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unimaginative2

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Conservative headquarters scripting calls to radio shows

ALEXANDER PANETTA

The Canadian Press

March 25, 2008 at 6:15 PM EDT

OTTAWA — Next time you're listening to your favourite radio phone-in show, those pro-Conservative opinions you hear from callers might not be as spontaneous as they sound.

Some of those apparently ad-libbed musings are actually being choreographed at the Conservative Party of Canada's national headquarters.

The governing party has produced talking points for grassroots supporters on a variety of issues, feeding them lines on everything from climate change to child care.

For Conservative supporters, the process is as simple as 1-2-3.

Surf the party website. Type in your postal code. Click on a topic you'd like to discuss on the radio.

And the website spits out the times, phone numbers, and names of local talk shows to call — along with a handy list of good things to say about the Conservatives and bad things to say about their opponents. The website includes similar advice for letter-writers to newspapers.

The system has been in place for months but an Ottawa-area talk show host first raised it with listeners Tuesday after learning about it.

“We want people to phone in and express their own opinions. We don't want people phoning in and reading from a script,†said Mark Sutcliffe, who hosts CFRA's The Chatroom.

“(But) I don't think we get a ton of calls like that.â€

The Conservatives describe the practice as state-of-the-art politicking. A party spokesman said the practice offers enhanced transparency, and is used elsewhere in the world.

“This is part of campaigning in the Internet age. Party activists are increasingly becoming virtual volunteers,†Conservative spokesman Ryan Sparrow said.

“And just as rank-and-file investors want the same data as market professionals, grassroots activists want the same info and (talking points) as party strategists and spinners.â€

The Conservative talking points on taxation, for instance, list details on the GST cut, the child tax credit, and tax cuts to seniors.

The same talking points contrast Conservative achievements with the Liberal sponsorship scandal, gun-registry boondoggle, and failure to cut the GST. They also suggest the Bloc Quebecois could never achieve real tax relief because it's perpetually in opposition and describe the NDP as tax-hikers.

All parties produce speaking notes for elected MPs, staff members, and lobbyists or activists who serve on their behalf as unsalaried, unofficial spokespeople.

Liberal and NDP websites also include phone numbers for radio shows or tips for getting on the air.

But the Tories appear to take it one step further: their site offers speaking points for members of the general public to pass off as their own musings to fellow radio listeners.

The headline on the Tory web page with the call-in instructions says: “Tired of hearing the vested interests of the Liberals and the special interests of the NDP get their messages out via the media? Call in to a show yourself and fight back with the facts!â€

A Liberal party spokesman says it's a new extreme for a government that has already placed an unprecedented gag order on its elected members, political staff, and civil servants.

In one famous incident during the last election campaign a Conservative MP was stuffed into a restaurant kitchen by a Stephen Harper staffer when approached by the media.

That strict discipline has survived their two years in government: requests to speak publicly are routinely vetted by the Prime Minister's Office, scores of MPs will recite identical sound bites on any given topic, and the government often allows only one person to make public utterances on a given issue.

“This undermines our democracy,†said Liberal party spokesman Daniel Lauzon.

“It's not up for someone in Ottawa to tell someone in Blind River what they should think. . . All we tell our supporters is, 'Speak your mind. Get out there and talk.'

“Never do we dictate messaging.â€

The Conservatives do pay more attention to talk radio than some of their rivals, seeing it as a more useful barometer of public opinion than other media.

Upon taking office, a Harper strategist famously told prime ministerial staff he didn't need to see daily clippings from the major national newspaper — he wanted talk-show transcripts.

But the attention to detail in messaging has occasionally raised eyebrows.

On a recent CPAC television call-in panel, host Dale Goldhawk interrupted at one point when a caller appeared to be stumbling over a list of written notes.

“Are you reading from something?†the frustrated host interjected.

The radio-host who reported the practice to his listeners Tuesday noted that even if callers phone in with a script, they still need to be able to engage in live conversation.

As Mr. Sutcliffe says, they're not speaking to an answering machine but a radio host whose job it is to ask probing questions.

Still, the system for distributing government talking points through the general public does strike him as somewhat strange — and certainly more elaborate than what other parties do.

“What I think is unusual about this Conservative website is just how systematic it is,†he said.

“The process for the Conservative one is a little more automated: punch out your topic and your postal code,and we'll spit out a script for you to follow.â€
 
confirms my idea the Conservative are trying to make the country more conservative. Change it from a more European democracy into an American one...


There will be some economic benefits but what about the social programs and such?
 
With each new day, I am rather amused by the fact that the new Conservative party of Canada has assumed identical tactics to the US Republican party and has started to use them on a daily basis.

I think Canadians are largely more apt to realize what is going on, so we'll see!
 
Remember the medium, though. Phone-in shows. Talk radio. In 2008.

Basically, the Tories are aiming at the lowest (and most susceptible) of the low. Barrel-bottom populism...
 
confirms my idea the Conservative are trying to make the country more conservative. Change it from a more European democracy into an American one...


There will be some economic benefits but what about the social programs and such?

Social problems will get worse but economic statistics might look better, until the recession arrives. Some Canadians will realize this but some listening to their talk radio will be convinced because not every caller is going stumble on the script.
 
Not exactly a surprise here, political parties and other lobbying / interest groups have been doing this for a long time. In fact the surprise would be if they weren't doing it.
 
Remember the medium, though. Phone-in shows. Talk radio. In 2008.

Basically, the Tories are aiming at the lowest (and most susceptible) of the low. Barrel-bottom populism...
These shows are mostly all Tory friendly anyway (even in Toronto).

And once again, the Harperites are one-step behind their GOP friends and haven't realized that this will likely be the first U.S. presidential race in a ages where talk radio will play very little of a role.
 
Well, maybe one step behind with a purpose all the same.

Interesting hearing CFRB this evening in the aftermath of the Rob Ford biz: several callers offering that he shouldn't resign even if he's found guilty, because he's the only councillor who talks sense out there...
 
Bah, those who listen to talk radio are more likely to be senile and middle-aged boomers with a right-wing mentality anyways.
 

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