Now if any of us here in the centre of the universe (Ontario) knew who this Manitoba MP Rick Borotsik was, it might matter. ;)
"There are big holes with respect to official bilingualism."
Manitoba has a very well-organized and politically-active French-speaking community (the Franco-Manitobans), ranking right up there with Franco-Ontarians in terms of demands for educational, health and social services in their own language, for instance.
(As background, official bilingualism was Pierre Trudeau's response to Quebec nationalism: in crass political terms, and more philosophically in terms of keeping the country together and protecting equality of rights, the stronger the French-Canadian communities outside Quebec are, and the more opportunities the Québécois have to succeed on equal terms with English speakers, the weaker the constituency for separation.)
The Reform/Alliance parties have never been known for their commitment to the francophone community's rights.
Going into the 2002 election, the CBC referred to the riding as having a "small francophone population" -- and also noted that Borotsik was the "last remaining Progressive Conservative MP in Western Canada".
http://www.winnipeg.cbc.ca/decision2000/ridings/brandon-souris.htmlIn 1997, he won the support of 35.6 per cent of riding votes. The Reform Party was close behind Borotsik capturing 32 per cent and the NDP got 13 per cent.
... Liberal Glen McKinnon broke the Tories' 50-year hold on the riding in 1993, before Bostick <sic> won it back in 1997.
2000 results --
http://www.brandonu.ca/organizations/bulc/Local_Ridings_Page/Local_Ridings.htm:Rick Borotsik - Progressive Conservative - 37.40%
Gary Nestibo - Canadian Alliance - 31.86
Dick Scott - Liberal - 17.85
Errol Black - N.D.P. - 12.32
Lisa Gallager - Communist Party - 0.27
Colin G. Atkins - No Affiliation - 0.25
Borotsik is a former mayor and apparently personally popular, which I assume he's counting on to attract that 70% that voted "right-of-Liberal" in 2000. Big gamble, looks like.
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