Feb. 18, 2004. 01:00 AM
Martin will have to keep his promise
Never make an ultimatum you're not prepared to have someone act on.
Never make a promise to do something you have no intention of living up to.
And never, ever — unless you're really sure of the ground under your feet — make the promise that you will quit your job if it turns out you're to blame for something.
And there's the funny place Prime Minister Paul Martin finds himself in right now.
Faced with outright hostility on Sunday about the federal Liberal government's sponsorship funding scandal on CBC Radio's Cross Country Checkup, Martin suggested that he would not only thoroughly investigate the spending, but also said that anyone found responsible for the fiasco should leave government.
Clearly, Martin had to do something; fallout from the scandal has seen the previously invincible Liberals fall nine full points in public opinion tracking in just a few days.
And why wouldn't the numbers fall? Federal Auditor-General Sheila Fraser reported that $100 million of the federal government's $250 million sponsorship funding program went to Liberal-friendly Quebec advertising firms, which basically did nothing for the money, sometimes charging hundreds of thousands of dollars for something as simple as issuing a cheque.
So it's no wonder that Martin has promised to investigate how the millions of dollars were allowed to go astray.
Concerns about the sponsorship funding were handily dismissed by former prime minister Jean Chrétien, who seemed comfortable with the fact that a million dollars or so might have gone missing.
If nothing else, this scandal shows just how dangerous it is to have one political party safely ensconced on the government side of the House of Commons with little fear of being unseated.
The only possible reaction now is something close to overreaction — Martin was, after all, federal finance minister when this spending was at its height, and it is going to take an awfully thorough investigation to come close to proving a finance minister knew little about the cheques going out under his imprimatur.
Let's hope that our current Prime Minister, when he gave a national radio audience his commitment to leave politics if found to be involved, had fully examined his own memories and records for the time in question.
As Socrates pointed out, the unexamined life may well not be worth living.
It's even clearer that the unexamined government is not worth having.
This is an edited excerpt from an editorial that appeared in the St. John's Telegram.
› Get 50% off home delivery of the Toronto Star.
FAQs| Site Map| Privacy Policy| Webmaster| Subscribe| My Subscription
Home| GTA| Business| Waymoresports| A&E| Life
Legal Notice: Copyright Toronto Star Newspapers Limited. All rights reserved. Distribution, transmission or republication of any material from
www.thestar.com is strictly prohibited without the prior written permission of Toronto Star Newspapers Limited. For information please contact us using our webmaster form.
www.thestar.com online since 1996.