Politics

 

November 27, 2012  
VIDEO GALLERY
PHOTO GALLERIES
COMMENT ON A STORY
ACROSS CANADA
WORLD WATCH
LATEST BREAKING NEWS
WEIRD NEWS
CRIME
POLITICS
FEATURES
SCIENCE
GREEN NEWS
GOOD NEWS
TECHNOLOGY
Sun Papers
Columnists
Lotteries
Weather
RSS Feed
Should politicians charged with crimes be booted from office automatically before they are tried?
Yes, without a doubt
No. Whatever happened to innocent until proven guilty?
I'm not sure. Depends on the crime.


Results | Story





Anti-Alberta rants hurt campaign, says candidate Harvey Locke
By Mark Dunn, Senior National Reporter


Liberal Party of Canada's leadership candidate, Justin Trudeau, visited the campaign office of the Liberal candidate for Calgary Centre, Harvey Locke. Mr. Locke and Mr. Trudeau will deliver short remarks on Tuesday Nov 20, 2012. (Darren Makowichuk/QMI AGENCY)

OTTAWA - Harvey Locke says sentiments expressed by Liberal David McGuinty helped dunk his campaign, but absolved Justin Trudeau for similar anti-Alberta comments.

"I think more the McGuinty comments than the Trudeau comments if I can be frank," said Locke, who lost to Tory Joan Crockatt by about 1,200 votes in the Calgary Centre byelection, one of three races Monday.

Polls showed Locke gaining ground on Crockatt until the criticisms surfaced and seized on by opponents who painted the Liberals as Western bashers.

"I think one was this week and one was two years ago so I think the two years ago stuff was out of context," he said about leadership candidate Trudeau's rant.

"I wish the comments this week hadn't happened," he said about McGuinty.

In a 2010 interview that came to light last week, Trudeau bemoaned western influence in Ottawa and argued that Quebecers make better PMs.


While Trudeau, a Montreal MP, offered what critics said was half-hearted apology, McGuinty, an Ottawa MP, resigned as natural resources critic for saying Conservative MPs should stay home for being oil industry cheerleaders.

Alberta Premier Alison Redford said the remarks likely swayed the outcome.

"I would expect it probably did have an impact," she said.

Interim Liberal leader Bob Rae said no one can say for sure what was on voter's minds when they went to the polls.

But "if Mr. Locke says that's a factor that he thinks was in their minds it could well have been."

Mark.Dunn@sunmedia.ca

Twitter:MarkDunnSun






Environment C-Health Galleries