The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
06 January 2020
Patronage and pork #nlpoli
09 December 2019
Political Foote Ball #nlpoli
Since 2003, the legislature has become more about political theatre than the public interest. This past sitting of the House proves how much that is so.
Public discussion of policy issues in Newfoundland and Labrador takes place inside an echo chamber. It tends to stay inside arbitrary, artificial boundaries. Participants ride their hobby horses and ignore or try to shout down anything that contradicts their assumptions. often comments are not about what is actually going on. They emphasise the trivial and superficial – the spats with Gerry Byrne and Tom Osborne – and ignore the far more serious. Much of what they do is absurd: they chase Chris Mitchelmore, knowing that Dwight Ball actually made the decision.
Only the Premier can approve appointments to the senior public service. |
30 January 2017
Duff in the hole encore #nlpoli
The CBC has gone off to the mainland to get Duff Conacher to make a comment about the need for political finance reform in Newfoundland and Labrador.
Three observations:
1. There is a desperate need for campaign finance reform in Newfoundland and Labrador. SRBP has been writing about it relentlessly for a dozen years. By comparison, the conventional media simply couldn't be arsed to cover the subject more often than not.
When they did notice something was amiss, as in 2006, they were inclined to follow the line set by the government-of-the-day rather than have a look at the facts for themselves. What they would have discovered in the massive patronage scheme that ran here between 1996 and 2006, for example, was that the the level of misuse of public funds went *up* after 2003.
And after that they'd have found all sorts of other odd things. Donations by companies getting hefty contracts from government? Absolutely, a problem. Tired of writing about it. Finance minister and later premier Tom Marshall financed his entire election campaign in 2011 out of a series of seven cheques from construction companies all of which did work for the government as Marshall shovelled cash into capital works at an unprecedented - and unsustainable - rate.
But what about political donations by town councils and the police? Or what about a politician who ran a charity while he was in office that was funded by his government salary)?
2, Conacher knows shag-all about what is happening here, as some of his previous comments have shown. That actually weakens the case for campaign finance reform here since he is going to miss more than he hits.
Duff's good for the penetrating insights into the obvious - we need reform because it lends itself to corruption - but as with the CBC story his ignorance of the particulars makes him look like a bit of a goof at best or a blind nob at worst. You see, Duff's been stonily silent on far worse things between 2003 and 2015 than anything he said before 2003 or since 2015.
3. Stunned as me arse or what? You really have to shake your head in disbelief at Dwight Ball's comments in the CBC story. His election platform included a promise to change the campaign finance laws. Instead of playing that up, Ball goes on the defensive making he look like he opposes finance reform.
That's the kind of stuff that must leave everyone outside of the Premier's Office banging their heads on the wall in frustration. Inside the office, it's likely high-fives all around as the boss nailed another one to the wall.
Nailed his thumb more like it.
04 January 2017
Taxing our understanding #nlpoli
All sorts of people are talking about these two things as if they are the most important things in the world and the most horrible things in the world.
Let's look at the book tax.
16 November 2016
The Sunshine List Case hits the court #nlpoli
McLeod is compiling the list because both the former administration and the current one have committed to publishing one but haven't done so yet. Several other provinces publish similar lists of public employees who make more than $100,000 a year.
The union's says it's okay to disclose the position title and income but McLeod shouldn't have the name of the person holding the job. It's a insane argument since there is no practical way to withhold either of the three elements of the request - name, position, salary - such that a person couldn't make up the list after a couple of requests. It's an insane argument from because the unions don't oppose disclosure of the name and position separately from the salary. Well, at least they haven't objected so far.
23 September 2016
Reforming the way government works #nlpoli
Derpy Conservative David Brazil dismissed Coffey in an interview with NTV News because Coffey has no connection to the provincial public service. He's an "outsider" supposedly. The facts are irrelevant: Coffey spent a couple of decades as a highly successful Crown prosecutor before he set out on his own about 16 years ago.
Dipper boss Earle McCurdy thinks Coffey is "lacking the right qualifications" although McCurdy had no idea what the right qualifications would be other than, say, not being Liberal.
For his part, Premier Dwight Ball told NTV that Coffey's job will now involve "challenging" the province's public servants so that the government has the best information possible when making decisions.
Such is the shallow nature of provincial politics these days. Even Dwight Ball's comments don't accurately reflect what is going on.
06 September 2016
The development of our country #nlpoli
The Churchill Falls power plant cost a little over $1.0 billion (about $6.1 billion in 2015) to build between 1969 and 1971. With an installed generating capacity of almost 6,000 megawatts, it was one of the largest if not the largest hydroelectric plant in operation at the time.
Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corporation delivered the project on budget, achieved initial operating capacity five months ahead of schedule and finished the whole project a year ahead of schedule.
Revenge for the humiliation of Churchill Falls remains at the centre of provincial politics, as it has since the late 1970s. Redress of the grievance has been the most common term for the political goal of the Newfoundlanders, but as Danny Williams and the provincial Conservatives made it out in 2010, revenge was really their burning passion. Muskrat Falls was not merely Williams' legacy. It was the means by which Newfoundlanders would break what he called Quebec's stranglehold on his province's economic future in Labrador.
In this pair of posts, we will look first at Churchill Falls. The second, coming tomorrow, will look at the years since 1972, culminating in Muskrat Falls.
22 August 2016
Message Control #nlpoli
One of the big ideas in the book is that politicians these days are very keen on something called message control. They have a fetish for consistency so that everyone is singing the same things from the same hymn book, as the metaphor goes. It's an old idea and there are many reasons why politicians like to be consistent. For one thing, repetition across many means of communication increases the likelihood the message gets through.
On another level, though, consistent messaging means ultimately that actions match words. The message of the words must match the message in the action that makes those words real.
In that sense, message consistency is about credibility and values and trust. Politicians like to tell people what they believe in and how they will make decisions. Voters don't spend a lot of time thinking about government so they want someone they can trust to make decisions they agree with or can generally trust are the right ones. When political analysts talk about "connecting with voters" that's what they are getting at.
The real connection voters need to see is the one between the words used to make promises with the actions that follows. That connection makes the words credible 0 literally, believable - the next time there are words about what the politician will do.
Anything that attacks a politician's credibility is bad and when - as in Ball's case - the wounds are all self-inflicted, then you know there is a huge problem.
So why did Dwight Ball fire John Ottenheimer?
15 August 2016
Policy Stagnation #nlpoli
27 July 2016
Good-bye John #nlpoli
We told you about this last July when Paul Davis appointed political operative John Ottenheimer to replace political operative Len Simms as head of the provincial government's housing corporation. After the Ottenheimer appointment, Davis and the Conservatives kept going with the questionable appointments. The swap of the chief judge in Provincial Court remains highly suspicious and unexplained, as does the sudden firing of the High Sheriff. The former is one the new Liberal administration genuinely could not do anything about. The former High Sheriff is now suing the provincial government for wrongful dismissal.
The Liberals could have and should have done something about all the others. It was a way of setting a new tone for their administration and demonstrating that things that are wrong cannot stand. For some unknown reason, Dwight Ball would not commit to reversing the Ottenheimer appointment - on principle - when Davis made it a year ago. When he took office, Dwight Ball decided to leave not only Ottenheimer but all the other Conservatives appointees in place. And when he unveiled the new appointments commission, Ball had a third opportunity to set a new standard for government appointments by getting rid of the old, wrong ones.
He didn't.
Now, Ball has punted John Ottenheimer. We do not know why. No one from the provincial government did any interviews. The minister responsible for the housing corporation issued a news release announcing Ottenheimer's replacement. Everything else that we know - including the size of Ottenheimer's severance - came from Ottenheimer himself.
16 May 2016
Responsible Government #nlpoli
Jerry is from Botwood. Last fall the people on Exploits district elected him as their member in the House of Assembly. He's been a around the block a bit. His official biography says he worked for Abitibi for 30 years and since 1997 he's been active on his town council and in some volunteer groups.
Last week Jerry said something in the House of Assembly that got some folks upset on Twitter. That helped get him some media attention - here's the TransCon and CBC versions - and so the fellow has been getting a bit of a rough ride.
12 January 2016
Pressure #nlpoli
They do not see a connection between the money they receive and the action of earning it. The money that flows into the collective pot – the government treasury – seems to appear by magic.
Paint two fences and you could get twice as much money. Or paint another bigger fence and you could get a bit more, Depending on how big the fence was and how much more paint you needed and how much more time it took you to finish painting, as a result, you could get more money for painting the fence.
And if everybody in your community painted fences or had the same basic connection between labour and reward, you could all understand it when someone asked you to give a bit of your fence-painting money so that you could buy a fire-truck to fight fires in your town. That extra bit of money for the community is a portion of your individual earnings from fence-painting or ditch-digging or tree cutting, or whatever it was that you did to make money.
But what about a place where, in addition to that cash, you all shared in something like money that came from producing oil?
12 October 2015
The ABCs of ABC #nlpoli
In 2004, Danny Williams fought for three months against a federal government decision that had been settled – at least for the federal government – earlier in the year as part of the usual budget cycle.
