Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

A Look At Maxime Bernier’s Musings, Headlines Over The Last 10 Years

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Aug, 2018 12:41 PM
    OTTAWA — Aside from calling for an end to supply management in the dairy sector and privatizing Canada Post, the man dubbed "Mad Max" has a history of making headlines, often with colourful — if not contentious — commentary. Here's a look:
     
     
    April 2008
     
    Bernier touches off a diplomatic row during a visit to Afghanistan by publicly urging the country's government to replace the governor of Kandahar, linking him to rampant corruption: "I think (the Afghan government) can work with us to be sure that the governor will be more powerful, the governor will do what he has to do to help us, and there's the question to maybe have a new governor." 
     
     
    May 2008
     
    Bernier comes under fire from opposition MPs over his relationship with Julie Couillard, who reportedly had ties to Quebec's notorious biker gangs.
     
    "Never did I think I'd get such a nasty and low attack from an opposition party," he says during question period. "This concerns my private life, the private life in the past of my former girlfriend, and the private lives of people are none of your business."
     
    Bernier resigns his cabinet post by the end of the month after he is found to have left confidential briefing notes at the Couillard's home.
     
     
    September 2010
     
    Bernier slams a proposal to give federal money for a new NHL rink in Quebec City, needed to fulfil dreams of the return of professional hockey to the city: "It's nice to have dreams, but when you use borrowed money to achieve them and act as if money grows on trees, you may have a brutal awakening."
     
     
    October 2010
     
    Bernier delivers a speech in Toronto where he says the federal government should end health transfer payments to provinces and territories, creating instead a new system to let them raise the money themselves to cover the costs of health care.
     
     
    April 2011
     
    Bernier holds a campaign rally where he rejects the idea that the Tories aren't open to fresh faces and new ideas: "I think we are an open party, and we like to debate and the best one will win. What is an election right now if it is not about debates?"
     
    Bernier is re-elected and is appointed to cabinet as the minister of state for small business, tourism and agriculture.
     
     
    November 2013
     
    At the Conservative policy convention, Bernier floats the idea of holding a referendum on whether to abolish the Senate, which at the time is mired in scandal.
     
     
    May 2016
     
    Bernier weighs in on the high-profile acquittal of Sen. Mike Duffy and the court judgment itself, which was critical of how Harper's office handled the affair: "I think we have some blame to take and that the people who were in charge at the time, they have to take the blame."
     
     
    May 2017
     
    Bernier loses the party's leadership battle to Andrew Scheer on the last of 13 ballots, even though Bernier led the previous 12. Scheer wins with 50.95 per cent of the vote; Bernier earned 49.05 per cent.
     
     
    April 2018
     
    A chapter from Bernier's forthcoming book is made public and causes a stir in caucus. In it, Bernier charges that it was "fake Conservatives" in the Quebec dairy lobby who signed up in the leadership vote to help Scheer win the leadership and protect Canada's supply management system for dairy and poultry products — a scheme Bernier is anxious to abolish.
     
    "He did what he thought he had to do to get the most votes, and that is fair game in a democratic system," Bernier writes of Scheer in the book. "But this also helps explain why so many people are so cynical about politics, and with good reason."
     
     
    August 2018
     
    Amid controversy over irregular border crossers in Quebec and elsewhere in Canada, Bernier trains his Twitter feed on the issue of immigration and multiculturalism, saying too much diversity and "extreme multiculturalism" could divide the country into "little tribes" and erode Canada's identity. Immigration in Canada is at "too high a level," he writes, and could soon cease to be "a tool to economically benefit Canadians," instead becoming a "burden" and "a big-government policy of social engineering for ideological and electoral purposes."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Killed In Vancouver Road Rage Incident Identified As 33-Yr-Old Willis Charles Hunt

    Man Killed In Vancouver Road Rage Incident Identified As 33-Yr-Old Willis Charles Hunt
    The VPD has identified the victim of the city’s 14th homicide as 33-year-old Vancouver resident Willis Charles Hunt.

    Man Killed In Vancouver Road Rage Incident Identified As 33-Yr-Old Willis Charles Hunt

    Five People Sent To Hospital After Crash At Abbotsford, B.C., Airport

    Five People Sent To Hospital After Crash At Abbotsford, B.C., Airport
    Five people are in hospital, including one in critical condition, after a 1930s era biplane crashed shortly after take off Saturday at the Abbotsford International Airport in British Columbia.

    Five People Sent To Hospital After Crash At Abbotsford, B.C., Airport

    Police Ask For Help To Locate Missing Abbotsford Man MITER SINGH

    Police Ask For Help To Locate Missing Abbotsford Man MITER SINGH
    The Abbotsford Police Department is requesting the public’s assistance in locating 44 year-old Mr. Miter SINGH.

    Police Ask For Help To Locate Missing Abbotsford Man MITER SINGH

    Children Born To Spies In Canada Should Not Be Handed Citizenship: Ottawa

     Russian spies lurking in the Canadian shadows may toil in secret, but they're still employees of Moscow — and therefore their children are not Canadian citizens, the federal government is telling the Supreme Court.

    Children Born To Spies In Canada Should Not Be Handed Citizenship: Ottawa

    Wildfire Crews Brace For Weather Change As 39 New Fires Recorded In B.C.

    More wildfires are burning in British Columbia in 2018 than in past years but the total amount of timber burned is well below average, a wildfire official says.

    Wildfire Crews Brace For Weather Change As 39 New Fires Recorded In B.C.

    Suspect Arrested After Sucker-Punch Assault Outside Laval Daycare

    Suspect Arrested After Sucker-Punch Assault Outside Laval Daycare
    Police say they've made an arrest in a sucker-punch attack outside a Montreal-area daycare last month that was captured on surveillance video.

    Suspect Arrested After Sucker-Punch Assault Outside Laval Daycare