In the episode that aired on 26 May 2019, Premier Dwight Ball told NTV's Issues and Answers that the deficit for the current budget is between $800 - $900 million.
"Are you prepared to make any specific changes to the budget in order to get their support?" asked Mike Connors.
"I think this budget is the one we ran on... everyone understands this budget is between an 800 to 900 million dollar deficit..."
Minor problem.
When finance minister Tom Osborne delivered the budget on April 16, he confirmed that the deficit in the budget the Liberals ran on was $575 million, once you took out the payments from the Hibernia Asset-Backed Dividend Agreement. That's the figure finance officials gave during the budget lock-up to media and other groups.
The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
28 May 2019
27 May 2019
Simon Lono , 1963-2019
Simon Lono - husband, father, grandfather, advocate, orator, writer, mentor, friend - died Friday, May 24, 2019.
He was 56.When our friends are alive, we do not spend time thinking about the past. We do not think about how we met them, about all the things we did with them, or why it is that we like them.
When they are alive, we do not need to remember
because they are there, every day.
We only feel a need to remember, once they are not
there any more.
Simon Lono’s family and friends spent Saturday as they
are likely to spend a lot of days from now on.
They thought about him, remembered when they first met him, all the
things they had done together, why they loved him.
Simon is dead.
And so, we remember.
We recall.
Frantically.
As if the memories will make the hard truth go away.
As if the memories will replace all of the things that
could have been or would have been.
But that will never be.
Because there is a hard truth.
Simon is dead.
Killed by a rare disease.
In itself, entirely fitting.
Tags:
Simon Lono
21 May 2019
The Lowest-Common Denominator Minority Legislature #nlpoli
An inherently unstable minority legislature where the parties have a history of finding political agreement through public spending is not exactly a recipe for tough decisions.
There is something seductively sweet about the idea
that the minority government that resulted from last week’s general election
has now solved all our problems Just get back to work, some people are saying. And play nice, together. No more of this bickering and name-calling.
Something seductively sweet but the sweetness reveals
itself as bitter naïveté when one considers that we now have a fundamentally
unstable legislature at the very time when both the government’s finances and
the Muskrat Falls mess are coming together.
Make no mistake about it. Minority legislatures are inherently
unstable. They tend not to last more
than a couple of years. The one elected last week will get through six months
or so without much chance of upheaval.
But once the opposition parties have sorted out their finances and, in
all likelihood, the Tories have found a new leader, they will be ready to bring
down the House.
Tags:
Election 2019
17 May 2019
The 1908 Election all over again #nlpoli
You will
hear a lot of spin about Thursday’s election result.
Doesn’t matter where it is coming from.
It is all spin and all spin is bullshit.
Doesn’t matter where it is coming from.
It is all spin and all spin is bullshit.
Thursday
night’s election result has been coming for three years. The polls have pointed to the public mood and
their views of parties and leaders. Only
the blind ignored it. Robocalls and dirty tricks did not produce the result. No Blue Waves were involved.
The Forecast
On Thursday morning, SRBP posted a projection based on polling and information coming from
all three parties directly and indirectly.
Here’s how
it played out compared to the result at about 10:00 PM Thursday.
Lib
|
PC
|
NDP
|
Ind
|
|
Forecast
|
19
|
18
|
1
|
2
|
Range
|
+/- 2
|
+/- 3
|
+/- 1
|
- 1
|
Actual
|
20
|
15
|
3
|
2
|
The Liberal
projection was almost bang on. The
Conservatives were within the range of the projection. The Independent forecast was bang on. Only the NDP exceeded expectations and that
was by virtue of a good candidate who succeeded, in some respects, despite the deadweight
of the Dipper crowd in town.
Tags:
Election 2019
16 May 2019
Poor Ed's Almanac - a hot summer is coming #nlpoli
The prospect of a minority government coupled with the need to pass a budget in the legislature after the election could produce a long, hot summer of political manoeuvring.Mainstreet Research released its poll on the Newfoundland and Labrador election. It basically shows what Abacus and Forum showed, which is a slightly Conservative lead in overall vote intention.
With that and the election due tomorrow, here's a guess at a possible seat count. This is based on the polls, observation of the campaign, and a bit of guesswork. There is no right answer and this version could be off by a seat or two for the Liberals. You might add an extra New Democrat to the mix but no more. There might be one fewer Independent.
Tags:
Election 2019,
minority government
13 May 2019
Ego, Brain Farts, and Electoral Reform #nlpoli
Public ignorance of our political system is a scourge. Tackling that is the first step to meaningful electoral reform in Newfoundland and Labrador. The second priority is to make sure the players do not set the rules for everyone, as they have done repeatedly, and disastrously, since 2003. Most of all, we need to get on with reform, as soon as possible.While there are many good reasons for electoral reform in Newfoundland and Labrador, most of the recent talk of changes to how elections run in the province is from people who want to give an advantage to a party they like.
