A provocative and inspired call to unite progressives in Canada and shift the political landscape.
The Liberal Party is down, and might not be able to get back up. It is no longer a natural governing entity after losing Quebec for seven straight elections. Stephen Harper’s policies have been controversial and polarizing, especially for left leaning Conservatives. There are people on both sides who want Canada to get past this mollified partisanship. The alternative is to take back the centre and charge forward with a progressive agenda. What about the environment? What about our foreign policy? Canada can once again stand tall in the eyes of the world and in the eyes of its own citizens.
Our nation was once a beacon for centrist, sensible, and level-headed policy. Do the Liberals speak for true Canadian values anymore? They don't. Will the Conservatives stand firm for Canada in a globalized economy. They won't. Is the status quo good enough for you? How do we get back to a place where Canada leads in those areas that Canadians feel passionate about?
Author of Dead Centre, Jamey Heath, watched the left fracture before his eyes when he was the NDP’s lead strategist from 2003 to 2006. In his book Jamey calls to account the leading lights of the left. He challenges assumptions and revisits the defeats and the squabbles. He then sounds a clarion call to regroup and tackle our nations' challenges. With refreshing, contrarian insight Heath will find a significant audience among Liberals, Greens, New Democrats and the growing number of politically minded -- but party neutral -- progressives that want sensible leadership and a renaissance of Canadian nationhood.
Dead Centre is printed on biodegradeable paper with environmentally friendly inks.
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Jamey Heath has has a front-row seat to changing progressive politics, both inside and outside political parties. On Parliament Hill, he was research and communications director for the NDP caucus after working in both the environmental and labour movements. he was a regular commentator on politics on television and in print while working for the NDP. He now lives in Toronto.
Some say the environment will be this century's health-care conundrum. Canadians are waking up from our Liberal hegemony mirage and finding out that we're not the progressive country they told us we were. And now, a country that stayed out of Iraq and embraced equal marriage has a neoconservative PM-and a Liberal emissions record that's worse than that of George W. Bush.
WHY?
Read about these insights-and many more-in a book that sets its sights Dead Centre.
Dead Centre is a provocative, timely and insightful book about changing the political landscape in Canada. If Canada is a progressive country and a beacon to the world, why haven't promises to move on the environment, health care and social values been realized? Jamey Heath, with keen insight and analysis and often caustic wit, debunks a few myths and gets his hands dirty in the political mire called Ottawa.
Heath digs away at the Liberal Party of Canada--the aprty of the "meaningless middle"--which has written politics' rules for too long. Now is the time to ask if the Liberal line on how things should work is the right line. With right-wingers running Ottawa and the national unity quesiton back on the agenda in Quebec, Dead Centre wonders aloud whether progressives don't have more options than the Liberals--and new leader Stephane Dion--let on. With the climate changing along with Canada's political dynamic, maybe the tired, old Liberal rules should be thrown out. As the spectre of a united Right hangs over the Peace Tower, something had to be done.
As former research and communications director for the NDP caucus, Jamey Heath saw Liberals fall from hegemony to the opposition benches in three years. In the environmental and labour movements, he saw new approaches flourish, only to to be throttled in the corridors of power. He suggests it's time for a rethink about ideas, policies and initiatives, and hence truly uniting progressives under a new banner.
If progressive Americans can start to turn the tide against Republicans, Heath asks why progressive Canadians can't turn our tide. In the context of recent minority governments and elections, he argues that multi-party democracy brings possibility--and hope for victory.
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Anbieter: Spafford Books (ABAC / ILAB), Regina, SK, Kanada
[978-0-470-84073-3] 2007. (Mass market paperback) Fine. 296pp. 8vo. Fine copy. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 133426
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Anbieter: Edmonton Book Store, Edmonton, AB, Kanada
Zustand: very good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: no dustjacket. 8vo pp.296. book. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 326696
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