A nice piece on the resurgence of the socialist NDP in today's (neo-con) National Post. The coffers are full, the new leader is dynamic, the Liberals are heading rightward to pick off conservative supporters - let's do this thing!
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NDP leader Jack Layton has been taking the fight to Paul Martin in a barrage of criticism that has included referring to the Prime Minister as "a practising coal baron" and questioning which flag of convenience his family company ships are flying to avoid Canadian taxes and environmental standards. One Web site segment quotes a Canadian seaman who used to work for the Martin family's Canada Steamship Lines but has since been replaced by a cheaper Filipino worker: "At 54 years old, what am I going to do?"
...There will be those in the Liberal party, arrogant in their convictions about their own invulnerability, who will merely shrug their shoulders. But if that is the case, they probably do not represent ridings in the Greater Toronto Area. One source said internal Liberal polling shows Dennis Mills, Maria Minna, Tony Ianno and Jean Augustine would all lose their seats to NDP candidates, should an election be held now.
It's not often that a Toronto Star editorial can be called thundering but last Sunday, the paper put Paul Martin on notice that he had better act on his new deal promises or he could see the Star switch its support to Layton. "If Toronto's hopes are shattered and trust in change is replaced by a sense of betrayal, politicians who were eagerly supported in the past could be scorned in the future," it wrote. The subsequent backpedalling by the Martin camp is a poor return for Mills, the man who brought the Pope and the Rolling Stones to Canada.
But it is not just in Toronto that the Liberals could face increased competition. Former NDP leader Ed Broadbent could expect roughly the same welcome from Liberal insider and prospective MP Richard Mahoney as the two hikers entering the Slaughtered Lamb pub in the film American Werewolf in London, after announcing his candidacy in Ottawa Centre. And there are other urban ridings in Vancouver and Halifax where the NDP has high hopes. In the 2000 election, the Dippers had just $3.5-million to spend and didn't run any major market advertising in the run-up to polling day. This time around, the party is on target to raise $12-million and will spend heavily in Toronto and Ottawa to ensure victory for its star candidates.
http://www.canada.com/national/nationalpost/columnists/story.html?id=dc9a84f6-837d-4b94-a5b8-d2a15efe8ab9