marquette University threatened to rescind her admission because of videos she posted on TikTok that were supportive of President Trumpalso appeared on The Ingraham Angle on Monday night.

Samantha Pfefferle said she has also received death threats after she posted the videos and added that other students were among those harassing her online, according to Heavy.com.

Ingraham asked Pfefferle, After what you have beenthrough, do you have secondthoughts about going toMarquette at this point or no?

I really, really, really wantto go, Pfefferle said in response.

She said she plans on attending in the fall adding that me and my parents are stillscared for my safety goingthere because of all the threats thatI have been getting including,Dont worry, you will be deadsoon.

So its kind of scary to step oncampus and Im nervous, she continued.But Im ready to rallyconservatives and stand up forwhat I believe in.

In a statement sent to Fox News, the university disputed the claim that Pfefferles enrollment was in jeopardy.

Concerns about this new student that were brought to the universitys attention are not based on political affiliation, but on alleged use of discriminatory language, the statement said. In this case, there were also concerns for the incoming students safety, which were investigated by the Marquette University Police Department and discussed with the incoming student.

The university also said that Pfefferles admission has not been rescinded nor did the university threaten to rescind the admission.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Ingraham asked Pfefferle if that is true or false.

When we went on the first call, theydid say that I was not astudent, Pfefferle said in response.

Ingraham then pointed out that she is not a student now.

They told me I wasnta student and that I would hearback in a couple days, Pfefferle responded. It took them a week and a half.

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Young conservative women who went viral for standing up to liberal mob say they've received death threats - Fox News

Opposition demand answers and action for students following Liberal WE apologies – CTV News

OTTAWA -- Federal opposition parties are continuing to demand answers from the federal government, and are calling for a quick solution to revive or rework the now-halted $900 million student summer grant program.

The program was initially awarded to WE Charity, prompting a series of headlines calling into question Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus ethics and the potential conflict of interest he and his finance minister may have put themselves in by not recusing themselves from the decision making table on the deal, given their close family connections to the organization.

On Monday both Trudeau and minister Bill Morneau apologized for their part in the controversy and vowed to recuse themselves from any WE Charity discussions in the future, though the federal ethics commissioner is still looking into the matter, and various House of Commons committees plan to continue to hear testimony and seek evidence that could further shed light on how this sole-sourced contract came about.

The government insists it was the public service that suggested WE Charity was the best, and only organization to administer the program, though now government departments and agencies are being looked at as alternatives to execute the program that was created to offer students grants for summer volunteer work related to COVID-19.

While the government has vowed to rework the program as quickly as possible, after WE Charity handed back over the program to the government along with the funding, thousands of students are left in limbo without summer jobs and, for now, no chance for volunteer grants to help cover costs like fall tuition.

This has prompted the Green Party to suggest shifting the funds to the Canada Summer Jobs program instead, a pre-existing program that connects young people to temporary job opportunities in their communities. That program was deemed oversubscribed this summer and the government has already put additional funding into it.

There are thousands of Canadian students who need jobs and thousands of Canadian charities and nonprofits which are dealing with a decline in revenue and an increase in demand in services that could benefit from students working with them. Organizations that applied through WE should be allowed to move their application to Canada Summer Jobs, Green Party parliamentary leader Elizabeth May said in a statement.

The grant to post-secondary students and recent graduates was designed to provide one-time payments of up to $5,000 for volunteering in pandemic-related programs, depending on the number of hours worked. For every 100 hours spent, a student would receive $1,000.

The whole premise of the Canada Student Service Grant was problematic, said Green Party MP and employment critic Paul Manly in the same statement, noting that the amount being offered for the volunteer work was less than the minimum wage in any province.

Students would not gain any EI eligible hours or have this de facto employment recognized next spring if there is another wave of the pandemic and a need for further financial relief programs, he said.

Diversity, Inclusion and Youth Minister Bardish Chagger said on CTV News Channel on Monday that the government will not be able to deliver the program to the same extent as was originally planned when WE Charity was involved.

"There was thousands of opportunities that were posted Right now we are looking to get the program out the door once again, looking at what needs to be done us to be able to deliver this program," she said.

Brandon Amyot was one of the students who was banking on volunteering through the program to help pay down their student debt. While the government says volunteer hours through to the end of October will count, by then many students will be back in class and preparing for the first round of midterms.

Amyot said WE Charitys involvement and the inference that students would only volunteer if paid was also a concern. It leaves me questioning how I am supposed to get through school, Amyot said. It weakens my trust in institutions in general when these sort of avoidable things happen.

Other students have opted to bypass the federal process altogether and set up their own volunteer positions, hoping that the federal government will still compensate them for those hours once the programs problems are sorted.

In a press conference on Parliament Hill on Tuesday, Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet doubled down on his call for Trudeau to temporarily step aside and let Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland take the reigns of Canadas COVID-19 response as the ethics probe into his potential conflict of interest is concluded.

I believe that now his attention is much more on his personal situation than about helping and taking care of Canadians and Quebecers. That by itself is a good reason for him to step aside, he said.

Though, given the ongoing health and economic crisis, Blanchet said now is not the time for an election so the Bloc Quebecois is not looking to bring down the minority Liberal government.

He wants to see Trudeau testify at the House of Commons Finance Committee, where one probe of the controversy is already underway. Speaking in French, however, he rejected the Conservative calls for an RCMP investigation, saying that its wrong for the Tories to think they can order a police investigation as if it was placing an order for a pizza.

With a report from CTV News Molly Thomas

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Opposition demand answers and action for students following Liberal WE apologies - CTV News

Enlightenment liberalism is losing ground in the debate about race – The Economist

Jul 9th 2020

LIBERALISMthe Enlightenment philosophy, not the American leftstarts with the assertion that all human beings have equal moral worth. From that stem equal rights for all. Libertarians see those principles as paramount. For left-leaning liberals, equal moral worth also brings an entitlement to the resources necessary for an individual to flourish.

Yet when it comes to race many liberals have failed to live up to their own values. We hold these truths to be self-evident, wrote Thomas Jefferson in Americas Declaration of Independence in 1776, that all men are created equal. More than a decade later the Founding Fathers would write into the countrys constitution that a slave was in fact to be considered three-fifths of a person. In Europe many liberals opposed slavery but supported despotic imperial rule overseas. Perhaps liberal theory and liberal history are ships passing in the night, speculated Uday Singh Mehta of the City University of New York in 1999.

What lies behind this failure? That question is especially important today. Norms are shifting fast. The global protests that sprang up after the killing of George Floyd denounced racism throughout society. Companies, often pressed by their own employees, are in a panic about their lack of diversity, particularly at the top. Television stations and the press are rewriting the rules about how news should be covered and by whom. There is a fight over statuary and heritage, just as there is over people forced out of their jobs or publicly shamed for words or deeds deemed racist.

