The day after a massive Liberal victory in the general election, CBC’s David Cochrane posted an analysis piece on the new administration. CBC distributed it nationally.
Cochrane described Dwight Ball as a man “unlikely” to be Premier:
Four campaigns. Two losses. Two wins. By a combined 75 votes.
Cochrane’s account leaves out relevant context. When it comes to describing how the Liberals won, Cochrane focuses not on anything the Liberals did but rather a string of Tory blunders that - according to Cochrane - made it easy for the Liberals to win the election essentially by accident.
And now, as Cochrane’s story goes, Ball The Unlikely will have to face enormous financial problems using a plan that Cochrane claims “was greeted with enormous scepticism in the final week of the campaign.”
In the supper hours news, Cochrane then reported on information leaked to him by someone with access to highly confidential government information. Their purpose - quite obviously – was to maximise the the damage to the new administration before it even had a chance to take office. The information fit quite neatly with Cochrane’s ongoing narrative and so, he naturally, had no hesitation in using it.