The Liberal party is ready for an election if Prime Minister Stephen Harper calls one in the coming weeks, Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion said Thursday.

“We’re ready. We’re well organized and we’re determined to win this election,” Dion told reporters at a news conference in Montreal.

The prime minister has said he’s considering whether an election needs to be called, a decision he expects to make in the next few weeks. Senior Conservatives have suggested Harper could pull the plug on his government as early as Tuesday after the Labour Day weekend.

Harper has sought meetings with all three opposition leaders to see if they can agree on an agenda for the fall session of Parliament, scheduled to begin Sept. 15.

He will meet Saturday with NDP Leader Jack Layton, who told CBC News on Thursday that he’ll hear what Harper has to say but expects little change to the prime minister’s agenda.

Bloc Québécois Leader Gilles Duceppe has indicated he won’t be available until Sept. 5, though sources told the Canadian Press on Thursday the two are meeting Friday and Dion has indicated he won’t be available until Sept. 9.

Harper said he is unwilling to wait until Sept. 9 to discuss whether Parliament can continue as is.

The meeting would occur a day after three federal byelections in Quebec and Ontario; a fourth byelection is slated to take place in Ontario on Sept. 22.

“These meetings are a way of saving face,” Dion said Thursday. “And he’s breaking his word to voters not to have an election.”

On Tuesday, the Prime Minister’s Office announced that Gov. Gen. Michaëlle Jean would cancel her trip to the Paralympic Games in Beijing that begin Sept. 6, a move further suggesting he will pull the plug on his current minority government and trigger a federal election.

That decision came after Harper said he wouldn’t be breaking his promise to Canadians if he calls an election this fall, a year ahead of the fixed date set by his own government.

Harper said the goal of the fixed election date - the next one being Oct. 19, 2009 - is to provide Canadians with some sense of certainty. But he said fixed election dates do not apply to minority governments.

“I think we were right not to have an election before Canadians can find out more about what this government is about,” said Dion, adding “we can see with these cuts what this government is about.”

Dion was referring to the government’s recent announcement to cut $45 million in funding for arts and culture programs, which he said he’d restore if elected.

Courtesy of:http://ca.news.yahoo.com