It is a defining moment. At Mr Floyds funeral, the Rev Al Sharpton declared: Its time to stand up in Georges name and say, Get your knee off our necks. At Mount Rushmore on July 3rd, President Donald Trump condemned a new far-left fascism. To understand all this, it is worth going back to the battle of ideas. In one corner is liberalism, with its tarnished record, and in the other the anti-liberal theories emerging from the campus to challenge it.

During the past two centuries life in the broadest terms has been transformed. Life expectancy, material wealth, poverty, literacy, civil rights and the rule of law have changed beyond recognition. Though that is not all thanks to Enlightenment liberals, obviously, liberalism has prospered as Marxism and fascism have failed.

But its poor record on race, especially with regard to African-Americans, stands out. Income, wealth, education and incarceration remain correlated with ethnicity to a staggering degree. True, great steps have been taken against overt racial animus. But the lack of progress means liberals must have either tried and failed to create a society in which people of all races can flourish, or failed to try at all.

Americas founding depended on two racist endeavours. One was slavery, which lasted for almost 250 years and was followed by nearly a century of institutionalised white supremacy. Of the seven most important Founding Fathers, only John Adams and Alexander Hamilton did not at some point own slaves. Nine early American presidents were slaveholders. And although slavery is a near-universal feature of pre-Enlightenment societies, the Atlantic slave trade is notable for having been tied to notions of racial superiority.

The other was imperialism, when British colonialists violently displaced existing people. Many 18th-century European liberals criticised the search for empire. Adam Smith viewed colonies as expensive failures of monopoly and mercantilism that benefited neither side, calling Britains East India Company plunderers. Edmund Burke (a liberal in the broadest sense) decried the outrageous injustices in British colonies, including systematick iniquity and oppression in India, which resulted from power that was unaccountable to those over whom it was exercised.

But, argues Jennifer Pitts of the University of Chicago in her book A Turn to Empire, in the 19th century the most famous European liberals gravitated towards imperial liberalism. The shift was grounded in the growing triumphalism of France and Britain, which saw themselves as qualified by virtue of their economic and technological success to disseminate universal moral and cultural values. John Stuart Mill abhorred slavery, writing during the American civil war in 1863 that I cannot look forward with satisfaction to any settlement but complete emancipation. But of empire he wrote that Despotism is a legitimate mode of government in dealing with barbarians, provided the end be their improvement, and the means justified by actually effecting that end. (Mill worked for the East India Company for 35 years.) Alexis de Tocqueville championed the French empire, in particular the violent conquest and settlement of Algeria.

A belief in the basic similarity of human beings, and of their march towards progress, led these thinkers to the belief that it was possible to accelerate development at the barrel of a gun. Even at the time, this paternalism should have been tempered by scepticism about whether it can be just for one people to impose government on another. Although Mill criticised the British empires atrocities, he did not see them, as Burke had, as the inevitable consequence of an unaccountable regime.

The turn in liberal thought was reflected in the pages of The Economist. From its founding in 1843 the newspaper opposed slavery, and early in its existence it criticised imperialism. But we later backed the Second Opium War against China, the brutal suppression of the 1857 Indian mutiny and even the invasion of Mexico by France in 1861. We wrote that Indians were helpless...to restrain their own superstitions and their own passions. Walter Bagehot, editor from 1861 to 1877, wrote that the British were the most enterprising, the most successful, and in most respects the best, colonists on the face of the earth. Although the newspaper never ceased to oppose slavery, it claimed, bizarrely, that abolition would be more likely were the Confederacy to win Americas civil war. It was not until the early 20th century that The Economist regained some of its scepticism regarding empire, as liberalism at home evolved into a force for social reform.

In America the big liberal shift took place in the mid-1960s. To deal with the legacy of slavery, liberals began to concede that you need to treat the descendants of slaves as members of a group, not only as individuals. Sandra Day OConnor, the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court, argued that affirmative action, though a breach of liberal individualism that must eventually be dispensed with, had to stay until there was reasonable equality of opportunity between groups.

Plenty of thinkers grappled with affirmative action, including Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a politician, sociologist and diplomat, and Ronald Dworkin, a philosopher and jurist. However, the most famous left-liberal work of the 20th century, written in 1971, was notably silent on race. The key idea of John Rawlss A Theory of Justice is the veil of ignorance, behind which people are supposed to think about the design of a fair society without knowing their own talents, class, sex or indeed race. Detached from such arbitrary factors people would discover principles of justice. But what is the point, modern critics ask, of working out what a perfectly just society looks like without considering how the actual world is ravaged by injustice?

Liberalism as it is theorised abstracts away from social oppression, writes Charles Mills, also of the City University of New York. The Cambridge Companion to Rawls, a roughly 600-page book published in 2002, has no chapter, section or subsection dealing with race. The central debates in the field as presented, writes Mr Mills, exclude any reference to the modern global history of racism versus anti-racism.

As the gains of the civil-rights era failed to translate into sustained progress for African-Americans, dissatisfaction with liberalism set in. One of the first to respond was Derrick Bell, a legal scholar working at Harvard in the 1970s. Critical race theory, which fused French post-modernism with the insights of African-Americans like Frederick Douglass, an abolitionist and former slave, and W.E.B. Du Bois, a sociologist, then emerged.

Critical race theory first focused on the material conditions of black Americans and on developing tools to help them win a fair hearing in the courtroom. One is intersectionality, set out in a defining paper in 1991 by Kimberl Crenshaw, another legal scholar and civil-rights campaigner. A black woman could lose a case of discrimination against an employer who could show that he did not discriminate against black men or white women, she explains. The liberal, supposedly universalist, legal system failed to grasp the unique intersection of being both a woman and black.

In the three decades since that paper was written, critical race theory has flourished, spreading to education, political science, gender studies, history and beyond. HR departments use its terminology. Allusions to white privilege and unconscious bias are commonplace. Over 1,000 CEOs, including those of firms such as JPMorgan Chase, Pfizer and Walmart, have joined an anti-racism coalition and promised that their staff will undertake unconscious-bias training (the evidence on its efficacy is limited). Critical race theory informs the claim that the aim of journalism is not objectivity but moral clarity.

Yet as critical race theory has grown, a focus on discourse and power has tended to supersede the practicalities. That has made it illiberal, even revolutionary.

The philosophical mechanics that bolt together critical race theory can be obscure. But the approach is elegantly engineered into bestselling books such as How To Be An Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi and White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo.

One thing that the popular synthesis preserves is its contempt for the liberal view of how to bring about social and moral progress. To understand why, you need to start with how ordinary words take on extraordinary meanings. Racism is not bigotry based on the colour of your skin. Races, Mr Kendi writes, are fundamentally power identities and racism is the social and institutional system that sustains whites as the most powerful group. That is why white supremacy alludes not to skinheads and the Ku Klux Klan, but, as Ms DiAngelo explains, the centrality and superiority of whites in society.

Some acts also have an unfamiliar significance. Talking to someone becomes a question of power. The identity of the speaker matters because speech is not neutral. It is either bad (ie, asserting white supremacy, and thus shoring up todays racist institutions), or it is good (ie, offering solidarity to victims of oppression or subverting white power). The techniques of subversion, called criticism, unpack speech to reveal how it is problematicthat is, the ways in which it is racist.

