The Saskatchewan party caucus office has moved its attack site from 'NDP Watch' to a new location ---> NDP Boogeyman. Like the old site, these publicly funded caucus staff are only capable of publishing posts that contain personal attack. They continue to attack Murray Mandryk of the Regina Leader-Post and mount a lame defence against anyone who writes a 'letter to the editor' that is critical of the Wall regime.
You will not see any of Wall's policy defended nor any rational arguments for legislation being introduced into the Spring Session of the Legislature. Nope. They only know how to slander and defame.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
John Gormley should feel like an idiot after so aggressively defending Serge Leclerc , but he probably won't
When the news first broke that Saskatchewan Party MLA, Serge Leclerc may have been using drugs and hustling on gay chat sites, no one came to his defense more aggressively than NewsTalk Radio open mouth show host, John Gormley.
Gormley tried for two days to convince his listeners that Serge was probably the victim of NDP dirty tricks. Wrong! John should feel like a real chump right about now, but he won't. He is so completely up the Saskatchewan Party's butt he simply can't see light.
Someone Looks Uncomfortable!
I don't know why, but I am reminded of a quote from The Hunt for Red October...
Jeffery Pelt; "Listen,I'm a politician which means I'm a cheat and a liar, and when I'm not kissing babies, I'm stealing their lollipops."
Conflict of Interest Commissioner Says Sask Party MLA Serge LeClerc ''Unethical, Unlawful'
Brad Wall's hand picked candidate in Saskatoon was 'unethical and unlawful' while he sat in the Saskatchewan Party government ranks. Brad Wall can sure pick candidates that reflect what the Saskatchewan Party is all about.
Here is the Leader Post story -
REGINA — The ethical watchdog of the legislative assembly has found that former Saskatchewan Party MLA Serge LeClerc engaged in “conduct that was both unethical and unlawful during the time he was an MLA.”
LeClerc left the Saskatchewan Party caucus and went on medical leave in April after CBC reported it had received a package of Internet chat room transcripts along with a recording of an individual who sounded like LeClerc discussing marijuana and cocaine use.
LeClerc denied the accusations but resigned his seat effective at the end of August.
In a report released Tuesday, conflict of interest commissioner Ronald Barclay rejected LeClerc’s assertion that the recording had been doctored.
Barclay sent the recording for forensic analysis to the RCMP, with police experts determining that all the audio clips were from the same original recording, are not composites and there was no evidence words and phrases had been spliced together or edited.
“According to the content of the recordings, it is my opinion that Mr. LeClerc smoked marijuana during the time period he was an MLA, and that he had an unidentified person bring cocaine to his residence during the time period he was an MLA,” wrote Barclay.
RCMP experts had also examined computers used by LeClerc and his constituency assistants during the time he was MLA. While four of them had not been used for Internet chats, LeClerc told Barclay he had thrown away the hard drive of his government issue laptop, “rendering any forensic analysis entirely impossible.”
“Mr. LeClerc destroyed the one vital piece of evidence that may have assisted in exonerating, or implicating, his participation in the chats,” wrote Barclay, who noted that when relevant evidence is destroyed “a presumption arises that the evidence would have been unfavourable to the party who destroyed it.”
RLP
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