After brewing for several days, the conservative election rigging incident has now snowballed all the way up to the Prime Minister's desk.
Unsurprisingly, the PM retorted with defiance and his habitual dose of rhetorical aggression, in an effort to divert attention (Globe and Mail, 29. 02. 2012).
Naturally, he blamed the opposition, evoked once again the far from comparable Vickileaks spat, and as in standard tory scripts he went on a vehement tirade against the Liberal Party.
Incidentally, someone should tell the PM that accusing the grits which have been out of government for the past 6 years, for facts that are old of almost 10 years, is becoming slightly specious.
Lastly, the PM dismissed the whole thing as a "smear campaign" and rumors circulated by "sore losers".
The (not so) funny thing in this whole story is that Elections Canada and the RCMP are taking this whole issue very seriously and their investigations keep spreading from riding to riding (CBC, 29. 02. 2012).
As it turns out, allegations suggest that as many as 30 to 40 ridings were affected by the robocalls, though facts remain to be ascertained and verified. However, the magnitude, scope, systematic and recurrent features of the episodes which seem to outline a coherent pattern are suspicious.
Remember the "strong, stable, conservative national majority"?
Again, it is early to pass a conclusive judgement on the matter, but history may well end up showing that national majority was a PHONY mirage! Pun intended, as usual...