Williams got the money the federal government had allocated but won the domestic war for public opinion.
In 2007, Williams and his provincial Conservatives launched a second political holy war against the federal government’s budget decisions. Williams waged a much longer war, lost it, but was widely credited at home with a victory.
There were other similarities
18 September 2015
Cabinet control of Crown corporations #nlpoli
Ostensibly, they are a reward for achieving corporate performance targets. Given that Nalcor has had some serious problems with its capital works and maintenance program over the past decade, it is rather surprising to see people getting great gobs of cash while the company hasn’t been performing.
Ostensibly, the bonuses are part of a compensation package that keeps the company competitive. That’s how Nalcor chief executive Ed Martin justified the compensation now that we understand they are the chief cause of the cost increases Nalcor is using to justify its request for an increase in electricity rates this year.
11 September 2015
Near the bottom of a very big rabbit hole #nlpoli
Thursday was one of those days where you felt like you had dropped down the rabbit hole with Alice.
Or maybe had indulged a bit too heavily in some mind-altering substance.
There was Lorraine Michael on the radio complaining that Muskrat Falls would likely cause environmental problems through the release of methyl mercury. Let’s be clear: there is nothing we know about Muskrat Falls today on any subject that wasn’t known when Lorraine endorsed Muskrat Falls. Yet, there is Lorraine trying to make it sound like she never, ever supported this megaproject.
28 August 2015
Chainsaw Earle keeps austerity on the table #nlpoli
NDP leader Earle McCurdy called the province’s major open line show on Thursday and by the sounds of things he hasn’t backed off the position that the size of the government’s financial problems will mean more cuts.
Sure he said he was opposed to austerity, but what Earle did say was that the government will have to cut jobs, lay people off and slash spending to cope with its financial problems.
Potato, potato, Earle.
29 July 2015
As Karl’s mom would say… #nlpoli
The Conservatives came to power in 2003 promising to do things a new way.
People thought that meant the Tories would do away with the practice of stuffing people into fat government jobs based solely on their political connections.
And so the Conservatives proved they were different by appointing failed candidate Joan Cleary to run the Bull Arm Corporation. Cleary had absolutely no relevant experience, but they owed her some pork and so she got the high-paid job.
27 July 2015
Smoke, mirrors, and Harper’s senate moratorium #nlpoli #cdnpoli
Heading into an election and with the three major federal parties within five or six points of each other in the opinion polls, the Prime Minister has decided that this is the time to talk about reforming the senate.
Stephen Harper said last week that he will not make any more appointments to the senate. His plan is to create a crisis and then either reform the senate or abolish it in the ensuing melee among and with the provincial premiers.
The New Democrats are flattered. They have already advocated abolishing the senate altogether. This is a popular idea in Quebec where the NDP are threatened by the resurgence of the Bloc Quebecois. The NDP won its current status as official opposition in 2011 with a surprising haul of seats in the province as the Bloc vote collapsed and its supporters looked for a politically friendly home.
The sovereignists found a welcome embrace from the NDP. To the extent that anyone else in the country thinks about the senate, it is likely only as the object of derision given the recent scandals over spending. Few have thought through the implication of the NDP plan. In Newfoundland and Labrador, for example, it would cut in half the province’s representation in Ottawa.
10 July 2015
Overcooked Ambition #nlpoli
Nameless Conservative Party insiders predict that without Ches Crosbie as a candidate, the federal Conservative party will be crippled in Newfoundland and Labrador in the next election.
Supposedly Ches could have raised $100,000 dollars already. But without Ches, they won’t raise a penny. Volunteers will stay home, too.
But here’s the thing:
CBC’s story on Thursday is essentially more of the same completely preposterous Ches-the-Saviour-of-the-Conservative-Nation fairy tale that John and Jane Crosbie have been shovelling since Canada Day.
28 April 2015
Contending Political Strategies #nlpoli
Starting last Friday, the ironically-named Conservatives currently running the place started holding a series of “pre-budget” announcements.
They started with news that to deal with the massive financial crisis they would be dumping 77 and a half teaching positions in the provincial school system. About twice that many would retire, so the school boards in the province would only hire enough teachers to fill half the empty slots. To make that fit with the declining student enrolment, the school boards would adjust the allowed class sizes by one student per teacher for grades 4 to 6 and by two students per teacher for grades 7 to 9.
Other than that, no change in staffing.
On Monday, the finance minister announced that the massive financial problem the government is facing led the government to cut the public service by zero real people.