The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
15 October 2012
The Language of Newfoundland Politics #nlpoli
One is “confused”.
The other is “tired” as in tired of hearing about it.
These are very interesting code words, once you realise what they mean.
The Simple Litmus Test #nlpoli
by JM
There has been a new group of business people who have been formed in support of the Muskrat Falls Project. I would ask that these individuals review the following key facts and figures before they confirm their support of the project. I would also ask that they push the Government to answer the questions raised at the end of this short post
14 October 2012
Same Old New Energy! #nlpoli
Thanks to the Telegram’s James McLeod and his Twitter feed from Gander, take a look at two of the resolutions from the Progressive Conservative.
13 October 2012
There’s always more to see if you look #nlpoli
Watch the raw video of the Thursday news conference in which Premier Kathy Dunderdale, natural resource minister Jerome Kennedy, and finance minister Tom Marshall announced the end of a dispute with the companies developing the Hebron project.
Pay less attention to the details of the announcement itself than to the details of how they made the announcement.
12 October 2012
Christmas will arrive early this year
Word from the hobby shop Thursday is that the USS Skipjack is on the way.
In 1/72 scale, this is going to be one big submarine:
-srbp-
Vote SRBP for Best Political Blog in Canada #nlpoli #cdnpoli
Sir Robert Bond Papers is in the running for Best Political Blog in Canada for 2012.
Round 1 voting is open and I respectfully ask for your support.
Click on the picture to cast your vote.
-srbp-
How much was that principle in the window? #nlpoli
Sending the third topsides module from Hebron outside the province was “absolutely unacceptable” to Premier Kathy Dunderdale back in June.
She was “extremely unhappy” and vowed to “pursue all avenues available” to her in order “to ensure that this very important work stays in Newfoundland and Labrador.”
A few months later, the absolutely unacceptable has become completely acceptable. The only question – as it turned out – was the price.
11 October 2012
Exploring the AIMS Commentary #nlpoli
Equalization Changes and Hydro-Electricity #nlpoli
The federal government is considering changes to the Equalization program and the way it assess revenue from hydro-electricity, according to documents obtained by PostMedia News under the federal access to information system.
The changes would apparently take into account revenue from hydro-electric corporations in provinces like Manitoba, Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador where a portion of the revenues from provincially-owned hydro corporations are sometimes passed directly to consumers in the former of lower electricity rates.
“Potentially, it’s a huge issue,” said Al O’Brien, chairman of the federal government’s 2006 expert panel on equalization, which examined hydroelectricity revenues as part of its analysis of the broader national program. “It will be controversial.”
He believes governments in Quebec and Manitoba recognize their fiscal capacity, or revenue-generating ability, is underrepresented in the current system.
However, any changes to how hydroelectricity is calculated in equalization could have a “huge impact” on how much — if any — a province receives from Ottawa in equalization, he explained. For example, some studies have suggested Quebec could lose billions of dollars in equalization payments if the true value of hydroelectricity were calculated in the program.
-srbp-
10 October 2012
Remittance Work and the Newfoundland Economy #nlpoli
For those who have been following the issue, SRBP and others were talking about remittance work back in 2007.
It remains a key part of the current administration’s economic policy. The proof is in an airport in western Newfoundland that offers parking facilities for patrons who may be gone for upwards of one year.
-srbp-
Another sign of the democratic deficit #nlpoli
Look for the work “donation”.
You won’t find it. Nor will you find any amount of money set aside in the health department budget that would cover a donation by the provincial government to health care foundations operated in some communities on the west coast earlier this year.
Muskrat needs full review: AIMS #nlpoli
By any reasonable standard, Gordon Weil would count as an expert.
In business.
In the energy business.
An expert.
As much as she said she wants to hear from experts, Weil’s review of the Muskrat Falls project won’t have any impact on Kathy Dunderdale.
That’s because he doesn’t fit her unique definition of what an expert is.
09 October 2012
Muskrat, Martin, and Meaning #nlpoli
Note the number of times Ed Martin says “open” or “transparent” within the first five minutes of his weekend interview for On Point with David Cochrane.
Odds are very high that these words relate to a very sensitive issue for Nalcor, revealed by their extensive polling.
Put the On Point interview together with Martin’s article in the weekend Telegram - not online - and you can see why these ideas are causing Nalcor such problems.
06 October 2012
Dunderdale on track for 100% #nlpoli
Premier Kathy Dunderdale tied the record on Friday for senior executive changes in the provincial public service.
She appointed an acting deputy minister of justice to replace a fellow who has gone off to his reward as a justice of the supreme court.
Dunderdale set the record last year with 39 changes in a group of senior managers numbering about 85 in total.
If she keeps up the same pace of changes in 2012, Dunderdale will make a total of 49 before the New Year arrives. A quick tally would show that - if she hits that number – Kathy Dunderdale will have made the equivalent of a complete change in the senior ranks of the public service in about two years.
That’s on top of the heavy number of changes to the senior public service over the past decade. Of the line departments, natural resources as seen the heaviest number of changes. There’s been no obvious explanation for the high turn-over any more than there was any explanation of the sudden and mysterious changes at the deputy minister level in the department last month.
The former deputy minister, appointed in 2011 disappeared in September 2012 without explanation or – if you check the release – even a mention of her existence.
She.
Just.
-srbp-
The Last Refuge #nlpoli
Call them the Dam One Percent.
Call them Dan-Dam Style.
Call them Millionaires for Muskrat.
Call them MFers, with tongue firmly in cheek.
The business people who back Muskrat Falls are now writing letters to the newspapers and forming political action groups to show their support of Muskrat Falls.
Like nobody knew that people like Nalcor directors Cathy Bennett and John Steele, former Nalcor chair Deanny MacDonald, and Labrador businessman Peter Woodward didn’t love the Muskrat Falls project already.
05 October 2012
Masters of our debt-ridden domain #nlpoli
According to Dunderdale, the companies “understand that if Muskrat Falls does not go ahead, what happens in Labrador from that point on lies squarely in the hands of Hydro-Québec and the province of Quebec.”
She added:
Think about that! Does anybody have any confidence that, when mines in this province go to Hydro-Québec looking for energy for development in Labrador, they are going to get the best industrial rates in Atlantic Canada?The provincial government wouldn’t be worried about the issue unless Quebec had power to sell.
04 October 2012
Kathy Dunderdale’s World #nlpoli
Remember the World the Old Man Lived In?
Apparently, Kathy Dunderdale lives in the same place.
-srbp-
The First Casualty in Dunderdale’s War #nlpoli
“We adhere to established contracts and respectful business practices,” she told the crowd at a Board of Trade luncheon. No word if the crowd at Fortis shifted uncomfortably in their seats. The people from ENEL - had they been there - could certainly attest to the manifest falsehood in the Premier’s comment.
Dunderdale had a few more bullets to pump into Veracity’s lifeless form off before she was done.