Speech is unfamiliar in another way, too. When you say something, what counts is not what you mean but how you are heard. A privileged person sees the world from their own viewpoint alone. Whites cannot fully understand the harm they cause. By contrast, the standpoint of someone who is oppressed gives them insight into both their own plight and the oppressors world-view, too. To say that whiteness is a standpoint, Ms DiAngelo writes, is to say that a significant aspect of white identity is to see oneself as an individual, outside or innocent of racejust human.

Black people can also find themselves in the wrong. What if two black people hear a white person differently and disagree over whether he was racist? Critical race theorists might point out that there are many sorts of oppression. In 1990 Angela Harris, a legal scholar, complained that feminism treated black and white women as if their experience were the same. By being straight and male, say, the listener belongs to groups that are dominant along some axis other than race. The way out of oppression is through the recognition and empowerment of these group identities, not their neglect. Or one of them may have failed to grasp the underlying truth of how racism is perpetuated by society. If so, that person needs to be educated out of their ignorance. The heartbeat of racism is denial, Mr Kendi writes, the heartbeat of anti-racism is confession.

These ideas have revolutionary implications. One result of seeing racism embedded all around you is a tendency towards a pessimistic attitude to progress. Bell concluded that reform happens only when it suits powerful white interests. In 1991 he wrote: Even those Herculean efforts we hail as successful will produce no more than temporary peaks of progress, short-lived victories that slide into irrelevance as practical patterns adapt in ways that maintain white dominance.

The second implication is that well-meaning white people are often enemies. Colour-blind whites deny societys structural racism. Ms DiAngelo complains that White peoples moral objection to racism increases their resistance to acknowledging their complicity in it. IntegrationistsMr Kendis term for those who want black culture and society to integrate with whiterob black people of the identity they need to fight racism. He accuses them of lynching black cultures.

Where does this leave liberalism? Cynical Theories, a forthcoming book by Helen Pluckrose and James Lindsay, two writers, argues that the two systems of thought are incompatible. One reason is that the constellation of postmodern thinking dealing with race, gender, sexuality and disability, which they call Theory, disempowers the individual in favour of group identities, claiming that these alignments are necessary to end oppression. Another is Theorists belief that power is what forces out entrenched interests. But this carries the risk that the weak will not prevail, or that if they do, one dominant group will be replaced by another. By contrast, liberals rely on evidence, argument and the rule of law to arm the weak against the strong. A third reason is that Theory stalls liberal progress. Without the machinery of individual equality fired up by continual debate, the engine will not work.

But what will? The appeal of critical race theoryor at least its manifestation in popular writingis partly that it confidently prescribes what should be done to fight injustice. It provides a degree of absolution for those who want to help. White people may never be able to rid themselves of their racism, but they can dedicate themselves to the cause of anti-racism.

Liberals have no such simple prescription. They have always struggled with the idea of power as a lens through which to view the world, notes Michael Freeden of Oxford University. They often deny that groups (rather than individuals) can be legitimate political entities. And so liberal responses to critical race theory can seem like conservative apathy, or even denial.

Tommie Shelby of Harvard University, who sees himself as both a critical race theorist and a liberal, argues that scepticism regarding liberalisms power to redress racial inequality is rooted in the mistaken idea that liberalism isnt compatible with an egalitarian commitment to economic justice. Mr Shelby has argued that the Rawlsian principle of fair equality of opportunity can mean taking great strides towards a racially just society. That includes not just making sure that formal procedures, such as hiring practices, are non-discriminatory. It also includes ensuring that people of equal talent who make comparable efforts end up with similar life prospects, eventually eradicating the legacy of past racial injustices.

This would be a huge programme that might involve curbing housing segregation, making schooling more equal and giving tax credits (see Briefing). That is not enough for Mr Mills, another liberal and critical race theorist. He wants liberal thinkers to produce theories of rectificatory justicesay, a version of the veil of ignorance behind which people are aware of discrimination and the legacy of racial hierarchy. Liberals might then be more willing to tolerate compensation for past violations. They might also demand a reckoning with their past failures.

The problem is thorniest for libertarians who resist redistributive egalitarian schemes, regardless of the intention behind them. But even some of the most committed, such as Robert Nozick, concede that their elevation of property rights makes sense only if the initial conditions under which property was acquired were just. Countries in which the legacy of racial oppression lives on in the distribution of wealth patently fail to meet that test. Putting right that failure, Mr Mills says, should be supported in principle by liberals across the spectrum.

Plenty of people are trying to work out what that entails, but the practicalities are formidable. Having failed adequately to grapple with racial issues, liberals find themselves in a political moment that demands an agenda which is both practically and politically feasible. The risk is that they do not find one.

This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline "In the balance"

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Enlightenment liberalism is losing ground in the debate about race - The Economist

Another liberal Zionist group faces insurgency a call to cut ties to Israel – Mondoweiss

The crisis of Zionism inside the Jewish community continues to crumble and rumble.

A couple weeks ago we reported that more than 1000 alumni of J Streets youth branch, J Street U, signed a letter to the liberal Zionist group saying its approach of urging Israel to end the occupation had failed and J Street should call for reductions in U.S. aid if Israel goes through with annexation.

J Street rejected the advice. We believe that Israel should continue to receive from the United States the full amount of security assistance outlined in the MOU: $3.8 billion per year. Though J Street calls for restricting that aid to certain purposes.

Well, heres another group of liberal Zionist alums in an uprising. More than 500 members and alumni of a Labor Zionist group famous for socialist kibbutzim the Habonim Dror movement havesigned aletterthat is in some ways anti-Zionist. It calls on the organization to answer Israeli annexation by cutting off much of its relationship to Israel: stop sending North American youth to programs in Israel and encouraging Jews to move to Israel.

The signers say they are being true to their liberal, or socialist, Zionist values, but in effect theyre advocating for a break from the Zionist core mission of sending Jews to live in Israel. They also call for boycotting Israeli emissaries who come to work with Habonim here who are from occupied territories, including East Jerusalem.

And once again, this liberal Zionist parent organization which is affiliated with the peace group Ameinu, an ally of J Street is being stiffnecked about its alumnis demand.

First, here is the letter, now signed by 548 current members and alumni of Habonim Dror North America (HDNA), calling for real action in support of liberation and safety for all Palestinians and Israelis.

We believe that HDNA must act now to ensure that we are no longer complicit in supporting the Israeli government and instead are working actively against its plan to go through with formal annexation. Thus, we are endorsing the following shifts in the movement:

1. Habonim Dror North America will immediately relocate or suspend all programming within Israel.

2. Habonim Dror North America will no longer actively encourage members to make aliyah [Jewish immigration], as aliyah made in the current political climate implicitly legitimizes the Israeli governments ongoing efforts to marginalize Palestinian rights and their freedom to self-determination.

