Pubdate: Fri, 12 Nov 2010 Source: Richmond News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010, Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.richmond-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1244 Author: Nelson Bennett IGNATIEFF COURTS STUDENTS IN RICHMOND A Liberal government would make education a top priority, cancel the Conservative government's $6-billion corporate tax cut, tackle Canada's $56-billion deficit, introduce a program that would pay people to take time off work to care for sick or dying family members and decriminalize marijuana possession. Those were among the pledges made by federal Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff at a town hall meeting at Richmond secondary school Friday. In exchange, he asked all students who will be 18 for the next federal election to vote. "I want you to commit," he told roughly 200 students. "It's your country. You're up next." The meeting was one of several Open Mike town hall meetings taking place across the country. The meetings use the Internet and interactive social media to engage young voters. Participants from across the country can ask questions via Twitter and Facebook and can read real-time blogs and listen to podcasts. (Visit www.liberal.ca/openmike.) Ignatieff said only out of five voters who had just reached voting age (18) bothered to vote in the last federal election. He encouraged students to take an interest in politics, saying it is a good way for young people to rise quickly up the ladder, and cited his own experience. Ignatieef was just 21 when he became the national Liberal youth leader under Liberal Leader Pierre Trudeau. "You can be in there playing an important role very fast," Ignatieff said. Asked by Glen Arthur in Vancouver by Twitter what his top priorities will be if his party forms the next government, Ignatieff said the first thing he would do is cancel a $6 billion corporate tax cut. "When you're in a $56-billion hole, we've got to get our deficit straitened out," he said. "And we've got to make some investments in learning and care." His second priority would be getting the country's deficit and debt under control, adding "we wouldn't waste so much darned money." "Last June, the government spent a billion dollars - I'm not making this up - in 72 hours for a G-8 summit meeting that didn't result in anything positive," he said. "And that's the kind of waste our government would be committed to eliminating." Ignatieff said his third priority would be investing in higher education, saying it is critical to job creation. "I've got to create a system that doesn't load you or your parents with debt," Ignatieff said. He said he wants a simple rule of thumb in Canada for higher education: "If you get the grades, you get to go." But for a policy that ranks third on his priority, Ignatieff was vague on just how he would make education more affordable and accessible. He said details of his party's education policies will be fleshed out in his party's platform in time for the next election. One plank that Ignatieff has expanded on is a $1 billion family care program that would pay people to take up to six months off work to care for ailing or dying loved ones. Ignatieff said it would be similar to employment insurance. He said families looking after their own sick or dying loved ones at home are shouldering huge costs. His plan would provide them with up to $1,350 per year to help defray those costs. "The future of health care is in the home, but only if families get some help to do it," Ignatieff said. Asked about his stance on trade with China and India, Ignatieff said trade agreements should be global in nature, and should address a variety of issues, not just economic ones. "It's not just trade," he said. "It's education, it's culture, it's visas, it's family travel." He added Canada also needs to makes its views on things like human rights known to countries like China, without sounding like it is lecturing. He cited China's attempts to control and censor the Internet as one example. In his last visit to China, Ignatieff said he let Chinese leaders know that "we think it's crazy to try and control the Internet. "They're a big, powerful country," he said. "They're going to do what they want to do. But they need to hear from their friends that this attempt to control freedom is both wrong and impractical. It's not even in their own interest." One student, who is a recent immigrant, asked: "What are the Liberals doing to ensure our multicultural population is supported?" Ignatieff - whose Russian-born father was an immigrant - said he wants to see immigration maintained at the current levels and wants to see more immigrants integrated in politics. But he added, immigrants have an obligation to learn one of Canada's official languages - English or French. "The key to immigrant success and integration and holding our society together is everybody speaks the same darned language," he said. Asked what he made of the recent failure of Proposition 19 - a referendum in California on legalizing marijuana - Ignatieff said the Liberals would reintroduce a bill (which died with the election of a Conservative government) to decriminalize simple marijuana possession. "I don't want any young person's life ruined for being arrested for possession of small amounts of marijuana," Ignatieff said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt