Liberal says she predicted results of Tory policies (Continued from page 1) reminding people the deal was fundâ€" ed by private sector dollars. But Brown was blunt about the entire deal. "To me, it smells," said Brown, noting the rush to close the deal before the election, the lack of public information about the financing, and the number of people reportedly involved in the deal. Mulvale defended it and said it has been known since August and has been audited every step of the way. "This puts people to work in November without tax dollars." "This is hypocrisy personified," said Mulvale. Mulvale said at the end of the meeting that the Liberals will promise anything to get elected and then do all the tough programs the Tories advocated during the election. She asked people to vote for someone they know has worked for them in the past and said repeatedly, the Tories were "on track" with their policies. "I‘m asking you to go with someâ€" one you know will work with you and tell you what you need to know, rather than what you want to know just to garner another round of applause,"Mulvale said. However, when she said they were doing their job on the "disgustâ€" ing" deficit inherited from the Liberals, and that Michael Wilson had earned the respect of his peers, she was soundly booed. "To suggest that Wilson has not earned the respect of his peers is flawed...it has no relevance," she said. "It has relevance to me," shouted out one man in the crowd. People lined up at the two microâ€" phones to ask questions on everyâ€" thing from NAFTA and the controâ€" versial helicopter deal to national daycare and the environment. Brown said it was clear to her when she ran unsuccessfully against Otto Jelinek in 1988, that her predicâ€" tions were right â€" she was against free trade, the GST, and what she called the Conservative obsession with inflation. Tory economic policies. "I predicted dire results. I lost. But I was right," she said, adding it didn‘t make her happy because the country is not happy today. But she said it made her more determined to immerse herself in federal politics. Since then, she has listened to many sad stories of Canadians affected by STORE HOURS Mon.â€"Fri. 9:30 a.m.â€"9:00 p.m. Sat. 9:30 a.m.â€"6:00 p.m. Sun. 12 Noon â€" 5:00 p.m. LANCOME BONUS Al SEFARS OAKVILLE PLACE 842â€"9410 OFFER ENDS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1993 "And I‘ve had enough of this," she said, adding it has made her want to go to Ottawa to represent the conâ€" cerns of Oakville constituents. Asked how the Liberal party could control finances of the country when it cannot pay for the credit cards â€" referring to Encore travel costs â€" Brown said she was unaware of it, but would look into the matter. "We are offering a rational proâ€" gram that we think is best for Canada," she added. Malbeouf said the old style poliâ€" tics have not worked for the past 20 years. "Can you afford more taxes?" he asked, calling the Liberal plan more of the same "tax and spend; spend and tax". Willie Lambert of the NDP called NAFTA little more than an exploitaâ€" tion tool and an unemployment fixâ€" ture, noting that minimum wage in Mexico is 60 cents an hour. Limit one. bonus per customer while quantities last. Not available in all stores Hydrative, Permanent Hydrating Resource. 50 ml... $45 30 ml tube (not shown}...$30 Bonus! With any Lancome purchase of $20 or more, you‘ll receive a cosmetic bag with the following: 60 ml Galatée Douceur, Miï¬( Creme Cleanser; 60 ml Tonique Douceur, Alcoholâ€"free Freshener; Rouge Absolu, Hygrcï¬ng Longâ€"Lasting lip color; Khol Poudre, Fumeé Noire; 2.5 ml Trésor, Eau de parfum. Expect more from Sears "It‘s exploitation â€" that‘s what it is, and our party is the only one who will scrap it," he said. Harry Bright, of the Natural Law party, who once again received polite guffaws for his plans to estabâ€" lish 7,000 Yogic Flyers across the country, thanked the crowd for not "erupting" in laughter as they did at last week‘s allâ€"candidates meeting. But he did receive a laugh for his comments on eliminating the GST. Mulvale said one in four Canadians has a job related to trade and that Canada must free itself from feeling it can only trade in isoâ€" lation. "We can compete...don‘t believe all the doom and gloom. We will lead the next century," said Mulvale. "We want to abolish the GST because everyone who pays it feels bad," he said. "And we can‘t have 27â€"million Canadians paying the GST and feeling bad about it."