Feb 142013
 
Christy Clark.
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Facts fall like dominoes in $15 million government ads.

by Bill Tieleman

"I call it like the domino theory of reality. If you can go one step at a time and it seems to make sense, you can then take your audience into an area that is relatively outlandish." 
Movie director Ivan Reitman

Anyone who lives in British Columbia, except maybe in a cave with no cable, has seen the BC Liberal government's pervasive $15 million ad campaign on television — the one their tax dollars are paying for despite its obviously partisan purposes.

The expensive 30-second spot features rows of black dominos collapsing all around the world — that is, until they run up against Premier Christy Clark's immovable white piece.
There's only one problem. It's not true.

The facts are far different than the misleading ad.

"Unstable government policies have hurt people around the world," the authoritative announcer intones over ominous music guaranteed to scare small children. "Big government, careless spending and quick fixes have caused economies to collapse."

The dominos fall until they reach our fair province, when uplifting music starts and the white domino of BC holds firm, thankfully.

"But British Columbia is standing strong. By controlling government spending, low taxes and investing in skills training," it says.

But the facts are far different than the misleading ad.

1. Provincial spending under the B.C. Liberals has gone up astonishingly — it has not been "controlled."

Moody's Investors Service downgraded BC's credit rating in December from "stable" to "negative" because of concerns about the province's "recent accumulation in debt."

Moody’s Investors Service downgraded BC’s credit rating in December from “stable” to “negative” because of concerns about the province’s “recent accumulation in debt.”


"The negative outlook reflects Moody's assessment of the risks to the province's ability to reverse the recent accumulation in debt with the softened economic outlook, weaker commodity prices and continued expense pressures," according Moody's assistant vice president Jennifer Wong, lead analyst for the province.

And no wonder. When the BC Liberals took office in 2001, accumulated provincial debt was $33.8 billion. Today it's $57.6 billion and scheduled to jump to $66.3 billion by 2015, almost double.

That's not "controlling spending." It's that "big government" the ad warns about!

2. The ads boast about low taxes — but BC is the only province in Canada where individuals have to pay Medical Services Premiums.

This regressive tax has gone up 85 percent since 2000 and 24 percent in just the last three years, an increase of $300 per person. The Medical Services Premium costs British Columbians over $2 billion each year in a tax that a Victoria Times-Colonist editorial called a "shell game".

And the same "low tax" government introduced a surprise Harmonized Sales Tax — that I helped successfully oppose with Fight HST — which shifted $2 billion in taxes from big business to consumers with new taxes on hundreds of items.

3. The province claims it is "investing in skills training" — but our six major universities warn that 20,000 jobs could go unfilled by 2020 because the government isn't doing enough training.

"Basically, what we're saying is there's a skills and education deficit coming and, in order to deal with it, we've got to actually start now," University of Victoria president David Turpin said last month. "We can't wait to 2016 to say, 'Wow, we now have this shortfall.'"

Meanwhile, tuition fees have more than doubled under the BC Liberals and students graduate with the highest debt load west of the Maritimes.

Then there are the 70,000 Temporary Foreign Workers currently working in BC, from coal miners to chefs to farmworkers while construction employers head to Ireland to recruit skilled trades workers. And Statistics Canada reported Friday that BC lost 15,900 jobs in January alone.

When it comes to BC government ads, it's the facts that fall like dominoes.

About Bill Tieleman


Bill Tieleman, president of West Star Communications, is one of BC's best known political commentators and communicators. Read political commentary from Bill every Tuesday in 24 hours, Vancouver's free weekday newspaper (also online) and in The Tyee — BC's award-winning online magazine.

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© Copyright 2013 Bill Tieleman, All rights Reserved. Written For: StraightGoods.ca
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  One Response to “BC Liberals run partisan ads”

  1. […] BC Liberals run partisan ads » StraightGoods.ca <i>"I call it like the domino theory of reality. If you can go one step at a time and it seems to make sense, you can then take your audience into an area that is relatively outlandish." </i> <i>– </i>Movie director Ivan Reitman Anyone who lives in British Columbia, except maybe in a cave with no cable, has seen the BC Liberal government's pervasive $15 million ad campaign on television — the one their tax dollars are paying for despite its obviously partisan purposes. Abolish the Senate already » StraightGoods.ca Senators currently control investigations into other senators' ethics, spending, attendance and actions overall, and enforcement of the rules. The rules are very weak without penalties for violations in most cases. This is a completely ineffective system, undermined by rampant conflicts of interest — and senators are not even talking about changing it. When the <i>Deepwater Horizon </i> drilling platform exploded in 2010, killing 11 people and spewing massive amounts of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, it cost more than $40 billion to mop up the mess. In Canada, an oil company would only be liable for only $30 million, leaving taxpayers on the hook for the rest. That’s just one of a litany of flaws Canada’s environment commissioner identified with the government’s approach to environmental protection. According to environment and sustainable development commissioner Scott Vaughan, who released a final series of audits before stepping down, the federal government’s failure to protect the environment is putting Canadians’ health and economy at risk. The federal government does not even require the oil and gas industry to disclose chemicals it uses in fracking, which means there is no way to assess the risks. […]

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