Politics [is] the art of pursuing common interests through... active listening, advocacy, public persuasion, compromise and negotiation.
William Ford Coaker, the father of the Commission |
The people from Newfoundland and Labrador quoted in
the Globe
and Mail on Friday described the problem facing the province today.
We are not talking about chronic overspending, an
aging population that will need more health care, or the impact of Muskrat
Falls.
The problem
is the shared attitude among the province’s opinion leaders - the ones quoted by the Globe and many more besides - that *any*
solutions to the province's financial problems are bleak and politically unacceptable.
Here are the
bits from the Globe and Mail piece, ironically by some guy named Greg
Mercer, a name he shares with the current Premier’s chief of staff:
- Political science professor Amanda Bittner: “You’re going to be making some tough choices that nobody is going to be happy with, and it’s probably going to be miserable.”
- Lawyer and cable television show host Melissa Royle Critch described the problems as “daunting” and said the debt problem was “insurmountable.”
- Progressive Conservative leader Ches Crosbie: “We are in a death spiral.”
- Outgoing Premier Dwight Ball said that borrowing to cover continued deficits will be the major challenge facing his successor.
- Economics professor Scott Lynch said,” [Dealing with the financial problem is] going to be a nasty situation. These cuts will be extremely painful.”
We can add
to that finance minister Tom Osborne who recently dismissed out of hand a proposal to
put the government’s liquor corporation in the private sector, like Alberta did
more than 20 years ago. The result would create jobs, preserve provincial tax revenues, and bring in a couple of billion dollars in the sale.
But Osborne, like all the others leading the province will brook no change in anything.
They simply want someone else to pay the bills.