The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
28 September 2015
White is the new black #nlpoli
Stephen Harper said that his party had a program that would help change the dependence in Atlantic Canada on government spending, a dependence that had led to what he called a “culture of defeatism.”
That’s the actual phrase, by the way, “culture of defeatism.” Not a culture of defeat as some politicians have put it in the innumerable times since 2002 that they have used that phrase against Stephen Harper in a federal election campaign.
25 September 2015
The N-word #nlpoli
New Democratic Party leader Tom Mulcair likely never imagined that an insult he threw at a couple of Parti Quebecois politicians in the Quebec National Assembly 20 years ago would come back to haunt him 2015.
Liberal candidate Nick Whalen likely never imagined that reminding Mulcair of the word he used – “Newfie” - would rob Mulcair of whatever coverage he’d hoped to get out of his campaign stop in St. John’s.
But it did.
Then the controversy over Mulcair’s remarks carried on for another two days as New Democrats whined and complained about the whole issue. That only served to keep it going.
And to make sure the story didn’t die, two national pieces - Colby Cosh (National Post) and Evan Dyer (CBC) – weighed in. Cosh and Dyer picked up on the context of the original comment and that’s where things stared to get really interesting.
24 September 2015
That's Doctor King to you #nlpoli
Not surprisingly, Darin King has decided to leave politics after only eight years.
King is just the latest in a long line of pensionable Conservatives who have decided it would be better to quit politics now with a fat pension rather than risk sitting on the opposition benches for a few years.
If he is remembered at all, King will stand out among his colleagues in the current Conservative administration for two reasons.
23 September 2015
Crossing Topsail Road #nlpoli
A new high school has put the better part of a thousand young people on Topsail Road opposite a raft of fast food outlets and a major mall.
Young people will cross Topsail Road, a four–lane major thoroughfare in St. John’s. it is dangerous. Things will get more dangerous. City council is thinking about building a pedestrian walkway way over the street so pedestrians don’t have to cross at street level.
The pedway will be costly. Some people don’t like the cost and suggest that some other, far less expensive measures would do. Those people are wrong and here’s why.
22 September 2015
Three things about Hurricane Igor #nlpoli
hard to believe but it has been five years since Hurricane Igor ripped through Placentia Bay and into Trinity Bay.
What stands out most about those events today is the same as it was at the time.
First, the devastation was astounding in every respect.
Second, the resilience of the people affected by the disaster was amazing.
Third the capacity of senior government officials, politicians and bureaucrats alike, to polish their own knob without any justification remains as appalling in 2010 as it was at the time.
21 September 2015
No race in Avalon, except for the truth #nlpoli
Tom Mulcair will not be coming back to Newfoundland and Labrador again during the current federal election.
He certainly won;t be coming back to visit Avalon and he will only be back if there is a sense that Ryan might actually have a shot at winning St. John’s South-Mount Pearl.
The only other reason he might come back is if he had a candidate in a fight for a seat. The latest poll from Mainstreet Research confirms what dedicated political analysts have known for some time: there is no race in Avalon. Liberal Ken MacDonald is miles ahead of any of his rivals.
The New Democrats are a distant second.
“Distant” means the Liberal candidate is out front by more than two to one either in decided voters or if you add leaning to the decideds.
Les vrais newfies #nlpoli
Sometime late in the last century, Bloc NDP leader Tom Mulcair said something in the Quebec National Assembly about Newfies.
Mulcair apologised for the remark during his campaign stop in St. John’s on Sunday, and well he should
“Newfie” is a slur. Even if it is used by people from Newfoundland, the word is still offensive. In some sense, It conveys an attitude about the place as being one so destitute that people leave it in droves for a better life. In another sense, it conveys an attitude about the people as buffoons.
So Tom apologised and, as far as that goes, we should hear no more of it. What we should continue to discuss, though, is the rest of what Tom had to say.
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.
17 September 2015
Political Calculations 2 #nlpoli
The next provincial general election finishes on November 30, 2015.
Not the way you are used to thinking of it, right?
You think the election happens on that day because, traditionally, that’s the day when most people vote.
Thing is, voting takes place on several days and pretty much always has. In Canada, elections sometimes took weeks and months according to Elections Canada. The rules to determine who can vote also changed over time. Some elections in the 19th century had different qualifications for voters in different provinces.
Through all that, the basic goal of the election was the same: be the one who had the most votes in the ballot box when the elections officials counted them up.
16 September 2015
Political Calculations #nlpoli
As you look ahead to the fall election, the bigger political addicts among you are likely trying to figure out different aspects like how the parties might run the campaign.
We got a clue this week with the debate story. Apparently the front-runner Liberals never thought of forcing the media outlets to pool together and have one debate. Instead they took the requests one-by-one until they hit their quota of two. Anyone who came along after that, including the largest private radio network, were shit-out-of-luck.
The episode reveals a curious bit of Liberal political strategy but it made your humble e-scribbler think about a bunch of other calculations that we should likely all keep in mind.
Let’s look at the numbers.
15 September 2015
Putting the questions about the debate #nlpoli
The Liberals have decided to skip the provincial leaders debate sponsored by VOCM and the St. John’s Board of Trade.
