Fabian Manning says feds believe Canada ends at Quebec - Action News
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Fabian Manning says feds believe Canada ends at Quebec

Senator Fabian Manning says Newfoundland and Labrador is still paying for Danny Williams's 2008 ABC campaign against the federal Conservatives, and faces other huge problems in Ottawa.

Says there's little 1st-hand knowledge of the Atlantic fishery at top levels in Ottawa

Senator Fabian Manning told CBC Radio's Fisheries Broadcast that Newfoundland and Labrador is still paying for Danny Williams's 2008 "ABC" campaign against the federal Conservatives, and that the rest of Atlantic Canada is also having a hard time in Ottawa.

Senator Fabian Manning says not only is his home province of Newfoundland and Labrador still paying for Danny Williams's2008 ABCcampaign against the federal Conservatives, but he hascome to learn the rest of Atlantic Canada is having a hard time in Ottawa,too.

In an interview with CBC Radio's Fisheries Broadcast, Manning who was appointed to the Senate in 2009, after serving one term asMP for Avalon riding said even people in his own Conservative Party know very little about Atlantic Canada.

The Anything But Conservative campaign was launched leading up to the 2008 federal election. (CBC)
He said Williams's tactic to punish Stephen Harper with the Anything But Conservativecampaignin the 2008 election over a broken Conservative promise to exclude oil revenues from the equalization formula is still having repercussionssix years later.

"We would be naive if we think that didn't exist here. It absolutely exists," said Manning, who lost his own seat in 2008, one of the victims of the ABC campaign that shut out federal Conservative candidates in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Manning said that before he was elected as an MP in 2006, "I was always under the impression, as many Newfoundlanders and Labradorians are, that the people here in Ottawa that make the decisions here felt that Canada ends at Halifax."

He said seeing Ottawa up close has changed his mind.

"I strongly believe that many of the people that make the decisions here in Ottawa believe that Canada ends at the Quebec border and these are within our own party, in the bureaucracy here," Manning said.

"I'm not trying to say it's one group or another, it's pretty well everybody."

'They have never seen the Atlantic Ocean'

Manning was asked to respond tocriticism from Liberal MP Scott Simms that Manning has done little to advocate for the fishing industry from the Senate chamber.

Manning, who criticized Liberal MPs from his own province for ignoring a standing committee on fisheries, said there's little first-hand knowledge of the Atlantic fishery at the top levels of power in Ottawa.

I've been around this game too long now to not know that without a voice here at the table we are at a major disadvantage.- Senator Fabian Manning

"We have people that make decisions in relation to the fishery, such as these ones that offer advice to deputy ministers and ministers, such as with the shrimp fishery here, [who] operate on the Rideau Canal they have never seen the Atlantic Ocean, and that's negative for us," said Manning.

PMO defends record in Atlantic region

Jason MacDonald, the prime minister's chief spokesman, countered Manning's claims in a statement that pointed out the federal government's record on "building a stronger and more prosperous Atlantic Canada" through trade and targeted spending.

"For instance, when New Brunswickers told us that we needed to invest in their Via Rail route, we listened," MacDonald said in a statement to CBC News.

"Whether through small craft harbour investments, highway improvements, airport infrastructure investments, economic development through ACOA, heritage investment like P.E.I.'s Confederation 150 celebrations, investments in regional hydro power through Muskrat Falls, the historic national shipbuilding program located in this region, the list goes on, we have always listened to Atlantic Canadians."

Manning, meanwhile, underscored that he continually runs into problems created by the war that Williams, a Progressive Conservative, waged against the federal Tories six years ago.

"There's no doubt in my mind that the ABC campaign, we pay a price for that, and people can shrug it off and say, 'That's just an excuse,' but I've been around this game too long now to not know that without a voice here at the table we are at a major disadvantage," Manning said.

"We can't hide that."

Even before the ABC campaign that cost him his seat in the House of Commons, Manning had had a difficult history with Williams.

In 2005, amid a dispute over the province's crab fishery, Manning was thrown out of the provincial Progressive Conservative caucus for speaking out against government policy.

'We are on the outside'

Almost a decade later and now working in Ottawa, Manning said he is still dealing with the consequences of Williams's ABC campaign even though he is inthe governing party.

"I fully understand how this system works, and this system works best when you have somebody within the government circle, and we are on the outside, there's no doubt in my mind about that."

In the 2011 federal election, the Conservatives elected only one MP in Newfoundland and Labrador Peter Penashue in the riding of Labrador. Penashue, though, was dogged by revelations of illegal campaign donations and resigned in 2013 to run in a byelection that he lostto Liberal Yvonne Jones.

Manning left his Senate seat in 2011 in anattempt to win back his seat of Avalon, but was defeated. Harper appointed him to the Senate again shortly after that election.