Martin pledges election after final Gomery report
Last Updated: Friday, April 22, 2005 | 9:26 AM ET
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MARTIN'S ADDRESS TO THE NATION Text of the PM's speech» RealVideo runs 6:54 Stephen Harper's response» Full text | RealVideo (runs 6:22) Gilles Duceppe's response» RealVideo (runs 5:59) Jack Layton's reaction» Full text | RealVideo (runs 4:29) |
In a seven-minute speech delivered in English, as well as a nine-minute version in French, Martin pleaded with Canadians to reserve judgment on his government until all the facts are known about the scandal.
- INDEPTH: Address to the nation
"I commit to you tonight that I will call a general election within 30 days of the publication of the commission's final report and recommendations," Martin said.
Prime Minister Paul Martin reads his address to the nation in his office on Parliament Hill. (CP photo)
The report, to be written by Justice John Gomery, the head of the commission, is expected to be released in mid-December.
"Let Judge Gomery do his work. Let the facts come out and then the people of Canada will have their say," Martin said in the speech, which was taped in the prime minister's parliamentary office about an hour before it aired.
Martin conceded that the scandal occurred under the Liberal government's watch while he was finance minister, saying "those who were in power are to be held responsible. And that includes me."
He added: "Knowing what I've learned this past year, I am sorry that we weren't more vigilant, that I wasn't more vigilant."
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Martin's address was made as the Liberal party continues to come under fire following recent revelations at the Gomery inquiry.
The inquiry is investigating the sponsorship program – a $250-million project intended to promote national unity and to oppose separatism in Quebec after the 1995 referendum in that province.
In her February 2004 report, Auditor General Sheila Fraser said an estimated $100 million in commissions in relation to the program went to Liberal-friendly ad agencies for little or no work.
Liberals saw their support plummet in the polls after the inquiry heard of an alleged scheme to funnel taxpayers' dollars to the Liberal party through sponsorship contracts.
- FROM APRIL 21, 2005: Opposition unmoved, election threat remains
In his address Thursday night, Martin acknowledged things went very wrong as the program was being delivered in Quebec.
"I will never hesitate to describe what happened on the sponsorship file for what is was: an unjustifiable mess," he said. "It's up to me to clean it up. That's my job. I am cleaning it up. And I am willing to be judged on my record of action."
But Martin, who has been hammered daily by opposition MPs over the allegations of corruption within the Liberal party, reminded viewers that it was he who cancelled the program and immediately called for an inquiry once he became prime minister.
He took credit for firing Alfonso Gagliano, the minister responsible for the sponsorship program, from his appointment as ambassador to Denmark, and bringing in whistleblower legislation.
The prime minister also pledged that "if so much as a dollar is found to have made its way to the Liberal party from ill-gotten gains" it will be returned to Canadians.
"I want no part of that money," Martin said.
The opposition had earlier denounced the prime minister's tactic of going to the airwaves, saying that measure should be reserved for times of national crisis.
A decade ago, Jean Chrétien made a TV appeal on the eve of the Quebec referendum. Brian Mulroney spoke to the country during the constitutional battles. Pierre Trudeau took to the airwaves to justify his wage-and-price controls of 1975.
Martin said the scandal has monopolized all political discussion and he blamed opposition MPs for "partisan jousting" and for not allowing the government to deal with important issues.
The allegations have fuelled speculation that the opposition parties will bring down the government and force a spring election.
"The Parliament you sent to Ottawa less than a year ago is preoccupied with election talk and with political strategy – not with the job you sent us here to do," the prime minister said.
"If we are to have an election, one that will be at least in part about the work of Judge Gomery, surely that election should occur only when we have the work of Judge Gomery."
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