-srbp-
The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
14 July 2012
13 July 2012
Provincial government working Hebron dispute outside terms of benefits agreement #nlpoli
Lots of words came from Premier Kathy Dunderdale and natural resources minister Jerome Kennedy in their dispute over construction of a major module for the Hebron project.
What became pretty clear – if you listen - is that the provincial government is trying to squeeze some resolution to the dispute outside the provisions of the Hebron Benefits Agreement.
Muskrat Falls Money Quote 3 #nlpoli
Premier Kathy Dunderdale, Muskrat Falls lover, from a scrum on Thursday:
Dunderdale said due diligence is more important than artificial timelines but that the two sides are "considerably closer" to an agreement. A deal will be done before her government debates Muskrat Falls this fall, she said, "sometime before November, I hope."
November, hopefully.
For the debate or the deal.
Whatever.
That would be a deal that was supposedly so close last winter that they didn’t need to set a new deadline after they blew through the first two.
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Innu Controversy Widens #nlpoli
The controversy at the Innu Development Limited Partnership developed some political overtones on Thursday.
CBC reported that federal intergovernmental affairs minister Peter Penashue borrowed $25,000 from the partnership to finance his campaign in 2011.
Muskrat Falls Money Quote 2 #nlpoli
Darrell Dexter, Nova Scotia Premier:
"We've already looked at that and we've done studies that look at the delivery of power to Nova Scotians," he said in Halifax."And the most effective way of doing that is through a project like the Lower Churchill."
Like the Lower Churchill.
So if it turned out that a hydroelectric project in Quebec could meet the need, Darrell could go with that option and still be correct.
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Muskrat Falls Money Quote 1 #nlpoli
Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter, in a scrum after meeting with Premier Kathy Dunderdale about cost over-runs on Muskrat Falls:
"Here is this project that we have that can provide stability because we're going to know what the input costs are upfront. And that will provide stability for many, many years."
For 35 years, Nova Scotians will get free electricity from Muskrat Falls.
Any cost over-runs on the project are solely the burden of taxpayers in Newfoundland and Labrador.
That is stability any Nova Scotia premier would love.
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Phake Photos Make Come Back #nlpoli
The Mighty Ceeb ran a story on Thursday about a block of three houses in downtown St. John’s. Tourists and some residents are upset by a set of wires that one of the local phone companies has installed in front of the houses.
They quoted Les Cuff, who lives in one of the houses.
"Instead of having the three houses nicely unbroken, now you have three houses with a big bundle of wires in the middle, he said. "It just looks unsightly."
The guy lives there and he never noticed this stuff before?
12 July 2012
Muskrat Falls carts, horses, chickens and eggs #nlpoli
All the Twitter commentary on Thursday about Muskrat Falls and mining prompted your humble e-scribbler to go back and do some checking about who said what when.
Sure enough, the initial announcement did mention that any electricity from Muskrat Falls that wasn’t used in the province would go off to any place that Nalcor might sell it. Still, it would be available to call back for “industrial development” in Labrador.
But that wasn’t really the focus of the discussion about Muskrat Falls.
The Ground Game Counts #nlpoli
Two posts, quite a distance apart touch on the same basic political (science) issue: the role of the local, get-out-the-vote effort in any political campaign.
The latest bit of drama #nlpoli
For the record, your humble e-scribbler will refrain from making any comment on the substance of the statements of claim filed by Danny Williams and Alderon against the Sierra Club and Bruno Marcocchio on the one hand and Brad Cabana on the other.
CBC has posted pdf versions of both, linked below:
- Statement of Claim – Sierra Club/Marcocchio
- Statement of Claim – Cabana
In general, your humble e-scribbler would humbly suggest that SRBP readers keep the following observations in mind.
11 July 2012
What’s missing? #nlpoli
While the case before the Supreme Court of Canada on Tuesday was about the federal Elections Act, two provincial chief elections officers have intervener status in the case.
Neither of them have court cases currently underway that challenge the results of an election.
What other province might you think would have sought intervener status on a case about a potentially controverted election?
What other province could that be?
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Autonomy and Legitimate Aspirations #nlpoli
Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter is ringing the bells, trying to alarm Canadians to the fact the federal government is trying to withdraw funding from areas that are generally provincial responsibility under the Constitution.
You can see a lengthy interview Dexter gave to Evan Solomon of CBC’s Power and Politics on the Mother Corp’s website. “They are pursuing what some people call a disentangled federalism,” Dexter warned. Dexter described the country in a curious way, where the federal government pays for things and the provincial governments do them.
It’s curious because that isn’t what the people who wrote the constitution had in mind.
10 July 2012
What Falls was that, again? #nlpoli
Tim Powers is a local boy who has done good for himself as a lobbyist in Ottawa. Powers is a sharp guy who is very well-connected in Tory circles.
