 Former prime minister Brian Mulroney says he may have made some errors in judgment in his lifetime, but he isn't worried that the suggestion of impropriety in his dealings with Karlheinz Schreiber will affect his legacy. Comments
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Well said bootlegga... was thinking he doesn't have to worry about that tarnishing his legacy.. he paved the road for that while in power... next up... harper
I sure hope you're getting paid for your efforts.
Where is Bassano?
on the border of Manitoba and Alberta.
This is what we refer in my profession as a delusion of grandeur.
Where is Bassano?
on the border of Manitoba and Alberta.
Thanks..
Where is Bassano?
on the border of Manitoba and Alberta.
Is Bassano the new name for Saskatchewan? From what I remember of my geography, Alberta and Manitoba do NOT share a border...
..... Alberta and Manitoba do NOT share a border...
Sure they do. The American one!
Where is Bassano?
on the border of Manitoba and Alberta.
Where is Bassano?
on the border of Manitoba and Alberta.
Is Bassano the new name for Saskatchewan? From what I remember of my geography, Alberta and Manitoba do NOT share a border...
Come on catch up to the joke will you, Kenmore knows
In the online survey of a representative national sample of 1,005 Canadians, only 31 per cent of respondents say they followed stories related to the so-called Oliphant Commission very or moderately closely over the past few months.
Seven-in-ten Canadians either paid little attention to the proceedings (32%) or none at all (38%). Almost half of respondents in both Alberta and Quebec say they did not follow the inquiry closely at all.
When this survey's findings are compared to those of an Angus Reid Strategies poll conducted in May 2008, it becomes clear that Canadians were turned off by the affair.
Four-in-five respondents (80%) believe that we'll never get to the bottom of what happened between Mulroney and Schreiber, up six points since May 2008. Also, almost two-thirds of Canadians (64%) say they are tired of hearing about the Mulroney-Schreiber controversy, a five-point increase since last year.
Also, 66 per cent of respondents believe the public inquiry into the Mulroney-Schreiber controversy was a waste of money, while 24 per cent disagree with this statement. In May 2008, as the terms of the inquiry were being defined, 58 per cent of Canadians believed the process would be a waste of money.
In testimony provided to a House of Commons ethics committee and to the Oliphant Inquiry, Mulroney and Schreiber have offered differing accounts on the amount of money that exchanged hands. About one-in-four Canadians (23%) believe Schreiber is telling the truth when he claims to have paid Mulroney $300,000, while one-in-ten Canadians (10%) think the former prime minister is being honest when he says he received $225,000 from Schreiber. Still, a large proportion of the population (44%) finds neither man credible.
http://www.angusreidstrategies.com/uplo ... iphant.pdf