Re: 'Mr. Carney, whom do you serve?'Canadians, is this really the type of prime minister you want leading our country? In the sordid affair of Liberal MP Paul Chiang, Liberal leader Mark Carney could have fired him outright. Instead, Mr. Carney said he unequivocally backed Mr. Chiang. He said he had been a police officer for twenty-eight years with the York Regional Police. Considering what Chiang had admitted to, emphasizing the fact of his rant and employment during that period is questionable. Refusing to act on this serious matter raises serious concerns about Mark Carney and Mr. Chiang’s objectives with regard to Beijing. The do-nothing response by Mr. Carney on this affair indicates he is not a leader, by any stretch. .Three Conservative candidates were fired outright by Mr. Poilievre and not two days later, as Mr. Carney endeavoured to slough-off Mr. Chiang’s debacle with a paltry apology but continued to declare confidence in him while he remained an MP in Canada’s government.Grave decision Mr. Carney, and not a “teachable moment” as you characterize it. In the end Mr. Chiang stepped down. But what kind of leadership is that other than scandalous?Ron YaschukQuispamsis, NB
Re: 'Mr. Carney, whom do you serve?'Canadians, is this really the type of prime minister you want leading our country? In the sordid affair of Liberal MP Paul Chiang, Liberal leader Mark Carney could have fired him outright. Instead, Mr. Carney said he unequivocally backed Mr. Chiang. He said he had been a police officer for twenty-eight years with the York Regional Police. Considering what Chiang had admitted to, emphasizing the fact of his rant and employment during that period is questionable. Refusing to act on this serious matter raises serious concerns about Mark Carney and Mr. Chiang’s objectives with regard to Beijing. The do-nothing response by Mr. Carney on this affair indicates he is not a leader, by any stretch. .Three Conservative candidates were fired outright by Mr. Poilievre and not two days later, as Mr. Carney endeavoured to slough-off Mr. Chiang’s debacle with a paltry apology but continued to declare confidence in him while he remained an MP in Canada’s government.Grave decision Mr. Carney, and not a “teachable moment” as you characterize it. In the end Mr. Chiang stepped down. But what kind of leadership is that other than scandalous?Ron YaschukQuispamsis, NB