People should not be afraid of their governments.
Governments should be afraid of their people.
The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
People should not be afraid of their governments.
Governments should be afraid of their people.
Gordon Weil thinks the NB Power purchase deal with Hydro-Quebec is a bad idea.
Interesting that both the pro and con for this two part series in the Telegram both come from people associated with the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies.
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Ron Ellsworth lost his bid to sit on the eastern school district board, the place where he began his short career in elected politics.
That’s hot on the heels of his humiliation at the hands of Doc O’Keefe in the race for mayor of St. John’s in September.
All that bodes extremely well for his opponents if Ron gets the Tory nod in any St. John’s seat in any upcoming provincial general election or by-election.
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Brian Lee Crowley and Tom Adams weigh in on the NB Power sale.
Among other things they not that the Lower Churchill is a dead horse owing to the current market situation:
The lesson for Newfoundlanders and Labradorians is inescapable. They should learn from the Mackenzie gas experience before supporting Premier Williams' ephemeral dream to press ahead with hydro-electric development on the Lower Churchill in a glutted market. Taxpayers should be relieved, not outraged, that Nalcor, Newfoundland's Crown energy company, is not out in the market trying to sell costly power right now.
In the long term, the economics of Lower Churchill development may well turn around, particularly if the market for its environmental characteristics becomes sufficiently rich to overcome the costs of remoteness. But that's for another day.
Perhaps one day soon local reporters will stop carrying the transmission line line as if it was anything vaguely close to reality.
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Sandy Collins, former executive assistant to Paul Oram is the provincial Conservative candidate in Terra Nova in the by-election yet to be called.
Orange Update: Robyn Brentnall is the New Democrat in the running.
Red Update: The Liberal candidate is John Baird. He was elected in a nomination fight on October 17.
Two things:
1. Remember what your humble e-scribbler said about a party that can only offer up former executive assistants as candidates, and,
2. The people in Terra Nova district can vote today by special ballot even though no election has been called.
Every person can request a special ballot including:
- an elector who has reason to believe that he/she will have difficulty voting on polling day perhaps due to work or personal commitments;
- a student who is in attendance at a recognized educational institution either inside or outside the Province;
- an elector temporarily residing outside the Province for a continuous period of less than 6 months who is unable to attend at either the advance or regular poll;
- an elector who is incarcerated in a correctional institution or in detention at the Waterford Hospital;
- a patient in hospital who will be unable to attend either the advance or regular poll.
All you have to do is contact the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, otherwise known as Elections Newfoundland and Labrador.
There’s a form to complete and send in. You can find it in pdf format here.
They’ll send you back a voter kit which you can use to cast your vote right now.
But there’s no election yet, you may be thinking.
Doesn’t matter.
Under section 86(4) of the Elections Act, voters who meet those criteria above can ask for a special ballot no more than four weeks before an election or by-election is called. Well, you and the rest of the world don’t know when the thing will be called but we know when the earliest date is that it could be called.
That would be the day Paul Oram threw his teddy in the corner. Any of you who knew Paul was going could have already voted.
But since the rest of us found out later on, you should be able to get a ballot and vote right now.
There is no legal reason for the Chief Electoral Officer (former Tory party president Paul Reynolds) to refuse you the opportunity to vote under section 86(4).
And don’t worry if you don't like the party but not the candidate. [Updated to reflect that all candidates are now in place, barring any independents]
Under section 86.4, you can write in the name of the political party you want to vote for instead of the name of a particular person.
Voting is your right.
Now that’s pretty much the same thing said in a post about the Straits, but you know, it is not very often people get to protest a completely foolish electoral law twice in the space of a month or so. In the Straits, people were a bit fried so a protest vote was possible.
In Terra Nova, townies may not be able to judge which way the local wind is blowing.
This time everyone can take advantage of the oddest election rules in the civilised world. Only in Newfoundland and Labrador could you get to vote before an election has been called.
Vote early for the candidate of your choice.
But vote.
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The province’s auditor general release a report last week to update issues covered by some of his previous reports.
or did he?
Your humble e-scribbler dutifully noted the release when it appeared and flagged it for later examination. returning to the site today, your humble e-scribbler found that the release had mysteriously disappeared.
There are traces of it, though, just in case you were thinking the old boy had finally lost it entirely.