The reason, according to Liberal leader Dwight Ball is that there is only so much time available, so the party has decided to go with the two television debates that will offer province-wide coverage.
Here are some questions that are begging for an answer…
14 September 2015
The state of federal politics in Newfoundland and Labrador #nlpoli
There is a problem, apparently.
A very big problem.
In the current federal election, none of the federal party leaders have visited the province yet.
On Friday, three of the four major outlets in the province all carried some version of exactly the same story. For the quibblers, the Telly story appeared on Saturday but it had to be written at least the day before. In itself, that fact says much about the state of the news media in the province and it isn;t a good tale.
NTV had local candidates on Issues and Answers but included a reference to the absent party leaders in the set up. CBC has a commentary by Peter Cowan on its website about the issue. The Telegram story on the Great Void includes comments from Bloc-NDP incumbent Ryan Cleary for good measure. Only VOCM seems to have ignored this political bombshell.
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.
10 September 2015
Three months later … #nlpoli
In June, SRBP used the CRA poll from the second quarter of 2015 as the basis for a bit of “what if” thinking.
Consider that the Liberals have dropped seven points in six months. The New Democrats are up seven in three months. Extend that trend forward to September. Then you’d have the Liberals down from 35 to 31.
The New Democrats, meanwhile, would move from 16 to 23. It isn’t unusual at all to see shift in votes during an election a lot larger than the one needed to close the eight point gap you’d have at that point between the NDP and the Liberals.
Guess what happened.
09 September 2015
Finding the voice of the next generation #nlpoli
That’s from the 2007 throne speech.
At the time, the language started a few people. That’s odd because Danny Williams was basically building up to that point for six years. He started with a speech in Halifax in 2001 shortly after he became leader of the provincial Conservatives. He ramped up the rhetoric and the tension through 2004 and into 2005.
Then in 2006, he went to war again, this time with Stephen Harper. It was the Conservative re-election strategy and came complete with an anthem composed in 2004.
What’s weird about the 2007 throne speech language in hindsight is not that the Conservatives used it or that some people found it surprising.
Take a look at the second use of the word autonomy and see if you can spot the oddity.
08 September 2015
Senior appointments in 2015 #nlpoli
Orders in Council up to the end of August 2015, show that the cabinet has made on 13 appointments at the rank of deputy minister and assistant deputy minister since the beginning of the new calendar year.
That’s roughly on par with the changes made in 2014.
It’s dramatically short of the record 51 such appointments made in 2013 or the very high rates of turn-over in 2011 and 2012.
-srbp-
07 September 2015
Adios to another one #nlpoli
Clyde Jackman is the latest provincial Conservative to quit politics.
That’s not surprising. He was supposed to go in 2011 but hung around to make sure the party didn’t have to make an serious changes in people or policies.
Jackman had a few colourful moments during his political career, not the least of which was his stint as fish minister. He scuttled an historic agreement to reform the fishery. Clyde and his colleagues couldn’t be arsed to spend money on it when they had all their cash tied up in other things.
Then there was the time Clyde and his colleagues couldn’t be arsed to fund an historic commemoration when Clyde was responsible for tourism.
Other than being part of the crowd that added more public debt to the back’s of provincial taxpayers than all the other administrations since Confederation combined, Clyde Jackman had a relatively tame political career compared to some of his colleagues.
Now Clyde is retiring. Not surprising really. In 2011, he barely scraped back into office in a situation where his party didn’t face huge opposition. Clyde wasn’t alone. Lots of his colleagues kept their seats by only the thinnest of margins. it’s only when you look at the numbers that you realise how just close the Conservatives came to losing in 2011. It wouldn’t have taken much,.
Good bye and good luck, Clyde.
Enjoy the grand-kids.
-srbp-
04 September 2015
Timeliness #nlpoli
The federal and provincial governments need to sort out a royalty regime for the areas of the seabed outside the 200 mile exclusive economic zone.
Wylie Spicer of McInnes Cooper has pointed this out in a new paper from the University of Calgary public policy school..
SRBP pointed this out in 2009, at the time of a significant discovery that might have commercial potential.
SRBP pointed it out again earlier this year when the notorious scoff-law Paul Davis said he wanted to get a development going outside the 200 mile limit without having publicly addressed the issue of the new royalty regime. He had started talking about a new royalty regime, apparently, but was keeping it a secret.
Maybe now that someone from Calgary has pointed out this deficiency someone will notice the problem and do something about it.
Maybe it is something one of the political parties in the province would like to bring up during the provincial election.
-srbp-
03 September 2015
Leadership and opportunity #nlpoli
On Tuesday, the provincial Conservatives launched their election campaign.
It was to be built solely on the image of Paul Davis as a great leader. They labelled the campaign Davis 15. The revamped the party website and they launched a second site – with the clever address davis15.ca – that included videos by and about Paul.
One of the videos included an endorsement from a police officer who, as it turned out, received a promotion last spring from sergeant to inspector. Only a short while before he had been a constable.
02 September 2015
Omega Man #nlpoli
The word that comes to mind when you look at the new provincial Conservative party website or the davis165.ca site isn’t fresh, new, rebounding, or even trying.
It is “alone”.
You see lots of pictures of Paul Davis.
By himself.