Canadian politics

Dec 062012
 

Environmental Commissioner's report charges cuts will cripple vital programs.

by SGNews staff

TORONTO, December 4, 2012 — Ontario's Environmental Commissioner, Gord Miller, says the Ontario government is backing away from its plan to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs).

Gord Miller today released "A Question of Commitment," the 2012 edition of his annual review of the government's Climate Change Action Plan. The 2007 plan established province-wide targets for reducing GHG emissions, as well as programs for reducing emissions in six sectors: electricity, transportation, industry, buildings, agriculture and waste.

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Dec 032012
 

Running only one progressive candidate per riding removes voters' right to choose.

by Bill Tieleman

The reactionary is always willing to take a progressive attitude on any issue that is dead.
– US president Teddy Roosevelt 1901-1909

“Unite the left! Have all progressive parties defeat Stephen Harper’s evil Conservatives” is the rallying cry of a coalition of increasingly angry agitators.

But my reply is simple: Unite progressives my posterior!

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Dec 032012
 

Sports broadcaster was the voice of every major hockey milestone in Nova Scotia.

by Stephen Kimber

I didn’t go to journalism school. In a day when informal apprenticeship was the norm, I was lucky to learn my trade from its best practitioners: Nick Fillmore, the crusading editor of the feisty local alternative weekly, the 4th Estate; Harry Bruce, one of Canada’s finest magazine writers and essayists; and Pat Connolly, the legendary sports journalist whose microphone was finally stilled last week at 84.

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Nov 262012
 

56,000 messages call for transparency, enforcement.

from Democracy Watch

OTTAWA — On November 23, Democracy Watch called on the federal Conservatives to introduce a bill to ban false election robocalls and strengthen election law enforcement. They had previously promised to introduce the bill by the end of September, under a resolution that carried unanimously in Parliament last March.

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Nov 252012
 

Conservative under fire for taking election for granted.

 

It’s just a byelection, but the raging battle for Calgary Centre is yet another sign that politics in Alberta is undergoing a radical shift.

How else to explain a Conservative candidate who has seen her support wither in the face of strong opposition candidates? Or a Liberal candidate who, according to some polls, is running neck-and-neck with the Conservative?

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Nov 222012
 
Christy Clark's "propaganda campaign" has spent $15 million of taxpayer money on ads.

"Canada starts here" ads called misleading, inaccurate.

by Bill Tieleman

"Those are very partisan ads. They should be bought and paid for by the Liberal Party of BC"
– CKNW host Bill Good , November 16, on BC government advertising

Canada doesn't "start here" in British Columbia, despite what government television ads claim — but Premier Christy Clark's propaganda campaign sure does.

The BC Liberals are ruining TV watching and radio listening with an endless $15 million taxpayer-funded parade of ads that are not only misleading and wasteful but also that we are paying for!

The ads are not only unnecessary; they’re also untrue.


Enough! All British Columbians want our economy to grow, our industries to prosper and our citizens to find good jobs. But the only positions these ridiculous "BC Jobs Plan" ads create are in advertising agency boardrooms and Clark's own office!

Selling cynicism
It's the worst kind of politics — and not just because it offends taxpayers who see a government spending $15 million that could be used to help children at risk or reduce hospital emergency room overcrowding or improve crime prevention.

No, it's even more sickening because it makes people even more cynical about elected representatives — when government actually has a critical role to help those in need.

That's one lousy way to further reduce already declining participation in our democratic process, especially when BC had a depressing 51 percent turnout in the 2009 provincial election.

The ads are not only unnecessary; they're also untrue.

Sun Media columnist David Akin pointed that out, saying Clark's claim that BC created more jobs than any other province in the last year was "demonstrably false" and her other stats were "pretty wobbly too."

"Statistics Canada, said right here on October 5, the most recent and up-to-date snapshot of the country's job creation numbers, that 'over the last year' in BC, there are 44,700 more full-time jobs, 15,100 fewer part-time jobs for a net gain of 29,500 more jobs. Where on earth does Clark get 57,000 new jobs created?" Akin wrote.

It's also hard to believe BC has a great "Skills and Training Plan" when up to 2,000 miners will come to the province as Temporary Foreign Workers — because the government had no response to its own task force report calling for miner training four years ago.

