If Paul Davis and his beleaguered band of provincial Conservatives started the week on a high, it didn’t last very long.
They opened the House on Monday to debate a bill that would reduce the size of the House of Assembly by 10 members. They had the instant support of the Liberals and, going into the session, they knew that Ball and the Liberals had already agreed that the fall election would now come sometime in 2016.
They announced another ridiculous twist in the already ridiculous fight over European free trade. The media reported the whole thing positively at first, although before the day was out major economic groups in the province had slammed the provincial government for their anti-trade stance.
On top of that, the three maritime premiers were in town for a meeting of the Atlantic premiers council. Reporters asked them about the feud. We’d be ticked off too, in the same position, they agreed, but if there’s federal cash to be had, we want a piece as well. That does nothing except highlight why the provincial government was just plain dumb when they passed on the original deal and tried to turn it into something else.
Okay, so Monday wasn’t really all that high, but when this time last year, the Conservatives were being burned in effigy for heat and light as people sat around in a blackout caused by the provincial energy corporation, Monday was pretty damn good.
Then Tuesday came and, in the hideous cliche of hack television reporters, things went horribly wrong.