The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
25 February 2014
Non-voters and Influence #nlpoli
An evil that causes “problems”.
Russell Wangersky found them and wrote about them this past weekend.
They are the people who do not vote.
16 November 2012
A friendly audience #nlpoli
Kathy Dunderdale defended the Muskrat Falls project at a speech on Wednesday night, according to cbc.ca/nl’s story.
That’s an odd phrase given that Dunderdale was speaking to a Tory party fundraiser, as the headline noted. That would be the textbook definition of a friendly audience for any talk about Muskrat Falls.
But if you look at the record of political donations you can see some rather interesting things.
19 December 2011
Party Political Finance: much more to read #nlpoli #cdnpoli
The Telegram took a very light look on Saturday at the most recent figures on political contributions released by the provincial elections office a couple of months ago.
For some reason, the Telly singled out Aliant for its record of donations even though the telecommunications company is by no means the big story in the 2010 figures or indeed of the recent public record of party donations.
If you want a more detailed analysis, then check these posts from SRBP and labradore:
- labradore: “A tale of two cities”. Compares St. John’s and Halifax and patterns of political donations. (16 October 2011)
- labradore: “The tradition continues” (08 October 2011) The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary Association likes to give money to the province’s Tories.
- labradore: “A donation has been made on your behalf”. Municipalities in the province make political donations to the governing Conservatives and the municipal politicians behind the use of public funds don’t seem troubled at the idea. (15 September 2011)
- labradore: “The amazing, atrophying democracy (II)”
- labradore: “The amazing atrophying democracy” A district by district assessment of donation patterns, especially the districts where no one gave money at all. (07 September 2011)
- SRBP: “The joy of political giving: look for the union label” (07 September 2011) Forget Aliant. The single largest donation in 2010 was the 20K a Toronto-based union gave to the provincial New Democrats.
- SRBP: “The joy of political giving: if you want to build it, they will give” (07 September 2011) The province’s construction industry had a very interesting pattern of political donations.
- SRBP: “The joy of political giving: punch in the bake edition” Contributions to the governing Tory party included the company that produces Republic of Doyle, and which gets quite a hefty financial contribution itself from the provincial government to help make the series.
- srbp -
18 October 2011
Follow the money: political finance edition #nlpoli
If you have eyes, be prepared to have them popped by labradore’s latest comparison of party financing.
He looks at the pattern of corporate political donations in metro Halifax and metro St. John’s from 2005 to 2009. The results are startling. In a region with a smaller population, the corporate sector in St. John’s gave more cash and they gave it disproportionately to the party in power.
Add that bit of information to a post on Monday that showed just how much the corporate sector gave in just a single year, namely 2010.
In 2010, the governing Progressive Conservatives raised $690,000 in reportable contributions, versus the Liberals $31,000 and the NDP's $59,000. That is the highest amount the Tories have ever raised in an off-election year.
Of the PC total that year, fully $383,000 — over 55% — came from business donors in the greater St. John's area.
And just to further refine those numbers, bear in mind that of the $690,000, the Tories got $235,000 or thereabouts from one sector: the construction industry.
- srbp -
07 September 2011
The Joy of Political Giving: Look for the Union label
The single biggest political donation, bar none in 2010 did not come from any private sector business.
It came from the United Steelworkers of America (Toronto, On).
$20,000.
That’s from the most recent figures released by the chief electoral office for the province. They gave the same amount in 2009 while in 2008, the United Food and Commercial Workers, of Washington DC gave the provincial NDP $10,000.
If you barred corporate and union donations to political parties in Newfoundland and labrador and forced the parties to raise money from individuals, the entire political party system would collapse.
At least then we could rebuild it an an infinitely more democratic basis than the one that sits there today.
- srbp -
The Joy of Political Giving: if you want to build it, they will give
Construction, design and engineering companies gave the provincial Conservatives $239,725 in political donations in 2010, according to figures from the province’s chief electoral office.
Companies in the design, engineering and construction field gave a mere $3, 950 to the Liberal Party and none to the New Democrats.
- srbp -
07 February 2008
The tale of the tape
American political campaigns are expensive affairs with paid staffers and heavy expenses across the continent.
Hilary Clinton and Barack Obama each raised US$100 million in 2007 and, as Associated Press reports, Obama has raised another $7.6 million since Super Tuesday. He raised $32 million in January 2008 alone.
Meanwhile, Hilary loaned her campaign $5.0 million from her own personal funds to keep the fight going in the run up to Super Tuesday.
At a more mundane level, consider that pretty well every major political campaign these days has some form of campaign store. It started out in the 2004 presidential campaign with Howard Dean and online fundraising, most notably through cafepress.com. Sir Robert just opened his own tchochke emporium. cough. cough.
Since Dean paved the way, democraticstuff.com has taken on the market for merchandise geared specifically for candidates for just one party. That's how big the political market for geegaws and online fundraising has become in four short years. Go to any Democratic candidate's website and odds are the "store" link will lead you back to a d-stuff.