The third step the alumni call for is barring or discouraging Israeli members of the movement from participation in North American Habonim activities until there are no longer members of Dror Israel who live or work over the green line/in settlements (including all suburban settlements around Jerusalem).

These demands are dividing the organization. The leadership, rightly perceives the letter as a direct blow to its mission: In short, this document calls for Habonim Dror to cease to exist as a progressive Zionist youth movement, leadership said in a June statement.

In a subsequent email, the chair of the Habonim Dror Foundation said the organization should not separate from Israel, no, we should further that engagement.

With our voice, we urge the leaders and members of Habonim Dror to further their engagement with Israel, and to continue to focus educational and political work in opposition to unilateral annexation in any form, and to issues of peace and social justice here and in Israel.

We urge leaders and members of Habonim Dror to join with and strengthen our allies in Israel who are on the front lines in the fight for peace and justice and not to apply litmus-tests from the comfort of the diaspora to those who stand in coalition with us.

Notice the old blackmail: The comfort of the diaspora. Youre not sending your kids to serve in the Israeli occupation forces, so who are you to judge? This is the core principle of the Israel lobby. And back on the home front, it should be noted that Habonim leadership has voiced support for the Black Lives Matter movement.

Other liberal Zionists are also responding defensively to the insurgency. Heres J.J. Goldberg, who first reported the Habonim scandal on his Facebook page, working the comfort-of-the-diaspora theme:

Its basically an exercise in self-expression. Nobody in Israel will notice or take it seriously. Theyll be called a handful of spoiled American kids who wont suffer the consequences anyway At the same time, it will reduce whatever political impact or credibility Habo has left within the presumed target audience. Politics isnt supposed to be about self-expression. Its supposed to be about changing things, figuring out how to get from A to B.

The answer to Goldberg is, self-expression is an important function in a liberal democracy; and its obvious why he pooh-poohs the letter, more than 500 angry alumni are yet another surge in the Zionist defection we are witnessing today. I suspect that many of these liberal Zionist groups are not at all democratic in their decisionmaking, that leadership makes all the important decisions and the self-expressions and their outlook is quite conservative. But they are losing traction. Liberal Zionism is now under siege.

The famous lines from Hemingways first novel are, How did you go bankrupt? Gradually then suddenly. We seem to be in the sudden phase of Zionist bankruptcy in American Jewish life.

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Another liberal Zionist group faces insurgency a call to cut ties to Israel - Mondoweiss

Democrats pressed to include court reforms in 2020 platform – Midland Daily News

Mark Sherman, Associated Press

Democrats pressed to include court reforms in 2020 platform

WASHINGTON (AP) Liberal interest groups are intensifying pressure on Democrats to take aggressive measures to reshape the Supreme Court, arguing the party should include such measures in its policy platform at next months convention.

Twenty-two Democratic-aligned groups signed a letter sent this week to the party's platform committee, saying Democratic electoral victories by themselves won't be enough.

The activists have already faced disappointment this year. Presidential candidates who embraced sweeping court reforms, such as former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg dropped their campaigns. The presumptive nominee, Joe Biden, has not gone as far, but he has pledged to nominate a Black woman to the high court.

But the liberal groups are pointing to a string of recent victories by progressive candidates at the congressional level as fresh proof that the party base wants the court to change to weaken the power of conservatives.

Failing to include any provision on Court reform in the Party platform would send Republicans the message that they can continue to break the rules to hijack our courts because Democrats will do nothing to reverse their illegitimate gains, the letter said.

The effort is picking up steam even as liberals won some surprising victories, including on immigration, abortion and LGBTQ rights, from a court with five Republican-appointed, conservative justices.

In New Yorks Democratic congressional primary last month, Mondaire Jones and Jamaal Bowman, who both favor court expansion, won their partys nominations for seats in and near New York City. Our democracy is under assault, and the Supreme Court has dealt many of the sharpest blows. If Democrats want to do something about that, expanding the Court is our only option, Jones wrote on Facebook in April.

While they won't have a say on the court, their victories are helping build interest in an area in which Republicans have long found it easier to motivate their most ardent supporters, said Brian Fallon, executive director of Demand Justice, the group leading the call for court reform in the Democratic platform. There are some signs this election cycle that there is heightened awareness on the left of the threat posed by the sheer number of conservative nominees Trump has installed, Fallon said.

Biden has made court appointments a leading issue in his campaign with his pledge to put the first Black woman on the court and has suggested vetting is already underway to consider candidates if hes elected.

President Donald Trump similarly energized conservatives in 2016 by releasing a list of potential nominees to the high court. Trump has appointed 200 federal judges, including Justice Neil Gorsuch and Justice Brett Kavanaugh. The task has been made easier by changes in Senate rules, first adopted when Democrats held a majority, that eliminated the procedural rule that required 60 votes to confirm executive branch and judicial nominees.

The liberal groups say doing nothing is not an option, complaining Republicans have made illegitimate gains" in the federal judiciary, embodied most vividly by GOP resistance to filling a Supreme Court seat in 2016 when President Barack Obama was in office, then quickly confirming Gorsuch after Trump won the presidency.

The court's size can be changed by legislation. The number of high court seats varied during its first 80 years from a low of six at the time the Constitution took effect in 1789 to a high of 10 during the Civil War. The current tally of nine justices was set in an 1869 law.

Congress might also act to impose term limits, but any change is likely to draw a legal challenge because the only limit set by the Constitution is that federal judges shall hold their Offices during good Behaviour. They can be impeached, but otherwise decide for themselves when to hang up their robes.

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Democrats pressed to include court reforms in 2020 platform - Midland Daily News

Who are the real liberals today? – The Week

This is a revolutionary moment in American culture.

On one side, activists and employees are demanding fundamental change to overturn structural racism deeply embedded within institutions of journalism, education, and business. On the other, critics accuse the would-be revolutionaries of engaging in acts of illiberalism, including the silencing and firing of people who resist the proposed changes or even show insufficient zeal in enacting them.

So far, the fight between the two sides has generated far more heat than light. That's what makes Osita Nwanevu's essay in The New Republic, "The Willful Blindness of Reactionary Liberalism," such a welcome intervention.

In defending the activist side of the dispute, Nwanevu's tone is high-minded, his reasoning clear and thoughtful. While critics of the activists frequently call the latter a "mob" or describe it in explicitly religious terms, Nwanevu makes a careful, deliberate, complex argument designed to show that it's actually the critics who are acting and speaking impulsively, reacting to events without deep thinking, intentionally refusing to see the reality going on around them.

As one of those critics (unnamed in Nwanevu's essay), I disagree. But it's important to clarify exactly why to ensure that both sides keep the conversation going instead of merely talking past each other, with each side doing little more than bucking up allies and seeking to discredit opponents. In my view, Nwanevu is quite wrong to describe social justice activists as "expanding" the bounds of liberalism, since the aim of their reforms is a deliberate constriction of debate. It would therefore be more honest for him and his ideological allies to admit this and accept its illiberal implications.