The provincial energy corporation employed Powers to lobby the federal Conservatives on behalf of their Lower Churchill project. While he has passed that contract off to a couple of other colleagues at Summa Strategies, Powers remains an ardent supporter of the Muskrat Falls project.
Powers delivered a keynote at the recent Expo Labrador mining conference. The title was Mining and Lower Churchill Falls.
Weird, huh?
Brand Failure #nlpoli
In another great service to Newfoundland and Labrador, the country’s leading shit-disturber has translated poll results by Abacus Data into a nice table.
It shows the results for each province across a range of topics.
Maybe it’s just you, Kathy #nlpoli
Prime Minister Stephen Harper met with Alberta Premier Alison Redford when the Pm dropped in for the Calgary Stampede.
As the Globe reported:
Carl Vallée, a PMO spokesman who was travelling with Mr. Harper during his Stampede stopover, wouldn’t talk about what was discussed during the Prime Minister’s meeting with Ms. Redford.
“He meets with premiers across the country when he travels out East, out West, everywhere,” Mr. Vallée said. “And he does do that, but we don’t comment on the content of the meeting.”
09 July 2012
When Johnny Cab breaks #nlpoli
Last week’s Environics poll caused more than a few people in the province to have a few sleepless nights trying to find a way to prove it was a crock or nothing to sweat.
Those were the Tories.
The NDP wasted no time getting a fund-raising e-mail on the go.
Oddly enough, and as an aside, a couple of prominent Dippers – Jack Harris and Lana Payne – both joined the Tories in trying to dismiss the poll as a one-off. Maybe their love of Muskrat Falls is clouding their judgment.
Anyway, and meanwhile…
The Liberals were wondering if the poll was good (they were up overall) or bad (they were still polling frig-all of any consequence in the province’s vote-rich capital region.
For the rest of you, here are some further ruminations to help you sort it all out.
Everything old is not new again #nlpoli
Trying to blow off the implications of last week’s Environics poll, former natural resources minister Shawn Skinner trotted out another line in this week’s edition of On Point with David Cochrane: it’s still early days. People don’t know Kathy Dunderdale yet. Give her another year and a half or two years for people to know her, or words to that effect.
Nice try Shawn, but Kathy has been Premier since December 2010. She’s been deputy premier since around 2008 and she’s been in cabinet since 2003.
Kathy Dunderdale is not new. In fact, Kathy has been around so long she was ready to quit politics back in December 2010. She’d done her thing.
If Kathy Dunderdale is having trouble making herself known to voters after a high-profile decade in politics, including winning an election as Premier after being in the job for the better part of a year, then imagine how much worse things will be 18 months from now.
Maybe the real answer, Shawn, is that people know Kathy too well already.
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Selective Perception and Strange Bedfellows #nlpoli
Labour federation president Lana Payne tweeted last week about the latest labour force figures in the province.
And that’s true. According to Statistics Canada, the province recorded the highest ever participation rate in June: 62%.
Two Conservative supporters retweeted Payne’s comments, apparently because they fit the Conservative mantra that everything is wonderful under the Tories. Conservative policies produce results, which is why the Tories enjoy such huge support in the province.
Anyway, Tories and Dippers cheering the same thing isn’t really as odd a situation as it might seem.
08 July 2012
Frankenstein – Final
A bit more work on Sunday morning and Frankenstein’s monster is done.
The colouring is unconventional. The instructions call for black or dark brown for the jacket and pants. A pre-painted figure, approved by Universal, in a slightly smaller scaled, appeared a few years ago with a colour scheme similar to this one. It works.
The figure is stock, from the box with one exception. The one hand that is turned incorrectly is fixed to imitate the original pose. Here’s a publicity still from the 1931 movie just to give you an idea of where the pose came from.
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Work in progress: Moebius’ Frankenstein #nlpoli
Here’s a close-up of Moebius’ Frankenstein, the project currently on the old modeller’s workbench. The detail is a little fuzzy because the picture is via a cellphone not a real camera.
Moebius based the model on the scene in the 1931 Universal movie when you first see the monster. It’s stock from the box.
The base, door and back wall are finished, as is the body (jacket and pants). The latest work has been trying to get the face and hands right. The choice for the face is very light grey for the deathly pallor, with some splashes of pink and red.
Check online and you can find as many choices for the face and hands as there are people who have built this kit. In the movie, Karloff wore a pale green make-up because it gave the right colouring for the black and white movie. Somehow, it just didn’t seem right to make the monster a part Vulcan.
Incidentally, for those who might be curious, the jacket is Model Master Dark Green (FS34079) and the pants are Testors’ Dark Brown (in the small bottle).
Here’s the same shot adjusted to make it black and white.
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