Take the decision in 2015 to slash public representation
in the House. The Conservatives who were
behind the notion, figured it would be easier to win a majority of 20 seats
instead of 48. They knew they couldn’t get 24 but hoped they could cling to
power with 20 or 21. Depending on how
the count goes on Thursday, they might be right.
The Liberals who backed the cuts, like Dwight Ball, were
concerned only that the idea appeared popular.
They thought that by siding with a popular initiative they would gain
favour with voters.
Lots of popular things don’t drive votes and this was one
of them. If they thought about the
electoral math – and there’s no sign they did – then they likely hit on the
same self-serving reason the Conservatives did.
Depending on how the count goes on Thursday, they might be as right or as
wrong as the Conservatives when they last held power.
Then there’s the business of fixed election dates.
Tags:
electoral reform,
political data
09 May 2019
The Abacus Poll for Election 2019 #nlpoli
The chart below looks like there has been a huge jump up and
down in “no choice” and a corresponding big change in party choice but actually
there is some consistency across the board.
Click to enlarge |
As SRBP has been saying for a couple of months, the Conservatives
and Liberals have basically been polling in the 20s for the past three
years. These results are within that 10-point
spread, allowing with the odd leap above 30 or below 20. The “no choice” option (green dotted line)
has been consistently above 35 the whole time.
Abacus is an outlier in that sense but, there is an election campaign
underway.
The Abacus poll – conducted between May 2 and May 5 – shows the
Conservatives in the lead with the Liberals trailing., But here’s the thing, the gap, even in the presentation of “decideds”
or “committed” is really inside the bounds of possibilities covered by the
margin of error.
Just to drive the point home. Here is a sample of MQO and Abacus results
over the past year or so.
|
Liberal
|
Conservative
|
New Democrat
|
No Choice
|
Abacus Feb-18
|
22
|
18
|
12
|
48
|
Abacus May-18
|
22
|
24
|
13
|
41
|
MQO Apr-19
|
25
|
20
|
06
|
47
|
Abacus May-19
|
29
|
33
|
12
|
21
|
Tags:
Election 2019,
political polls
08 May 2019
Election 2019 - First Poll #nlpoli
While the MQO poll shows the Liberals in the lead, a new poll from Abacus - released with an hour of this appearing - will likely show that since the debate, the political landscape of the province has changed dramatically.
The latest
poll from MQO showed that after a week and bit of campaigning, voters were
almost precisely where they were at the end of March when MQO conducted a poll
for NTV.
When asked
which party they would vote for in an election, 47% made no choice compared to
56% in March. More chose Liberals
(25/21) than Conservatives (20/18) or New Democrats (6/4). One percent chose
the NL Alliance and one percent chose the Green Party. Neither registered support in March.
The gap
between Liberals and Conservatives is within the margin of error.
Detailed poll data courtesy MQO Research Click image to enlarge |
The
variation between March and April results is also within the margin of error
for the poll (plus or minus four percentage points 19 times out of 20). The
margin of error for the “decideds”-only sub-sample, widely reported by news
media, would be higher since it based on only half the total sample.
NTV
included a question in the MQO quarterly omnibus. They asked which party people thought would
win the election. 46% of respondents
chose the Liberals, 21% the Conservatives and 30% made no choice. This is a
useful question since research suggests the response to this question
frequently closely matches the popular vote result in an election.
Tags:
Election 2019,
political polls.
06 May 2019
The Financial Reality of Election 2019 #nlpoli
The financial reality confronting any administration after May 16 is the same regardless of which party wins the election.The government is unlikely to balance the budget in 2022, regardless of who wins the 2019 election.
In 2019, as in 2015, the last
government budget before the election did not accurately describe the
government’s current or likely future financial position. All three parties did not make this an
election issue in 2015 and have ignored the government’s financial situation in
2019.
The governing Liberals are
running on their current budget, which is included in the campaign platform. They apparently
have no new spending plans beyond the current budget. The Conservatives cost their plan at $254
million. These promises must be assessed against the financial realities of the provincial government.
The Financial Situation
We can accept the government forecasts of revenue for what they are although there are some issues, as noted below. We must add the following expenditures to the government's projected spending in 2020 and beyond. These additional expenses are why it is highly unlikely the government will balance the books in 2022.
Tags:
Election 2019,
public finance
30 April 2019
Voter Turn-out and Popular Vote Shares of Parties, 1949 - 2019 #nlpoli
Election turn-out has been declining steadily for provincial elections since the mid-1990s. The 2019 general election is on track to show a record low turn-out at 44% of eligible voters.
Party share of eligible vote had declined in the same period. The Liberal victory in 2015 went against the pattern since Confederation of an increased turn-out in an election in which the government changes hands.