I've been pointing to the illiberalism of the social-justice left since at least 2013. I backed off somewhat during the first couple years of the Trump administration, since it seemed a little peevish and an offense against proportionality to write frequently about the topic with the White House occupied by a man who regularly expresses contempt for civil liberties. But there have been events worth addressing over the past year or so. Roughly since the publication of the "1619 Project" in The New York Times last August, but especially since the newsroom rebellions began early last month, I've found myself led once again to call out the illiberalism of the activist left.

Yet as far as Nwanevu is concerned, those who hold my views are the ones guilty of illiberalism.

Part of the problem may be that Nwanevu is responding to weaker arguments made by some on my own side. He's right to note, for example, that the core issue has nothing much to do with "free speech" in constitutional terms, since no one is raising a threat of government censorship. But neither does it concern, as Nwanevu asserts, "freedom of association," including the freedom of a community civil society, a newspaper, a corporate workplace to establish its own standards, since no one is denying the legitimacy of that freedom.

As I've argued on other occasions, every community makes decisions about what ideas and attitudes to rule out of bounds to treat some ideas as worthy of debate and others as unacceptable and warranting cancellation. What's distinctive about the present moment is that groups of activists are demanding to be given the power to make this all-important decision within certain institutions and they are using this newfound power to shift (and often constrict) the lines of acceptable thought and discussion, ruling certain arguments (and the people who make them) out of bounds.

Why do I oppose this effort? It has nothing to do with public policy. I'm all for vigorous debate and personally support efforts to ensure that Black Americans and other minority groups receive equal treatment under the law and that police reforms address and rectify manifest injustices in law enforcement. But that's only a small (and peripheral) part of what Nwanevu discusses in his essay and what his activist allies are aiming for. What he and they are really concerned with is defending the view that American society is comprised of "intelligible, if often hidden, systems" of racial oppression, and rejecting the views of "reactionary liberal[s]" like myself, who see the country as "a jumble of bits and pieces a muddle that defies both systemic understanding and collective action."

That really is the nub of the issue, though I think this is a tendentious way to describe the difference between the two camps. My criticism of the "1619 Project," for example, was focused less on the details of the various contributions and more on the framing of the project as an effort to tell the definitive, "true" story of America, with the history of slavery and its legacy sitting at its very core, decisively shaping everything else.

This was an activist move an act of deliberate exaggeration, a flattening out of the complexity that Nwanevu dismisses as a "muddle" and a "jumble," a decision to focus monomaniacally on one (important) facet of the multifaceted American experience and warp everything else around it. It certainly wasn't an example of seeking to achieve what Nwanevu calls "parity" among various groups. It was an effort to make Black history the defining feature of the country.

The best one can say for the effort is that it's an act of intentional overcorrection: American history has for too long been told as a story focused on white people, so now we should tell it as a story focused on Black people. But that's not a way to achieve a more accurate understanding of the past. It's an act of replacing one form of distortion with another.

And this brings us back to the second-order issue to the question of whether the activists fighting for control of decisions in the workplace believe this kind of criticism is acceptable, and hence worth publishing, at all. From his essay, it's genuinely hard to tell where Nwanevu comes down on the question. During an especially perplexing passage, he mocks New York Times columnist David Brooks for "surreal condescension" in wondering, in the midst of an essay about Ta-Nehisi Coates's much-lauded memoir Between the World and Me, whether, as a white person, he had "standing to respond" critically to Coates' "experience."

When Brooks' column appeared, five years ago, it was possible to wave away such concerns. Today, after a series of forced resignations and firings at a series of media organizations, they cannot be. Yet Nwanevu dismisses them anyway before quickly pivoting to expressions of admiration for two more recent columns from Brooks in which the columnist shows that his reading in Black history has "worked" on him, leading to a "conversion" to support for reparations for slavery and an acknowledgement that "moderates" have "failed Black America."

Brooks has learned. He won't be canceled.

But what if his reading hadn't "worked"? What if Brooks stood by or deepened his respectful criticisms of Coates? What if he continued to argue, as he did in that five-year-old column, that "this country, like each person in it, is a mixture of glory and shame" and that although "violence is embedded in America it is not close to the totality of America"? What if instead of joining Coates in calling for reparations, he argued, as I have, that it's a proposal doomed to failure? Would he be allowed to make those arguments in The New York Times today? Or would he be risking his job in doing so not because he would be severely criticized, which is assumed and expected, but because he would provoke a rebellion on staff and calls for his dismissal for refusing to adequately listen, learn, and adjust his views?

I want a public world in which Ta-Nehisi Coates is free to make his arguments with as much potency as he possibly can. But I also want a public world in which his critics can do the same without fear of crossing lines newly drawn. One argument. Then the next. And so on, down through the years. That's how we truly learn and grow as a culture not by taking control of the boundaries of debate, narrowing them to verify our tidy certainties, protecting our sacred texts, and punishing those who dare to profane them.

I don't know if Osita Nwanevu shares this vision of a free, liberal society. I do know that many of the people on his side of the debate appear not to. And that he nonetheless believes that those who think the way I do are the ones guilty of illiberalism. Maybe one day, if the argument continues, I'll be able to persuade him otherwise.

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Who are the real liberals today? - The Week

Guest Opinion: Liberal ideas need to be challenged with facts, experience – Bucks County Courier Times

By Robert Lanhan

TuesdayJul14,2020at4:30AM

Im in my 80s and Ive experienced a lot with going to different places and countries and, from what Ive seen, it appears that classification is alive and well wherever Ive been.

"Classification" has been around since the beginning of time with mostly, the "Have" and "Have-Nots" and it doesnt matter what your skin color is for, in some form or another, there is bigotry at every level in our societies regardless of race.

I served in our military when there was no separation of races and you were given the same privileges and rights and as long as you respected others. In most cases, there was harmony due to the rules applying to each in the same way.

I see so many negative things coming mostly from younger people who I consider as to not being knowledgeable and qualified regarding what our system is supposed to be built on. That being mutual respect for others along with pride in being a good citizen and taking care of your personal responsibilities.

One thing Ive overlooked that is to get the facts straight before you become a mob and destroy other peoples property and lives with what might not be the truth coming from sources that want to stir up trouble. So make sure you get the true facts before you form an opinion, if possible. In lots of cases they are self-motivated from sources that start rumors and want all of us to think the worst, which in most cases not true.

I dont approve of tearing down statues of historical people that made our country what it is supposed to be. That was in another time and place and those people stood up and did what they had to when it was required. Second guessing is easy when you dont have to do it yourself and there has been a lot of that lately and, surprisingly, the news agencies have fanned the flames with their power to incite the public with their views, which are supposed to be only the true facts.

There is nothing wrong with our country other than ourselves and these liberal ideas that seem to prevail. All of us have the Bill Of Rights to stand on equally. Thats what all of us should respect.

Robert Lanhan lives in Feasterville.