On the government website you can find the archive of AG news releases.
The month of October is there but underneath it is nary a thing. Odd that, given that in other months where nothing was said, not even the name of the silent month is noted.
On the AG website, the name of the report is there - right at the top of the pile - but the report itself is not.
Interesting, wot?
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Hard across the province on CBC Radio, Tuesday afternoon, a woman in Plum Point reminding the host of CBC radio’s On the Go that many parts of the province still live in what host Ted Blades had referred to as the Dark Ages of the Internet or some such.
Dial-up.
Not broadband.
There is no modern, high-speed access in said community because of the costs of bringing such tools to sparsely populated areas of the province. The woman interviewed talked of a federal government initiative to help expand coverage of the information superhighway to places like Plum Point.
The lovely town of Plum Point is interesting because it is in the same neck of the woods once represented in the House of Assembly by Trevor Taylor. Trev represent the Straits and White Bay North and across the highway, his buddy Wally young still represents the district of St. Barbe in which Plum Point is located. The boys were touted back in January 2001 as the start of a Tory wave sweeping the province.
Odd the number of people scurrying to claim that the opposite is not true now, but that’s another issue.
The only thing Trevor listed as an accomplishment as he hastily ran from cabinet and local politics a month ago was a provincial government plan to give a bunch of private sector companies a wad of public cash so they could stretch broadband access across the island to places that sounded suspiciously like Plum Point.
Now Plum Point is also no ordinary town as these things go for many more reasons than the fact that it is near where Trevor used to rule.
Plum Point is also home to the local member of the House of Assembly, one Wallace Young. He owns the local motel. His official biography also reminds us that his wife is a teacher who “has seen first-hand the effects of teacher cuts and larger classrooms”. Old news or foreshadowing?
Anyway, perhaps Wally’s good lady wife knows, as well, the value of Internet access for local schools.
Maybe someone should ask Wally and his wife about that.
And while they’re at it wonder how it is that this glorious fibreoptic deal Trevor was so proud of could benefit Greenland but not the lovely community of Plum Point.
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A few years ago Roger Grimes took a royal roasting for telling an off-colour joke at a small, private gathering of business people in New York.
It was inappropriate, to put it mildly.
That’s why it so nice to see the decorum Grimes’ successor has brought to the office as he welcomed the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall yesterday in St. John’s.
This came shortly after a plug - completely out of place - for the Danny Dam, by the by:
Hopefully your experience will be contrary to the experience of Sir Winston Churchill who when asked if he had any complaints after his tour of the United States in the 1930s said, and I quote him, “the toilet paper was too thin and the newspapers were too fat.”
Yes, there is nothing like a Royal Visit to make a joke about the ‘loo. And if the thing is broadcast live on national television, so much the better.
Don’t even bother with the fact that the quote is only attributed to Sir Winston.
The rest of the speech is about Hisself, of course. His time at Oxford. Miniskirts. Popular music from the mid 1960s. And his staff, fish and chips and Coronation Street.
Incidentally, the applause at the front end of the speech might have to do with the fact that the relatively small crowd in the venue (600 out of a seating capacity 10 times that) was crammed full of the governing party’s caucus and staffers.
His capper for the crapper speech – of course – was a half-story about the naming of the stadium, something Hisself said he had done. Mile One was the half of the tale he told. What Hisself didn’t say is the name he wanted but everyone else rejected.
The applause was restrained, even for such a loyal and faithful audience.
It all makes you wonder who is writing speeches for Hisself these days. This one was about as cliche-laden, stereotyped and – as the quote shows – as grossly inappropriate as can be imagined. He’s been known to deliver the odd clunker or six, including one in Toronto where his flat tone must have had his security detail making sure to keep an eye on the sharp objects and the high ledges. Then there was the mess from the now legendary January 5, 2004 speech.
But this one? Makes you wonder what the Governor General and HRH, the Prince of Wales tittered over immediately after the Churchill “joke”.
At least if Hisself didn’t write it they can correct the problem by finding someone who can write speeches for the next one. You see, speech-writing is like a lot of things: you are usually better off not doing it yourself. Experience counts.
