I have recently written some posts bemoaning the paucity of policy undergirding the campaigns of those who would become the next leader of the Liberal Party, both on the provincial (Ontario) and federal level. Substituting for substance are tired bromides and platitudes that, in an earlier, less cynical age might have been sufficient to inspire, but now fill the seasoned observer with ennui and suspicion.
I was pleased to see Martin Regg Cohn addressing the issue in this morning's Toronto Star. Lamenting the lack of substance in the provincial leadership race, his piece lists six questions he says aspirants need to answer:
1. With unemployment hovering at 8.3 per cent, what’s your concrete plan to not just create but keep well-paying jobs?
2. Should motorists pay for driving on congested roadways? (road tolls, congestion fees, etc.)
3. Can you make future pensions a present-day priority?
4. Do you have the political stamina to tackle welfare reform?
5. As a rookie premier, will you stay green?
6. How do you persuade people to back you, while you’re cutting back on what you give them?
While these are all excellent questions, I hope Mr. Cohn remembers that it is the responsibility of journalists not only to ask these questions, but also to ensure the politicos don't simply fob off non-answers in response.
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