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Guest Opinion: Liberal ideas need to be challenged with facts, experience - Bucks County Courier Times

Why the Conservatives are going after the Liberals’ pre-pandemic spending now – CBC.ca

The federal balance sheet is a mathematical exercise that has real fiscal and economic implications. But outside of a debt crisis,the greatest value of a surplus or deficit estimate may be as a political idea.

In that respect, the most interesting thing about the $343 billion deficit that Finance Minister Bill Morneau projected on Wednesday is how it might frame the federal debate for years to come.

There is very little actualdebate to be had about the current deficit. Almost no one is arguing that the federal government should not have spent nearly $200 billion over the last few months to help Canadians get through a pandemic-induced economic shutdown. The need to continue providing some amount of support through the fall and into next spring seems obvious.

Where there are specific complaints, they tend to be that the government could have spent more and moved faster. As if in response to those critiques, Morneau's 168-page snapshot goes on at length about what the Liberal government has done and makes a point of showing how the federal response in Canada stacks up against relief efforts in other G7 countries.

All of which might explainwhythe Conservatives stopped short Wednesday of a fullassaulton the current deficit. Instead,the Conservatives renewed their attacks on the deficits the Trudeau government ran before the crisis. In 2015, the Liberals made an explicit decision to run a deficit and the federal government ran a cumulative shortfall of $54.7 billion between 2015 and 2019.

Watch: Andrew Scheer presses federal government for a pandemic recovery plan

The Conservatives like to argue that the budget was balanced when the Harper government left office five years ago. That's not entirely accurate. In November 2015 after that year's federal election, but before the Liberals had started to implement their agenda the office of the Parliamentary Budget Officer released an updated fiscal projection that showed a surplus of $1.2 billion for 2015-2016.

But the federal balance sheet was benefiting from a one-time boost provided by the sale of the federal government's shares in General Motors. In the years following, the PBO projected that the budget would show a deficit of between $3 billion and $5 billion in subsequent years.

For the fiscal year of 2018-2019, the PBO estimated that the federal government's debt-to-GDP ratio a measure of accumulated debt in comparison to the national economy would be 27.9 per cent.

In fact, after the Liberal government implemented its spending plans, the debt-to-GDP ratio was 30.9 per cent in 2018-2019. That three per cent difference isn't nothing, but it is the box within which any argument about pre-2020 fiscal policy has to be fought.

Of course, a full evaluation of the Liberal approach before the pandemic hit would have to assess the value of that increased spending. But the 2015 to 2019 era is just the prelude to what'slikely to be a larger debate about the shape, size and activity of the federal government going forward.

The federal government is running a deficit of $343 billion but the sky has not fallen and that is an implicitchallenge to the Conservatives' arguments about the primary value of frugality.They also may notwantthe idea of such widespread federal support for individuals and businesses to be broadlyaccepted by Canadians.

So, on Wednesday, Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer told the House of Commons that Morneau had presented a "dire" picture of federal finances. Pierre Poilievre, the shadow finance minister,stood and loudly decriedthe fact that total federal debt isnow expected to reach $1 trillion.Poilievrethen called on Morneau to reform the government's relief policies so that the free market could be unleashed to create the jobs and growth that are now needed.

The future direction of the Conservative Party still depends on who its next leader turns out to be, but Scheer and Poilievreprobably havelaid out the broad strokes of what Conservatives will argue in the months and years ahead that government borrowing isa significant source of concern, that there has been too much spending under the Liberals, and that the private sector must be left alone to create prosperity.

When Conservatives need to argue that Canada cannot "afford" something in the future, they'll no doubt insist that the Liberals have 'spent the cupboards bare'. (Granted, Poilievre and Scheer were making that argument before the current crisis. Maybethey needa new metaphor.)

Watch: The National:Bill Morneau on $343B deficit, post-pandemic recovery

One trillion is not a magic number;the federal debt almost inevitably would have reached that level at some point in the future. But it is a big number. And big numbers can be attention-grabbing.

No one should take thedeficitfor granted, but Morneau was prepared to argue thatCanada's current fiscal plight looks less alarming when it's placed incontext. Canada went into this crisis with the lowest debt-to-GDP ratio in the G7 and it still has the lowest level of net government debt among those countries. Due to low interest rates, the federal government also willpay a lower servicing charge on that debt this year than it did last year, even with the extra borrowing.

Federal debt-to-GDP is now expected to reach 49 per cent well below its peak of 66 per cent in the mid-1990s. As the economy continues to recover, that ratio should decline.

But even if no one is really contestingthe need to spend now, there will be a debate later about how to manage the deficit and the debt going forward. And the extent of the federal government's emergency spending coupled with the deficits of earlier years could leave Morneau and the Liberals vulnerable to claims that they are irresponsible or profligate.

There was some faint grumbling already when it seemed that the federal government might not be doing enough to ensure that payments from the Canadaemergency response benefit (CERB) weren't going to ineligible recipients. Any future spending scandals could be much more potent in light of the big numbers that were released on Wednesday.

And Morneau willsoon have to confrontall the other problemsthis pandemic has exposed, and all the outstanding requests that have piled up over the last four months. Major issues involving long-term care, precarious work, inequality, child care and climate change are going to be waiting for the finance minister once it's time to rebuild not to mention the need to be better prepared for the next pandemic. Each of those issues will come with demands for new funding.

On that note,theNDP'sJagmeetSingh isalreadycalling for a new tax on the richest Canadians. Of course, theNDPwas proposing a wealth tax before this pandemic but New Democrats will have evenmore reasons to argue for one now.

For the Liberals, doing everything and making the case that theycan do so responsibly is only going to get harder. And Liberals who worry about this government's legacy must know that if they leave the government on an unacceptable fiscal path, they'll give their successors a handy reason to significantly restructure whatever is left behind.

Watch: The At Issue panel discusses what's missing from the fiscal snapshot

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Why the Conservatives are going after the Liberals' pre-pandemic spending now - CBC.ca

Ex-Liberal MPs running in next election eagerly await start of nomination process – The Hill Times

With the Liberals in majority territory in public opinion polls, some Liberal MPs who lost the last election are eagerly awaiting the start of nomination contests that will give them a chance to reclaim their seats.

In interviews with The Hill Times, some former Liberal MPs said nominations for unheld ridingsthose currently occupied by MPs from other partieswill likely start after the Liberal Partys biennial convention, which is scheduled to run between Nov.12 and Nov. 15 in Ottawa. They said the nominations contests were originally planned for March, but were delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The latest update that Ive been able to get is that they may start looking around when our national convention is going to be, which is after Remembrance Day this year, so sort of mid-to-late November, said former Liberal MP John Aldag, who represented the riding of Cloverdale-Langley City, B.C. from 2015-2019, but lost the last election to Conservative MP Tamara Jensen by a margin of 2.5 per cent of the vote. Ms. Jensen won 20,937 votes, Mr. Aldag 19,542, NDP candidate Rae Banwarie received 10,508 votes, and Green Party candidate Caelum Nutbrown garnered 3,572 votes.

