The perils of the printed page
This morning the prime minister was giving a speech in Cupids, Newfoundland.
He was speaking about the shared history of Newfoundland and Canada, when he said this: "So when Newfoundland finally joined together with us in Confederation in 1867, we all say it was like a family reunion..."
Now, we at Political Bytes are sure that Stephen Harper knows that Newfoundland joined Confederation in 1949.
But what is on the printed page and what comes out of the mouth can cause political problems.
Back in 2004, then-prime minister Paul Martin visited CFB Gagetown and started his speech by recalling the Allied plans for the "invasion of Norway and the liberation of Europe."
He meant Normandy … but it came out Norway.
Were these slips the mistake by the speech writer or by the prime ministers themselves? We may never know.
The end result in Cupids is some egg on the faces of the PM and his team and a distraction from the message they flew in to deliver to Newfoundlanders.
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