Pubdate: Tue, 06 Dec 2005 Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.ottawasun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/329 Author: Michael Harris Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) GIVE HIM SOME ROPE Paul Martin reminds me of Muhammad Ali. And no, Lowell, I have not been smoking the drapes. Fight fans will never forget the Rumble in the Jungle. Set against the majesty and mayhem of the former Belgian Congo, it pitted a 25-year-old giant and heavyweight champion, George Foreman, against Muhammad Ali, an aging lion whose skills were in decline long before the two climbed into the ring. Both time and Ali stood still that night back in 1974. Ali hunkered down against the ropes and absorbed hundreds of punches from the younger, stronger man until his passive resistance paid off. Arm-weary and exhausted, Foreman dropped his guard. The old lion pounced and the champ hit the canvas. Pugilism got a new strategy from the wily veteran: "Rope-a-Dope." Paul Martin and the Liberals clearly remember Kinshasa. Like Foreman back in 1974, Stephen Harper has come out swinging in Election 2006, landing some heavy body blows -- a cut in the Goods and Services Tax (GST), mandatory-minimum sentences for drug dealers, specific time frames for reducing waiting lines for Medicare, choice in child-care, an independent public prosecutor and future tax breaks that might include income-splitting. By comparison, Paul Martin has barely answered the bell. The Liberal campaign has so far been an exercise in turbo-platitudes, ("I love Canada"), if not utter disdain. While Harper was banging away on the issues over the weekend, the prime minister offered a photo-op of himself and the missus buying a Christmas wreath for 24 Sussex Drive. Strategy Of Inertia But Martin's strategy of inertia against a younger, more aggressive opponent has a very cogent bottom line. The more Stephen Harper exposes himself in the public ring, the further he carries the attack, the more openings are created for a deadly counter-attack. The Conservative leader's guard came down when he promised to re-visit the same-sex marriage issue almost before the fighters had touched gloves. For most of us, Same Sex the Rematch holds all the attraction of a root canal followed by a trip to the proctologist. The courts have ruled on the issue, the majority in parliament has passed a law, and everyone has moved on except Stephen the All-Seeing. True, his doggedness might impress his conservative base, perhaps even galvanize it. But how will it play with the thirty-somethings for whom sexual orientation is like one's taste in wine -- a personal matter? Harper's guard came down a little lower with his foolish policy that possession of marijuana for personal use would continue to be a federal offence in a Conservative government. For the 2 million Canadians who regularly indulge, a vote for Harper could mean a criminal record one or two tokes over the line sometime in their mellowed-out futures. Not A Federal Offence Besides, this issue was decided a long time ago in the real world, when John Lennon sued the U.S. government after the Nixon administration tried to throw him out of the country for possession of weed. Stephen Harper seems to have forgotten that Lennon won that case and legions of young people got the message -- having a joint wasn't a federal offence, even if some old fart said it was on his way to his painkillers and a double scotch. On those policy announcements with both steak and sizzle, early exposure is at best a mixed blessing. It gives the Tories a leg up, but it also gives the other side a chance to pick apart their program. Momentarily fazed by Harper's promise to cut the GST, Martin quickly gathered himself and began pawing back. After the initial blaze of positive press about the reduction of the hated tax, the coverage began to change. First came the thumbs down from selected academics and economists, then news stories claiming that voters weren't really impressed either. Will Rope-a-Dope humble the better man in the jungle of the '06 election? Too many rounds left to say. But the latest poll from Strategic Counsel shows the Liberals with a 12-point lead in Contrario. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman