Oakville Beaver, 20 Jun 1993, p. 14

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Oak ville Bo eaver W eekend, Sund ay. Jun 9 20 , 1993 â€" 14 I gem M N _ §?°3.§ IE ’7 Some 150 members of the fed- eral Progressive Conservative Oakville/Milton riding found out where their two candidates stood as they fired questions at them at a gathering in St. Ignatius of Loyola High School. The questions cov- ered a gamut of policies â€" from the federal debt to party affilia- lions. Mulvale sparked twice during the evening. In answering a ques- tion regarding an editorial said to dub her “an opportunist” since she experience, Anne Mulvale and Stephen Sparling presented a picture in contrasts, and Thursday night the political candidates paint- ed with large brush strokes their own images of a better Canada, in age, shape, background and By BARB JOY Oakville Beaver Staff Mayor lashes back at 'opportunistic' critics Mullay tar ,. the "atlas! Cflllflflllli III IIIWII. a / If? 4’ 1/ x: ,1 4/ ’ .I'C / 4/ y/ / \ / I , J \ r“) \J - A MlllSllN INIIV llllllS III" [III Hill-4639] Hlllllllllflll I'lAlif, Illlllllflll .llllY lli, IT, 18, 1993. non. Signing} g 7\ Ball lullay III the Hottest lifllfllls Ill IIIWII. FLAVEP'S ' LTD. Noting that there is probably more party affiliation in municipal politics than most people realize, she added that many politicians had moved from municipal to fed- eral politics. She said she had declared herself as a PC member because the party stressed “individ- ual worth” and because she thought the upcoming fall election is “abso- lutely crucial to Canada”. She said she entered the race to offer the communications and leadership skills gleaned throughout the years as regional and town councillor and as mayor of Oakville to help When asked if she would sup- port the PC party if she failed to be chosen to represent the party in At the same time, she noted that party members have a right to their differing points of View. “If we don’t respect each other’s opinion, then we deserve to fail,” she firmly stated. win that election. Stephen Sparling Irv-awn “We sell verticals, venetians and pleated M x O“ U "m" shades at VERY, VERY Low PRICES!” PLUS . . . FREE VALANCE! HERE'S HOW - You'll save up to $73 on our already low CUSTOM prices by choosing a “STANDARD-SIZED” vertiwl (“Standard size” simply means pre-set sizing in exact 12" increments). It's really that simple. Below you'll see a few examples of your savings (many more sizes available) Stu “77 ~ W M LW‘ SIM GEEK “WWW. W‘ "TWIN. WV“. 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She countered that her “advisors” and friends were such longâ€"time PC notables as Gordon Krantz, Jim Snow and the wife of Terry O’Connor. “I think you would insult their public service record to suggest they are Liberal advisors,” she said. 386 Iroquois Shore Blvd. Mon.-Wed. Open “til 2 am. Thurs.-Sun. Open 'til 3 am. Bishara Arraf 845-7937 $550 $650 Choou "um 10 gorgeouo "Pe-rflzed" PVC colour: or 6 ol' today's most popular FABRIC coloun. 72” x 84” Ol' 84" x 84” 410 Spears Rd., Oakville Monday-Widnosday 10-530; Thursday 10â€"6; Frlday 10-9; Saturday 10-5 “The leadership of the other par- ties is not relevant,” she said. “They are of another decade â€" tired, irrelevant and not saleable.” (See 'Sparling' page 20) In fact, Mulvale listed a restora- tion of the electorate’s confidence in politicians and specifically the PC party as the second priority in her platform. She said that whoev- er is chosen as candidate by federal PC members next Wednesday must bring the message to the public that they represent a renewed party that is intent on building a nation. It should not dwell on the past, as the Liberals under Jean Chretien will probably do by attacking free trade. “The public is ready for some honesty and there’s nothing wrong in saying we underutilized the opportunity following the last elec- tion,” she said. “After the 1984 election, we didn’t follow through on the mandate given to us.” Mulvale, especially, reiterated this throughout the evening. She intimated that the present govern- ment under Brian Mulroney might have sloughed over the reality of the economic crisis when it promised jobs in the election of 1988. These “short-term expecta- tions” handed out to the people of Canada left them frustated and cynical. But beneath all the practical suggestions for government changes put forward by both candi- dates ran a bedrock of realization by them that the electorate itself was getting tired of rhetoric and evasion. It demanded honesty in the person who would represent them in Ottawa, should the PCs win the riding in the next election. 338-2603 OMY % s99 Verticals YMMâ€"

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