In the 70 years since Confederation, provincial voter
turn-out has varied in each election.
Turnout tended to be highest when there was a well-contested
election such as on three occasions when the government changed hands. The exception to this rule was 2015 when
turn-out dropped from the previous election.
Click to enlarge |
There was a slight uptick in turn-out in 2003, but
what is unmistakable is the steady trend downward of turn-out since the peak in
1993 (the green arrow). The 2019 projection – based on MQO’s last poll for NTV - would put turn-out in the
general election at 44%. Turn-out might be higher than that, but the signs are pointing toward a record low turn-out even if it does not
reach below 50% of eligible voters.
29 April 2019
Where do elections come from? #nlpoli
From fixed election dates to the number of candidates that run in an election, what Newfoundlanders and Labradorians believe about one of the basic institutions of their democracy is as much myth and rumour as reality.
Here are some facts to help you navigate the world of post-Confederation elections in Newfoundland and Labrador.
The Crown Prerogative, exercised with the advice of the Premier
Newfoundland and Labrador does not have a fixed
election date.
The changes to the House of
Assembly Act in 2004
that supposedly set the election date for a day in October every four years
starts with a simple clause that supersedes the fixed date bit:
3. (1) Notwithstanding
another provision of this section, the Lieutenant-Governor may, by proclamation
in Her Majesty's name, prorogue or dissolve the House of Assembly when the
Lieutenant-Governor sees fit.
To understand how that works, we need to recall some basic
constitutional points first. Except in
some very rare – but important – instances, the Lieutenant-Governor may only act
with the advice of the Executive Council.
22 April 2019
Restoring Power - Mitigating the Impacts of Muskrat Falls #nlpoli
Left
untended, the Muskrat Falls project threatens the financial well-being of the
government and people of Newfoundland and Labrador. The threat cannot be
removed merely by directing money from one pot or another to offset the impact
the mismanaged project’s costs would have on electricity rates in the
province.
The threat from Muskrat Falls
can only be removed by concerted action that addresses the project’s financial
burden, restores integrity to the system of electricity regulation, and that
breaks, once and for all time, the fundamentally corrupt relationship between
the provincial hydro-electric corporation and the provincial government. This
is the only way to restore power to the province’s people so that they may
control their own future.
Tags:
Muskrat Falls
17 April 2019
Budget 2019 - revised trends #nlpoli
Budget 2019 was an election budget in the sense it contained a lot of little goodies, but there was nothing to get overly excited about.
While everyone else is focused on the shot-term, the long-term trending contains more interesting tidbits. The following slides update the post from Monday.
Income versus Spending
Budget 2019 forecasts cash spending (capital and current) of about $8.0 billion, about $200 million above the 2018 actual spending.
While everyone else is focused on the shot-term, the long-term trending contains more interesting tidbits. The following slides update the post from Monday.
Income versus Spending
Budget 2019 forecasts cash spending (capital and current) of about $8.0 billion, about $200 million above the 2018 actual spending.
Tags:
Budget 2019,
public finance
16 April 2019
A CHEAP Framework - the PC and Liberal Muskrat Falls plans #nlpoli
The Conservative and Liberal Muskrat Falls rate mitigation plans are the same. Both include magical assumptions of revenue. Both omit crucial details.
Note: Some people asked on Monday for comment or analysis of the two plans to mitigate Muskrat Falls' impact on provincial electricity rates.
This is an abbreviated summary of the two plans and some issues flowing from it. A more substantive analysis will come on Monday 22 April 2019 with the publication here of the SRBP rate mitigation proposal called "Restoring Power."
General
The Conservative and Liberal rate mitigation plans are the same idea.
This is not surprising since the Conservatives copied the Liberal approach and used the same information from the Public Utilities Board review as the basis for the plan details.
The Liberal and Conservative plan uses the following approach:
- Pick a Number
- Subtract other Numbers
- Use Magic
- Hit zero
Tags:
Muskrat Falls
15 April 2019
Budget 2019 Context #nlpoli
Most of the commentary about Budget 2019 on Tuesday will be focused on the short-term.
Here are some slides that show longer-term trending. We'll update them later on with the Budget 2019 figures.This is the sort of stuff that bears watching especially since the announcement of a new federal transfer payment came with the unexplained claim that it will magically reduce public debt and return the government to surplus over night.
Here are some slides that show longer-term trending. We'll update them later on with the Budget 2019 figures.This is the sort of stuff that bears watching especially since the announcement of a new federal transfer payment came with the unexplained claim that it will magically reduce public debt and return the government to surplus over night.