In 2015, Mr. Aldag had carried the riding by a margin of 11 per cent of the vote over Conservative candidate Dean Drysdale. That year, Justin Trudeaus (Papineau, Que.) Liberals won a majority government with 184 seats. They were reduced to a minority in 2019, ending up with 157 of the total 338 seats. The Conservatives won 121, the Bloc 32, the NDP 24, the Greens three, and one Independent MP was elected.

In a minority government, an election could happen at any time if the governing party loses a vote of confidence. In comparison, under majority governments the dates of elections are fixed in advance.

In minority governments, political parties try to nominate their candidates sooner rather than later, given the inherent unpredictability of how long a government will last. Early nominations give nominated candidates more time to campaign, gain name recognition, raise funds, and develop contacts in communities in their ridings. The average life of a minority government in Canada is 18 months.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addressing the national Liberal caucus during the Jan. 23 winter caucus retreat. Recent polls showed the Liberals would win a majority government if an election were held at the time, but that was before the WE Charity scandal erupted last week. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade

Even after losing the last election, Mr. Aldag said hes never discontinued his outreach with people living in the riding. He said he agrees with the partys decision not to call nomination contests when the country is dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, but he also said its always better if a politician can introduce themselves to voters as a partys nominated candidate as early as possible, rather than as someone who is seeking a nomination.

I am planning on putting my name forward again, and I know itd be a lot easier when we are able to start campaigning or getting out in public to actually be there as the candidate, as opposed to the person seeking the nomination, said Mr. Aldag.

They were originally looking, pre-COVID, at having some of the nominations starting by the end of March. COVID has changed all of that.

National public opinion polls taken not long before the WE Charity scandal erupted last week suggested that the Liberals would win a majority government if an election were held at the time. The numbers suggested that Canadians supported the way the Liberal government was managing the pandemic so far.

A Lger poll released last week suggested that if an election were to be called now, 39 per cent of Canadians would vote for the Liberal Party, 25 per cent Conservative Party, 20 per cent NDP, and five per cent for the Green Party.

The online poll of 1,517 Canadians was conducted between July 3 and July 5, and had a margin of error of 2.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

This would mean a marked increase in popularity for the Liberals compared to before the pandemic, when the Liberals and the Conservatives were in a statistical tie at 31 per cent and 32 per cent respectively, according to a Lger poll conducted on Jan. 22. The NDP support was at 19 per cent, and the Green Party at eight per cent.

It however remains to be seen if the WE Charity controversy will have any serious effect on the popularity of the Liberal Party. This is the first major ethics controversy that Mr. Trudeau has run into since the last federal election. During the last Parliament, his popularity was severely damaged by the SNC-Lavalin scandal and also his family and friends trip to the private Caribbean island of the Aga Khan, whose charity has received millions of dollars from the Canadian government.

The WE Charity controversy surrounds a now-cancelled, untendered $900-million contract to handle a student volunteer program that was handed to the charity. The Trudeau family is close to the WE Charity; Mr. Trudeau has volunteered for it in the past, his mother Margaret and brother Alexandre have received a total of about $300,000 over the years in speaking fees for WE Charity events, and his wife, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, is an official ambassador for the charity and hosts a podcast for it. She received a $1,500 honorarium for hosting a WE Charity event in 2012.

Late Friday, media reports indicated that Finance Minister Bill Morneau (Toronto Centre, Ont.) also did not recuse himself from cabinet approval of the WE Charity contract although two of his close family members have been directly involved with the charity, one as a contractual employee. The Conservatives have called on the RCMP to investigate the issue.

Mr. Trudeau has said the decision to award the contract for the Canada Student Service Grant to the WE Charity was made by public servants, but it was also approved by the cabinet, and Mr. Trudeau did not recuse himself from that decision.

Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion is currently investigating the scandal.

The Conservative Party announced its nomination rules for held ridings in April. A party spokesman told The Hill Times last week that nominations in unheld ridings will likely start for the Conservatives sometime after the party elects its new leader next month.

According to the Conservative Partys nomination rules for incumbent MPs, if an election were to be called between now and June 2021, all MPs would be acclaimed as partys candidates automatically. If an election is held after June of next year, Conservative MPs can still run unopposed without going through the nomination process if they raise $15,000 by Dec. 31, 2020.

Liberal delegates at the Halifax biennial convention. Liberal MP John Aldag says it appears the nomination process will start after the partys biennial convention in mid-November in Ottawa. The Hill Times photograph by Cynthia Munster

If any Conservative MP is not able to meet the threshold by that deadline, they would have to then raise $25,000 by April 30, 2021. If an MP is not able to meet either of the two deadlines, they will have to earn their nomination through the regular nomination process.

Those fundraising thresholds are relatively low, and all Conservative MPs are expected to be acclaimed as party candidates for the next election.

Some Conservative sources told The Hill Times that the caucus had recommended that financial target as the only condition for qualification to carry the partys banner for the next election to the elected National Council, the 20-member governing body of the party. The council accepted it without any amendment.

Conservative MPs toldThe Hill Times in April that the COVID-19 pandemic is the reason the threshold is so low. Canadians are facing daunting economic and health challenges, and fundraising is going to be a challenge for politicians for at least for the next year or so.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for the Liberal Party told The Hill Times last week that the party is still in the process of consulting MPs and rank and file members about the nomination rules for held and unheld ridings. He did not say when the nomination contests would start.

Over the course of this year, weve been continuing to hear ideas from Liberal MPs, past candidates, EDAs, and registered Liberals across Canada on the best process to help elect even more Liberal MPs whenever the next campaign eventually arrives, wrote Braeden Caley, senior director of communications for the Liberal Party, in an email to The Hill Times. We anticipate those consultations being finalized shortly, andwell have more to share about the new nominations process in due course.

Liberal MP Dan Ruimy, who represented the riding of Pitt Meadows-Maple Ridge, B.C. from 2015 to 2019, but lost the election to Conservative MP Marc Dalton, said he is also planning on running in the next election, but does not know when the nomination contest will happen. Since the last election, Mr. Ruimy said, he has stayed in regular contact with people in the riding. In his conversations with constituents, Mr. Ruimy said he always asks what they think about the governments response to the pandemic, and so far he has received a positive feedback.

He said hes not worried about when the nomination contests will happen, but wants to ensure that hes ready whenever the contest is called.

We dont know when the next election is going to be: it could be two months from now, it could be two years from now, said Mr. Ruimy. So, I try not to worry about when thats gonna happen. Its more about making sure that Im ready for whenever it happens.

Mr. Ruimy won the 2015 election by a margin of only 2.4 percentage points. He won 17,673 votes, or 33.8 per cent of the total, compared to Conservative candidate Mike Murray, who won 16,373 votes, 31.4 per cent of the total. The NDP candidate Bob DEith received 15,450 votes, 29.6 percentage of the total; and the Green Party candidate Peter Tam won 2,202 votes, or 4.2 per cent of the total.