The speech also stood in stark contrast to the other two, one by the Prime Minister and the other by the Prince of Wales which were light in tone and charming in content. And lookit, if Stephen Harper – one of the worst speech readers even to live at 24 Sussex Drive - comes off sounding better than you do, you know you are doing something wrong.
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Public submissions on MHA severance pay, as with pensions, were few. Those who did comment on MHA severance pay felt that it should be one week for each year of service instead of the current one month, to make it more in line with other severance payment provisions in the province.How few?
How can it be that Prince Edward Island is getting 15% of its energy needs met by wind power but all Newfoundland and Labrador has are two small projects pumping 27 megawatts each and a“demonstration project” at Ramea?
And that’s it!
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1. A link to a speech on the proposal to turn Newfoundland and Labrador into a private sector energy corporation. Note the list of specific goals established by cabinet. Note that cabinet could use those goals to measure any proposal against but – more to the point – note that every Newfoundlanders and Labradorians could use the same list to measure the proposal.
Now let me compare that to my energy mega-corporation checklist from 2005.
or was it 2007?
Ummm.
Errr.
Just a sec.
Must be here somewhere.
Anyway, while the hunt continues…
2. Try this link from last February to a proposal to privatize Hydro-Quebec. Talk about inefficient! But even that inefficiency is nothing compared to the mess known as NB Power.
Meanwhile, wait for any of the hysterical anti-sale opponents to give even the vaguest clue as to how NB residents could get lower power rates and pay down the NB Power debt without getting rid of the debt pig company as a Crown corporation?
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The current issue of The Scope includes a front page feature on wind energy in the province or – to put it more accurately - the lack of any serious development of wind energy.
Maybe one of the answers is that everyone talks about an island when in fact there is a huge landmass on the mainland potion of the province that is ripe for wind energy development. Heck it’s even got a connection so people can ship the power to where it is needed on the eastern part of the continent.
There’s just one obstacle.
Care to guess what it is?
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Following are links to some stories on the memorandum of understanding to sell of NB Power to Hydro-Quebec:
1. There’s strong positive reaction side Quebec to news of the MOU. La Presse Canadienne from metromontreal.
2. A 30% drop in electricity rates could save the Edmundston pulp and paper mill. Bet people in Corner Brook would be looking hard at that right now if they were in the same spot, not to mention what would have happened in Stephenville or Grand falls-Windsor under the same circumstances.
3. NB Premier Shawn Graham accuses NB Opposition leader …err…Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams of misleading the people of New Brunswick. From the Gleaner.
4. A long term rate cap is needed in New Brunswick, according to some analysts. Considering the province has the highest residential electricity rates in Canada that would seem to be a good point. maybe opponents of the deal – including the gigantic facebook site - could explain how to keep NB Power and lower public debt and reduce rates simultaneously.
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Danny Williams muses on his political past and future in the weekend Telegram. All of it is very much old hat for the locals after six years, but the mainlanders might find it revealing, especially those who are looking for some perspective on NB Power.
The constant negativity the Premier displays really starts to get wearisome after a while.
Relentless negativity. There’s hardly anything positive to the guy. And then he accuses others of always harping on the bad stuff.
It’s all vintage Danny: things were so much better (for him, of course) when he was in the private sector and didn’t have to be accountable to anyone. If only things could be like that now, with no criticism or complaints from anyone, all following dutifully behind - unquestioningly - and jumping at his every bleat.
He doesn’t even seem to take heart that he still has the Fan Klub, as the comments section to the story shows. Some are so smitten with the aging leader that it seems only a matter of time before they start holding conventions, like Elvis groupies. There they’ll be, some with their hair in Mullet Danny and others in the Silver Fox Danny of later years, either version – of course - perfectly parted down the middle.
Either version always tanned, as if fresh from yet another vacation. Of all Canadian premiers, only Richard Hatfield spent more time out of the province he ran during the course of a year than Danny.
Perhaps they’ll hold shoulder twitching contests and if he should deign to make an appearance perhaps the Fan Klubbers will be like Ontario and fall on their knees, on a go forward basis. Can’t you just see it? There he is in the director’s chair, a lone spotlight glinting off his cufflinks as he takes questions from the audience about his career as a politician who loathes being a politician. What was it like in episode one, when you did battle with the evil emperor of Canada that first time? they will ask.
