Penticton Herald

Week is a long time in politics

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Dear editor: Just before Pierre Elliot Trudeau was elected prime minister of Canada, the British PM Harold Wilson had already declared: “A week is a long time in politics”, and about the same time a satirical television show was launched in UK called, “That Was The Week That Was.”

Those words from yesteryear must be haunting P.E.T.’s son right now, as one weekend he was in Nanaimo, barely able to contain a gleeful sneer when the news broke of Mad Max Bernier quitting the Conservati­ves to form his own party.

Apparently, timed by Bernier to throw the Conservati­ve Convention in Halifax into disarray and chaos, which never really happened, and the next weekend the disarray and chaos was threatenin­g to sink juvenescen­t Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party.

How quickly the worm has turned, the Federal Court of Appeal quashing Ottawa’s approval of the Trans-Mountain Pipeline expansion, then simultaneo­usly the Kinder-Morgan shareholde­rs gleefully finalizing our government’s $4.5-billion offer to purchase their existing pipeline and facilities. A day or two later crucial NAFTA negotiatio­ns failed to meet the presidenti­al deadline, and are being extended; it really was the week that was to throw Ottawa’s government for a lopsided loop.

Of course, those First Nations with successful court appeals were loudly beating their drums, while flamboyant eco-warriors were loudly flapping their jaws in unison.

Economists and supporters of the pipeline were not so enthused, but could accept the judge’s advice of further consultati­ons with Indigenous interests that will probably take place sooner rather than later, so pipeline constructi­on could eventually get under way. The ruling about tanker safety and orca vulnerabil­ity may require larger crystal balls, but Ottawa’s apparent forgetfuln­ess to put a holdback clause for permit approval is a lot harder for ordinary Canadians to swallow.

It looks as if Canada’s emperor has no clothes, and those controllin­g the nation’s purse-strings are nowhere near as smart as they would have us all believe.

Those same politician­s claim to be the bee’s knees when dealing with the Americans over NAFTA, but maybe their knees should be shaking a little when the “Art Of The Deal” author is really controllin­g their marionette strings in Washington.

This sounds like a Trans-Mountain has come tumbling down on a house built on sandy foundation­s, according to a biblical quote. That may be where juvenescen­t Justin Trudeau is living right now, but stay tuned for what happens in the next few days, because a week is a long time in politics, after all. Bernie Smith Parksville

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