Tags:
Budget 2019,
public accounts,
public finance
09 April 2019
The 2005 and 2019 Federal-Provincial Agreements #nlpoli
The Atlantic Accord functions in Newfoundland and Labrador politics in two ways. There is the agreement between the Government of Canada and the provincial government that established the joint management framework for the Newfoundland and Labrador offshore. At the same time, there is the political prop and the associated mythology that has, in largest measure, replaced the actual agreement in both the popular and political/bureaucratic understanding of it.Neither the 2005 nor 2019 federal-provincial agreements commonly referred to as the Atlantic Accord or revised Atlantic Accord had anything to do with development and management of the oil and gas resources offshore Newfoundland and Labrador. Neither changed the 1985 agreement directly or indirectly.
The widely-held
belief is completely different. The popular misconception comes from the fact
that in both cases, the premiers faced with financial difficulties linked their
demands for money from Ottawa to the Atlantic Accord. In both cases, the issues
were about something else. In 2005, the
discussion was actually about Equalization. It 2019, the final agreement was
about financial assistance for the provincial government about its own
financial difficulties and to deal with the troubled Muskrat Falls project.
Tags:
2005 Arrangement,
Atlantic Accord,
HDBAA
08 April 2019
The Atlantic Accord: background to the 1985 agreement #nlpoli
The Atlantic Accord functions in Newfoundland and Labrador politics in two ways. There is the agreement between the Government of Canada and the provincial government that established the joint management framework for the Newfoundland and Labrador offshore. At the same time, there is the political prop and the associated mythology that has, in largest measure, replaced the actual agreement in both the popular and political/bureaucratic understanding of it.
Provincial Concerns and Objectives
The Atlantic Accord ended a decade of often acrimonious
dispute between the federal and provincial governments over offshore oil and
gas resources. The province had
initially staked its claim to ownership of the resource in 1975, based on the
premise that Newfoundland and Labrador brought the resources with them
at the time of Confederation and had retained jurisdiction over them.
The Supreme Court of Canada ended the dispute in its decision
on a reference from the Government of Canada. The Court found that, for several reasons, the
right to explore and exploit offshore resources and the legislative
jurisdiction to do so lay with the federal government. The court decided that,
in addition to other considerations, control of the offshore was a function of
Canada’s international status. Under the
Terms
of Union, this part of Newfoundland’s pre-Confederation legal status
transferred to the federal government.
The Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador Court of
Appeal addressed a reference from the provincial government that also concluded
the federal government had jurisdiction over the offshore.
01 April 2019
Gaslighting a society #nlpoli
Saturday morning and Facebook delivered a video clip of Peter Mansbridge accepting a lifetime achievement award.
After the obligatory thanks to everyone, Mansbridge delivers a scripted couple of minutes about journalism in the age of fake news and alternate facts.
"Journalism is under threat," Mansbridge warned, "in a way we haven't witnessed before."
"The very principle that we stand for is under attack."
"Truth is under attack."
Finding truth and presenting truth is important, according to Mansbridge.
Challenging power and those who wield it is important for "power unchallenged too often becomes power abused."
After the obligatory thanks to everyone, Mansbridge delivers a scripted couple of minutes about journalism in the age of fake news and alternate facts.
"Journalism is under threat," Mansbridge warned, "in a way we haven't witnessed before."
"The very principle that we stand for is under attack."
"Truth is under attack."
Finding truth and presenting truth is important, according to Mansbridge.
Challenging power and those who wield it is important for "power unchallenged too often becomes power abused."
26 March 2019
Everyone loses: new MQO poll for NTV #nlpoli
On the eve of an anticipated election call, voters in Newfoundland and Labrador turn up their noses at everyone currently on the field.The latest MQO poll for NTV shows why no one should discard the people who don;t pick a party when asked who they would vote for.
When asked which party, they would vote for if an election were held tomorrow, a majority - 56% - said either that they would not vote, refused to answer, or said they were undecided.
Liberal support dropped five points from the previous MQO poll, going from 26 to 21. PC Support dropped from 25% to 18% and NDP support sank to four percent. The party defectors all went into the bag of supposedly undecided voters. It looks much more like they were opting for "none of the above."
Tags:
elxn49,
political polls
18 March 2019
Banning plastic bags and public policy in Newfoundland and Labrador #nlpoli
Effective public policy must be based on a clear understanding of the problem and its relation to other issues, as well as public needs and behaviour."...almost 50% of all wind borne litter escaping from landfills in Newfoundland and Labrador is plastic, much of it single-use plastic bags....
There's the problem, defined neatly.
The quote is from Municipalities Newfoundland and Labrador's campaign against plastic shopping bags.
Put the quote in a search engine on the Internet and you will turn up all sorts of places, including news stories, that use that phrase or a slight variation on it in coverage of the popular campaign to ban plastic bags from the province. Here's an example from The Telegram in 2017 and another a couple of days later that went province-wide.
One small question: what's the source for the statistic?
Tags:
environment policy,
public policy,
recycling
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