Three Canadian Politicians -
In, Out and Retired
By Paul Tuns
The Interim
In
Uncertainty
reigned during heavy voting at the packed Oasis Convention Centre in
Mississauga on March 11. Every parking spot for blocks around the centre
was taken as a mass of over 1,800 voters flowed in and out of the building.
At stake was the Liberal nomination for the riding of Mississauga South
and the future political career of thrice-elected, pro-life, pro-family
MP Paul Szabo.
Szabo has recently been one of the most outspoken Liberal MPs on life
and family issues, and led the challenge within the Liberals to defeat,
or at least substantially amend, the government's deeply flawed Bill
C-6, previously numbered C-13. For this, the principled member of Parliament
incurred the wrath of some of his party's establishment and was subjected
to an unusual challenge to his re-nomination, using a political neophyte,
Charles Sousa.
By the end of the evening, Szabo defeated challenger Sousa by a reasonably
healthy margin, 966-838. The riding membership had grown from the original
500 to a final 3,400 members during the lead-up to the nomination. The
Sousa campaign appeared to have suffered more than expected no-shows
from among its instant membership sign-ups. Szabo, being the incumbent
and a long-time Liberal party activist, was able to rely on a more committed
voter base, which showed up and cast their ballots.
Sousa is believed to have the backig of Liberal party hacks known to
have considerable animosity towards the MP. One Liberal party headquarters
bureaucrat was overheard blurting out that Szabo's win was "a disaster
for the party," whatever that could possibly have meant.
The Interim found a young Chinese couple with Szabo badges who said
they supported the incumbent because of his stand on the same-sex "marriage"
issue.
Szabo has been a reliable friend of life and the family within the
Liberal caucus. In recent years, he has consistently opposed re-defining
marriage to include homosexual couples. In 2003, he voted against C-250,
a private member's bill that would grant special rights to homosexuals
under existing so-called hate crimes legislation. He also voted for
M-83, a private member's motion that asked Parliament to study whether
abortion is, in fact, medically necessary.
He not only voted against C-13, the government's reproductive and experimental
technologies legislation, but he was also one of its most outspoken
critics and offered numerous amendments to correct fundamental flaws
in the bill. He was one of the few MPs to call health minister Anne
McLellan to account on her claim that the bill banned human cloning
noting the wording of the legislation allowed for loopholes.
For his courage in standing up for the unborn, Campaign Life Coalition
awarded Szabo its 2003 Joseph P. Borowski award, given annually to the
politician who shares its namesake's commitment to standing up for the
rights of the unborn.
Out
Oh,
how the mighty have fallen. Once a rising star in the Liberal party,
and a former deputy prime minister and cabinet minister under Jean Chretien,
Sheila Copps lost the nomination battle for Hamilton East-Stoney Creek.
Copps' riding had been amalgamated and she faced fellow Liberal MP Tony
Valeri, a Paul Martin loyalist. On March 6, she lost by 311 votes out
of a total 5,313 cast - 2,802-2,491.
In recent years, Copps has promoted same-sex "marriage," despite warnings
last summer from the Vatican and Canadian bishops that Catholic politicians
cannot support re-defining marriage to include homosexual couples. Copps
responded by saying that she didn't think politicians should take marching
orders from bishops, especially when such religious views do "not embrace
equality."
She has also said, "I can say unequivocally that I support gay marriage.
Well, the right of same-sex couples to marry is a critical issue for
me, because it is a fundamental issue of human rights."
Last fall, she voted against an opposition measure that would have
re-committed the government to the traditional definition of marriage.
Dr. Carmelo Scime, of Campaign Life Coalition Hamilton, told The Interim
that Copps often parades her Catholicism at election time, but her position
on life issues is contrary to Catholic teaching. When she replied to
CLC election questionnaires, "she always opposed life," Scime explained.
"She has never supported life."
Not only does Copps support abortion, she uses it as a wedge issue
in elections. In 2000, she attacked the Canadian Alliance for supposedly
wanting "to take away a woman's right to choose."
Last October, she voted for the government's reproductive and experimental
technologies legislation, Bill C-13.
Copps is not going quietly. She says that there were at least 15 different
"irregularities" during the vote and has complained publicly about Martin's
heavy-handedness in trying to get rid of her. The two have shown no
affection for one another since Copps refused to bow out of the Liberal
party leadership race last year. Even the mainstream media recognize
that this aggressive and brash former deputy prime minister is not likely
to survive long in Martin's Liberal party.
Scime said that if Copps is smart, she will "disappear quietly," but
that is not her style. He predicts that we haven't seen the last of
her, but adds that even the local NDP have soured on her - leaving Copps,
for the moment, without a political home.
Retired
Elsie
Wayne, a Canadian pro-life heroine, has announced that she will not
seek re-election. Wayne, 73, has been a member of Parliament for Saint
John since 1993 and is currently the deputy leader of the Conservative
Party of Canada. But it is not in the rise to partisan prominence that
she makes her mark, but rather as one of the boldest and most outspoken
defenders of life and family in Parliament over the past decade.
She has been a fixture at the annual March for Life in Ottawa and is
a past winner of the Joseph P. Borowski award, given annually by Campaign
Life Coalition to the politician who has done the most on behalf of
the unborn in the political arena. Furthermore, Wayne has represented
the Progressive Conservatives as co-chair of the Parliamentary Pro-Life
Caucus since 1998.
Last year, she spoke out against the homosexual movement. "I must say
that I never thought, when I came to the Hill in 1993, that I would
ever have to rise in the House of Commons and debate the definition
of marriage. I cannot believe that this is happening." She added that
she did not understand why homosexual activists flaunt their lifestyle
choices in annual "gay pride" parades.
Days later, attending the March for Life, she received two standing
ovations and a plaque in recognition of her integrity in standing up
for traditional values. However, homosexual activists denounced her
as a hatemonger and called for her to be booted from the Progressive
Conservative caucus.
In the House, she spoke out against C-13, the government's reproductive
and experimental technologies bill. In an impassioned plea for the right
to life for human embryos, she said: "Would anyone realistically say
that it is okay to take the lives of innocent three-year-olds in the
name of medical science? If it is brutal and barbaric to take the life
of a little three-year-old, why do we, as a society and as a government,
not say that it is just as brutal and barbaric to end the life of a
healthy fetus in the mother's womb?"
She also spoke out against re-defining marriage and attempts to liberalize
Canada's already-permissive child pornography laws. In one speech, she
pointed to the young House pages and said: "We want to have a great
country for them. We want to make sure that we have a solid foundation
for their future, and a solid foundation for their future is to make
sure that we stand up and we speak out for the values that are good
for them for the rest of their lives. I will say right now that when
I look at the definition of marriage being changed, that is not a solid
foundation for the future of our children."
Karen Murawsky, of Campaign Life Coalition's public affairs office
in Ottawa, told The Interim that Wayne has a "charisma and enthusiasm
that nobody can match and people love her for that." During the March
for Life last year, Wayne got up and began dancing while David MacDonald
was singing one of his pro-life songs for the 3,500-person crowd. The
audience cheered wildly.
In announcing her retirement from federal politics, Wayne said she
hopes to spend more time with her husband Richard and their sons and
their families.