CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Puffins, galas and false starts

All parties committed their share of blunders during campaign

Last Updated: Wednesday, October 15, 2008 | 12:01 AM ET

The often rancorous federal election campaign was punctuated by several gaffes by all parties. Several candidates also withdrew as past actions, writings and statements emerged to haunt their political aspirations in the internet age.

The party leaders themselves were not immune from the blunders.

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper drew intense criticism for suggesting Canadians take advantage of "buying opportunities" in the stock market plunge, as well as saying "ordinary Canadians" couldn't relate to artists complaining about a lack of funding while attending "rich galas" subsidized by taxpayers.

Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion, in turn, faced criticism after the botched start of an interview showed him struggling to understand a question on what he would have already done to help Canada's economy if he had been prime minister.

The Conservatives were forced on the defensive early in the campaign after the party's website attacking Dion's leadership abilities depicted a puffin defecating on the Liberal leader. And a Tory staffer was suspended from the campaign for suggesting the comments made by a father of a Canadian soldier killed in Afghanistan were politically motivated.

Another Conservative staff member was forced to resign and apologize for writing a speech read by Harper in 2003, as leader of the Opposition, that plagiarized an address by John Howard, Australia's prime minister at the time. A Liberal campaign researcher discovered the copied passages after doing a Google search.

Candidates in hot water

The Liberals were forced to dump Winnipeg-area candidate Lesley Hughes, a former CBC journalist, for a column she wrote in 2002 as a freelance journalist. She had suggested that Israeli intelligence warned the U.S. in advance of the Sept. 11 attacks and that Israeli businesses vacated the World Trade Center before two passenger planes struck the buildings.

The New Democrats saw four of their candidates resign during the campaign over past controversies. Two had past links with the B.C. Marijuana party, while another withdrew following reports that he took off his clothes in front of a group of teenagers at a retreat 12 years ago.

A Toronto-area NDP candidate also resigned because of postings he made on Facebook attacking an activist who supported U.S. war resisters on the social networking site.

The Conservatives, meanwhile, resisted calls for Calgary MP Lee Richardson to resign for connecting crime with immigrants in an interview with a local weekly newspaper.

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Canada Headlines

New B.C. avalanche kills snowmobiler
A massive avalanche in British Columbia's mountainous backcountry on Friday killed at least one snowmobiler, injured two others and sparked a search for anyone else caught in the second deadly slide in the area in the past week.
Olympic show mini-skirts irk RCMP
The closing ceremonies at the Vancouver Olympics were supposed to show the world that Canadians have a sense of humour but many members of the RCMP weren't laughing at how they were depicted, according to an internal memo obtained by CBC News.
Luck prevented 'worst ever' avalanche accident
A preliminary report into the deadly avalanche near Revelstoke, B.C., last weekend is crediting good luck and a rapid rescue response for limiting the death toll.
King Ralph reigns on new game show
Former Alberta premier Ralph Klein will be handing out his signature "Ralph Bucks" on a new game show that airs this weekend — except this time, people won't actually be able to cash them in.
Top court quashes child porn conviction Video
The Supreme Court of Canada has overturned the conviction of a Saskatchewan man charged with possessing child pornography, saying a justice of the peace had insufficient evidence to issue a search warrant in 2003.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

New B.C. avalanche kills snowmobiler
A massive avalanche in British Columbia's mountainous backcountry on Friday killed at least one snowmobiler, injured two others and sparked a search for anyone else caught in the second deadly slide in the area in the past week.
Montreal shop owner arrested after slayings Video
Montreal police arrested the owner of a clothing boutique where deadly shootings took place as homicide detectives finished combing through the blood-spattered crime scene Friday.
9/11 deal for workers 'not enough': judge
A federal judge has rejected a mutimillion-dollar deal to compensate thousands of emergency workers who had claimed that cleaning up the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center had made them sick.
Obama makes final health-care pitch Video
U.S. President Barack Obama made a final push to rally support before this weekend's vote on health-care legislation, charging that the country cannot afford to miss this historic opportunity.
Woolstencroft wins 4th gold medal
Lauren Woolstencroft of North Vancouver won the women's standing super-giant slalom ski race Friday for her fourth gold medal of the Paralympics.