Former Liberal MP Boivin poised to run in Gatineau riding for NDP
Juliet O'Neill, The Ottawa Citizen
Published: Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Former Liberal MP Françoise Boivin will jump to the New Democratic Party in time to run in the Gatineau riding if an election is triggered in the next couple of weeks.
The feisty 47-year-old lawyer and broadcasting personality all but announced yesterday that the NDP has successfully courted her as she became fed up with her treatment by Liberal party officials, disenchanted with Liberal leader Stéphane Dion's leadership and has found Liberal policy on the war in Afghanistan ambivalent.
"It's not the party I joined in 2004," she said yesterday. "It's so different. You claim you're a governing party, but you're supposed to be more solid."
She said Liberal party officials have been stringing her along for two years to run in the Gatineau riding she lost in 2006 to Richard Nadeau of the Bloc Québécois. But she discovered that all the while they were looking for a more prestigious candidate.
"I was good enough from 2004 to 2006 to be sent left, right and centre ... to defend the Liberal brand in English and French, but once the job is done, then ... 'we're looking for somebody else'," she said. "I don't think it's the way you treat people."
She has told NDP colleagues there is one Liberal she will not criticize -- Paul Martin, who was prime minister when she had a seat in Parliament from 2004 to 2006.
"At least he was a democrat, and that I appreciate," she said. She says Mr. Martin has urged her not to jump ship -- to no avail.
Although the NDP came fourth in Gatineau in the 2006 election, with about a quarter of the votes secured by Mr. Nadeau, Ms. Boivin believes she can take many of the thousands of Liberals who supported her over to the NDP.
"I'm not crazy, I'm not going to say we're going to win, but boy, we're going to give them a run for their money if I jump in," she said.
One of the members of the NDP elite who says she can win is Thomas Mulcair, the lawyer and former provincial cabinet minister who beat Mr. Dion's handpicked candidate in the longtime Liberal Montreal stronghold of Outremont in a federal byelection last year.
Former NDP leader Ed Broadbent and current leader Jack Layton also have held talks with Ms. Boivin and she is studying party policy to make sure she is comfortable before formally announcing her decision.
She is no stranger to the NDP agenda. As a Liberal MP, she broke party ranks to support NDP policy on anti-scab legislation and was against Canada participating in the U.S. anti-ballistic missile defence system.
© The Ottawa Citizen 2008