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Related: Canadian govt defeated in non-confidence
vote
Paul Martin to call for new election Tuesday
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Canadian Prime Minister Paul
Martin is applauded after Martin's government was defeated by a
no-confidence motion in the House of Commons in Ottawa, Monday Nov. 28,
2005. (Photo: Xinhua) |
OTTAWA, Nov. 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Canadians are heading
for a rare winter election as the Liberal minority government led by Prime
Minister Paul Martin was brought down on Monday by a vote of non-confidence.
The non-confidence motion, introduced by the
Conservative Leader Stephen Harper, was passed Monday evening local time by a
vote of 171 to 133 with the support of the New Democratic Party (NDP) and Bloc
Quebecois in the 308-member House of Commons.
Moments after the vote, Martin called on a boisterous
Liberal caucus to get their snowshoes on for the coming election campaign.
"All of us have a lot to be proud of and I cannot
tell you how proud I am of you," he said, while elaborating on what the Liberals
have achieved especially in the economic front in the past 12 years of ruling.
In his caucus address, Harper foresaw a Conservative
government would emerge in the election. "Canadians need and they want and
deserve a change. And to get that change we need a change in government ... A
government that stands up for Canada -- a new Conservative government." He said.
Harper tabled the non-confidence motion on Thursday
following Martin's refusal to the opposition demands to dissolve the 38th
Parliament in January and hold election in mid-February.
The opposition has claimed that the Liberal party
lost the moral authority to lead the nation after a judicial report confirmed
Liberals were involved in a federal sponsorship scandal earlier this month.
As a constitutional routine, Martin will ask Governor
General Michaelle Jean on Tuesday to dissolve the Parliament for an election.
The election dates are widely speculated at either
January 16 or January 23. It will be the first Christmas campaign in 26 yearsin
the country.
Recent polls have given the Liberals a slight lead
over the Conservatives, with the NDP in the third place.
That means the new election will return another
Liberal minority government to power as most observers anticipated.
The opposition has been taking advantage of the
public anger with the sponsorship scandal involving the misuse of about 200
million US dollars targeted for a national unity program in the French-speaking
province of Quebec.
The investigation report, the first of the two,
exonerated Martin of any wrongdoing but put most blame on former prime minister
Jean Chretien and his senior Liberal members. Martin has repeatedly promised to
call an election within 30 days of the release of the final report on the
scandal which is due on February 1, meaning an election in April.
Martin's government was left in a free fall earlier this month when it lost the support of the NDP, whose backing helped Martin to survive the non-confidence motion by a single vote in May this year. Enditem
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