Then they will mouth the lines they have memorized from countless viewings of his previous scrums as he repeats his answer, complete with the quite-franklys at just the right spot. All designed, it seems, to send their Fan Klubber hearts a-twitter.
Sometimes all you can do is chuckle at it all.
Some of his fans no doubt have not heard all his past rants about what he would like do, if only he had the time.
Like no free speech in the legislature. That’s right. He once mused about stripping the legislature of the right of members to speak their minds without fear of persecution. A right hard won centuries ago by English parliamentarians and cherished by all elected to such a body ever since.
Well, all but one, so it seems.
It’s hard for Williams to get things done, apparently, when half his time is taken up with pesky things like speaking to reporters - or editorial boards too? - or blocked off with nuisances like going to cabinet and caucus meetings.
In the past, he has worried about whistleblowers and what they might get up to if they are not properly controlled. No mention this time of the headache of trying to keep his speeches from being made public. You know, speeches that were in public in the first place. These are the sorts of things that prevent from doing more.
Uneasy lies the head, he is wont to remind us all constantly.
If only people would focus on the positives instead of the negatives, he complains. Danny has been on this complaint track quite a bit this year. Much more so than usual, even for him. Ranting at Randy Simms seemed like only yesterday.
But thankfully – for the Fan Klub and Tony’s sanity - he’s going to stick around in a job he evidently despises for some totally incomprehensible, unexplained reason.
Unless, of course…
"I'm definitely going to hang around to see if I can get it [the Lower Churchill] done," said the premier.
But Williams said he's not going to stick around forever "to beat a dead horse" if a deal cannot be sealed, nor will he sign a bad deal for the sake of getting one done while in office.
Dead horse, eh?
Keep clicking those heels, Tony.
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Criminals are now writing columns, presumably from inside their American jail cells.
Yes, Insta-peer Conrad Black has a by-line for a piece on the monarchy.
Quebec and Newfoundland have a string of politicos with criminal records all of whom could do either court or political reporting. Maybe that would help solve the Post’s financial woes.
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So, did Jane Taber’s informant actually do air quotes around the word “pollster”, or did she add that for extra effect on her own?
You know, a creative-reporter-license kinda thing?
That’s a funny thing about something someone is supposed to have said. There are no quotations marks.
Must be something about Connies - like Jane’s informant - that make them telegraph their fears.
Meanwhile, in Frenchman’s Cove, Newfoundland, at least one provincial Connie must be clicking his heels together frantically and chanting ‘There’s no place like home” at the top of his lungs.
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So if there really had been a cultural genocide, as the Societe St-Jean Baptiste claims, there wouldn’t be anyone speaking French in Quebec , would there?
Some people just need to portray themselves as victims for some unfathomable reason.
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Just in time for Halloween, there’s a remake of an old horrorshow: the local economist who makes dubious assessments that seem a wee bit tinged by things non-economical.
Used to be Wade Locke was the regime-supportive economist of record.
Now it’s Jim Feehan, a guy with a record of producing dubious bits of research on partisan political subjects. He also co-wrote a paper on another local partisan favourite, the 1969 Churchill Falls contract. The article was titled “The Origins of a Coming Crisis” but at no point in the article is the crisis ever described. That should make you scratch your head just a wee bit in scepticism.
Anyway…
Jim Feehan told local CBC radio listeners Friday morning that while this New Brunswick power deal looks like a good one in that rates will be stabilised after a series of increases, public debt will be hacked down and pulp and paper mills will benefit from lower rates, this deal isn’t really so good because once it is sold, NB Power can never come back again.
In other words, even though this deal is great from the standpoint of an economist, people should maybe think twice because of things the economist commenting knows nothing about.
Like say law.
You see, as the Fortis expropriation in this province demonstrates, even in the worst possible case in New Brunswick, there is nothing like this that can’t be undone.
But why would you want to expropriate or buy back a debt pig like NB Power if the new arrangement delivers all the economic benefits the economist noted but downplayed?
Well, there’s a question for us to ponder as we wait for the great news in Labrador Feehan’s predecessor once predicted. In the meantime, don’t hold your breath expect an answer to that one from Feehan.
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When Gushue’s book is finished, make sure you get a copy.
in the meantime, check John’s blog post and leave him some words of encouragement and support.
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