Mr. Ruimy lost the 2019 election by a margin of 6.5 per cent of the votes. In that election, Mr.Dalton garnered 19,650 votes, 36.2 per cent of the total. Mr. Ruimy won 16,125 votes, for 29.7 per cent of the total, while the NDPs Jack Mogk carried 12,958 votes or 23.9 per cent of the total, and the Green Partys Ariane Jaschke won 4,33 votes, eight per cent of the total.

Former Liberal MP Gordie Hogg, who represented the British Columbia riding of South Surrey-White Rock from 2017 to 2019, but lost the last election, said that his decision to run in the next election will depend on when the nextelection is called. He said if the election is called in the next year or so, he would run. Otherwise, he might not run. A former provincial cabinet minister, Mr. Hogg, who holds a PhD, said hes looking at some teaching opportunities at universities in British Columbia and other possibilities.

Ive been invited to do a number of things and participate in a number of boards in the community, said Mr. Hogg. So Ive been waiting to make some decisions on that and certainly the pandemic has made it a little more difficult to make decisions around that.

Mr. Hogg and other former MPs said early nominations would give more time to candidates to get ready for the election. They however also agree that the health consequences of the pandemic are preventing the party from nominating candidates.

Mr. Hogg, a former provincial MLA, won the riding in a 2017 byelection by a margin of 5.3 per cent of the votes. He won 47.4 per cent of the vote, while second place Conservative candidate Kerry-Lynne Findlay garnered 42.1 per cent of the vote. The third place NDP candidate Jonathan Silveira carried 4.8 per cent, and the Green candidate Larry Colero won 4.1 per cent of the vote.

In 2019, Ms. Findlay, a former Harper era cabinet minister, bested Mr. Hogg by a margin of 4.5 per cent of the votes. Ms. Findlay won 41.9 per cent of the votes, Mr. Hogg 37.4 per cent, NDP candidate Stephen Crozier 11.6 per cent, and the Green Party candidate Beverley Hobby won 7.7 per cent of the votes.

The Hill Times

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Ex-Liberal MPs running in next election eagerly await start of nomination process - The Hill Times

Peter Beinart is neither a Zionist nor a Liberal – Ynetnews

Beinart is the High Priest of the Jewish American left. He is also J Streets' unofficial ideolog. His is a perplexing notion.

You can argue about the rights of the Kurds to have an independent state or the Catalans, but there is no precedent in these times, to rescind an already existing state.

We clashed Beinart and I in 2005 in London, in a public debate. He presented the positions of a liberal Zionist, so I chose not to remind him of the pogrom tweet. Afterall one can make a mistake. A liberal Zionist is a person who has criticism of the Israeli government but does not deny its right to exist. A liberal is respectful of the right for self-determination on both sides. Beinart is no Zionist and is certainly not a liberal.

Not all of Beinart's claims are invalid. The settler movement has been trying to bring about a one-state solution to the question of the West Bank and enjoy the support of part of the Israeli government.

They are promoting the notion that the settlement movement has succeeded in upending the chances for a two-state solution, but that is not the case.

Today the settlements occupy 1.5% of the West Bank and have municipal reserves that would include 7.9% of the territory. Most Israelis oppose even a partial annexation unless it is part of a peace deal.

Ma'ale Adumin settlement on the West Bank

(: AFP)

But Beinart is throwing the baby away with the bathwater. He negates the rights of Jews to an independent state because a minority of them oppose the rights of Palestinians to have the same. He supports the far-right policies of settlers from his position on the left. The French call it " Les extrmes se touchent," The opposite ends meet.

Beinart refuses to explain how what had failed in Yugoslavia, that broke apart into seven separate entities after decades of unity, would work for Israelis and Palestinians, and how what is failing in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Somalia, Libya, and is barely hanging on in Belgium would thrive between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea.

In what reality could two groups that have so much animosity, follow different religions, different languages, culture, and tradition succeed in existing in peace and harmony?

The situation we are living with now, which is in need of change, would seem like heaven on earth compared to the nightmarish prospect of a one-state solution.

Calls to exterminate Jews come not only from the Hamas terror group. They can be heard from members of the Palestinian Authority including its religious leader, who like his predecessor in the 1930s the pro-Nazi Amin al-Husseini, calls not only for the destruction of Israel but the extermination of Jews.

Beinart is mum in the face of those calls.

The Middle East is ripe with conflicts of national, ethnic, tribal, and religious groups waging war, slaughtering each other. But Beinart is mum in the face of that too.

Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, President Clinton and Yasser Arafat sign the Oslo Accords at the White House

(Photo: Reuters)

These words were soon followed by a massive wave of terror attacks. Beinart wrote nothing about that. Nor did he write about the Palestinian rejection of former prime minister Ehud Barak's offer of an independent Palestinian state in 2,000, or their rejection of the Clinton initiative to end the conflict - that same year, or the solution offered by Ehud Olmert when he was prime minister in 2008. They also rejected President Obama's proposal in 2014.

Why does Beinart only hold the Jews responsible for the ongoing Israeli control of the West Bank? Why has he never laid blame on the Palestinians? Relieving them from any responsibility is racist and condescending.

Jews have lived side by side with Moslems before. It had most often ended with persecution and expulsion. How can it now be expected to work? How can he and the far-right settlers believe that one big state would succeed where no other similar political entity had?

The Islamist movement Hamas is already gaining strength among Palestinians and according to the latest polling has 41% support. Is this terrorist group now expected to become part of a democratically governed entity?

A clear majority of Israelis and Palestinians reject the notion of a one-state solution that will end the conflict. But Beinart pays no attention to that fact because he believes his idea would invigorate the Palestinian cause. But to what end?

He is not motivated by a respect for the rights of both sides, he is fighting against the rights of one nation, out of all the nations in the world.

-A Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement's demonstration in New York

His words carry weight in some quarters in the West but there is nothing new in his message. The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement (BDS) campaign for the same thing and has been rejected as anti-Semitic by the European Union, the German parliament, the British Labour Party and elsewhere.

Denying the right of Jews to a national homeland is anti-Semitism.

Beinart is not Anti-Semitic. His intentions are different, but his position assists the anti-Semitic campaign.

A one-state solution works when it is made up of two nations that share the same roots, religion, language, and culture. Even the same family. Jordan's population that includes a Palestinian majority is a case in point. You would be hard-pressed to find the differences among Jordanians. Not that Beinart has considered that option.

He is not motivated by concern for the Palestinians or their rights. He is following the herd of anti-Zionists that has overtaken progressive thinking and is based on an industry of lies.

Beinart's column is another small win for the Israeli far-right and some Palestinians, who oppose to a two-state solution. He is not promoting peace and reconciliation.

The far-right deals in action as they work to achieve this nightmarish vision of one great state now supported by Beinart's words and ideas as part of their own propaganda.

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Peter Beinart is neither a Zionist nor a Liberal - Ynetnews