Pubdate: Fri, 16 Apr 2010 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/O3vnWIvC Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Kelly McParland THE CASE AGAINST HELENA GUERGIS The Toronto Star's big expose on Helena Guergis and Rahim Jaffer should be bound in book form and handed out to schools as Canadian Politics 101. Want to know what real-life politics is like? Read the book. The Star, understandably enough from a newspaper-selling point of view, has been treating the situation like the second coming of Gerda Munsinger, the granddaddy of all Canadian political scandals. On Thursday, to its credit, it provided details that show the story could have been presented in a much different way. For the first time, we found out that Guergis had been going through a difficult personal period prior to her famous PEI airport blowup. Two miscarriages in under a year; the minister was four months pregnant when she lost the second baby before the ill-fated trip to Charlottetown. "When one's hormones are badly out of whack, life can be difficult," notes a sympathetic editorial in a local newspaper. Her mother had also recently suffered an anaphylactic attack. Guergis called 911 and her mother was rushed to the hospital, where she suffered a heart attack. Just a bit of pressure, no? If Canadians had known this when the Liberals gleefully circulated the details of Guergis' airport blow-up, would we have been as quick to condemn? Would the Ottawa media, which long ago lost patience with Guergis's haughty personality? And what about Rahim Jaffer, the husband causing her additional grief? A former MP who seemed on the road to great things gets caught drinking and driving, with drugs in the car. When he gets off with a small fine, thanks apparently to a colossal police mix-up, it's treated like a government scandal, as if Ottawa had any direct influence over a provincial Crown prosecutor. According to the Star account, Jaffer's mistake was to dine with a Toronto "businessman" who works out of a strip club and, according to the Star, brags about luring clients into compromising situations, snapping cellphone pictures and then using that to pressure them. And sure enough, when Jaffer attends a dinner at an expensive Toronto steakhouse, it turns out there are "busty hookers" (a term the Star has come to love) present. Smile for the cellphone, please. The Star interviews a private investigator, who says he elicited undercover information from the "businessman," who bragged about his methods and his influence. He boasts to the investigator about having access to the Prime Minister's office. He boasts about setting up offshore accounts for the Jaffers. According to the newspaper, "while some of the things he boasts about are true, often his boasts are groundless." So, to recap, a man who can't be trusted and who allegedly brags of his skill at blackmail, makes claims that can't be backed up involving a high-profile political couple. The male half, Jaffer, is dumb enough to be driving around with drugs in his car. The female half, Guergis, who has just suffered two miscarriages and rushed her mother to hospital, shows the pressure when she cracks in public. She gets no sympathy, as the press doesn't like her and seizes the opportunity to put the boot in. Her caucus colleagues run for cover. The Prime Minister sticks by her until apprised of the claims of the private investigator, who passes on the unsubstantiated claims of the unreliable businessman, at which point he kicks her out of caucus and calls in the RCMP, providing himself with political cover. Meanwhile, her mortgage is being questioned for no other reason than that she seems to have gotten a good deal; and $742 in questionable campaign expenses are held up as further evidence of her craven personality. Her sister says she's the one who submitted the expenses. I've never met Guergis. All in all she sounds hard to take. It's easy to imagine even worse revelations are yet to come. But so far the crimes she's committed are: marrying a husband with appallingly bad judgment, letting him use her office, having an annoying personality and breaking down in public under the pressure of two miscarriages and her mother's health scare. For that she's been ousted from her job and party and crucified in the press. I wonder why more people don't choose a career in politics. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D