Doing government 'differently'
What's worse is a premier who just doesn't get it. Clark was recently asked by the Kamloops Daily News about criticism of her $15 million ad campaign and responded this way:

"It's about content. What we're talking about in the advertising is all fact-based. So we talk about the jobs plan, we try to engage people in the jobs plan because one of the things that we have to do as we're building government policy is get the opinions and the best thinking of the people of the province," Clark said.
 
"So, I said I was going to do government differently. One of the things we need to is we really need to listen to people and engage them in their own government," she concluded.

Is that how you “do government differently” — by spending taxpayers’ own money to tell them you are doing a great job?

Is that how you "do government differently" — by personally appearing in some of the 90-second TV ads?

By spending taxpayers' own money to tell them you are doing a great job?

Gagging
And the sheer hypocrisy is breathtaking.
 
This government spending oodles of money to promote itself is the same one that tried to defend its gag law that prohibited third party advertising before provincial elections — until the BC Court of Appeal rejected its legislation . Again.
 
It's also the same government that spent $6 million in a failed advertising effort to convince taxpayers in last year's binding referendum that the Harmonized Sales Tax was a brilliant idea.
 
Their advertising policy has gotten so offensive that even longtime BC Liberal supporters have had it.
 
Martyn Brown — former chief of staff to ex-BC Liberal premier Gordon Campbell — is criticizing the ads.
 
On Shaw Cable's Voice Of BC last week he told host Vaughn Palmer that the $15 million ad budget is: "About the same price in total on environmental protection as we’re spending on these ads."

"I think first of all we should remember that every penny of that money is borrowed," Brown added. "We're going into debt to pay for those ads, so they better be worth it."

Martyn Brown's bright idea
Brown has a suggestion that I've made before to solve the problem: require opposition approval for government ads.

Martyn Brown has a suggestion that I’ve made before to solve the problem: require opposition approval for government ads.

"Refer all major proposed government ad campaigns to an all-party committee that can scrutinize and approve or reject those expenditures, and make public that information as soon as any ad campaign goes public," Brown wrote in an opinion piece last month.

If the official opposition agrees that it's worthwhile information for the public to see, hear or read — then go with it.
 
If taxpayers disagree, both parties will hear about it equally. Cynics will rightly note that Brown had 10 years as Campbell's top political staffer and was involved in every major government ad campaign but never implemented his own idea — fair enough criticism.
 
But that doesn't make it a bad idea. And Clark would be smart to realize that Canada doesn't start here. Rather, anger starts here when a wasteful government spends our money to advertise itself for political advantage.

 

Nov 212012
 

And: WTO undermines Ontario-first buying in Green Energy plan.

from Inside Queen's Park, Vol 25, No 25  

Money: the mother's milk of politics

The Ontario Liberal Party (OLP) has set a ceiling of $500K for leadership contributions and further requires each candidate to remit to the party 25 percent of the total donated to their campaigns.  So if campaign donations reach the allowable ceiling of $3.0M, $750K would be clawed back by the party, leaving $2.25M for the campaigns.  And in addition, the OLP will collect an entry fee of $50K from each candidate.  Whatever their detractors say about the party’s "tax-and-spend" orientation when it comes to the provincial budget, the OLP does not shrink from taxing its own party leadership candidates.

IQP thought it worth comparing the current half-million dollar donation limit to that applied in the previous Ontario LIB leadership contest, in 1996. Sadly, our inquiries of the party and calls to sundry Liberal officers and activists yielded a welter of incompatible responses — $250K; $350K; no limit.  (As one source noted, it is especially difficult to extract information from records sloshing around on the beginning edge of the Internet.)

Having to take our pick, we note that the income and expense filings with Elections Ontario for the 1996 Liberal leadership show donations for four of the six listed were clustered around $250K, only one of which exceeded that sum.

Leadership contests held when a party is in opposition attract smaller crowds at lower prices.  The Liberals cashed in very profitably after the 2003 formation of the McGuinty government but they have fretted unhappily of late at the disinclination of stakeholders and consultants to cut cheques as generously as they had done before the October 2011 slump into minority territory.

(There was certainly not much sign of donor fatigue at the recent Celebration Dinner 2012: A Tribute to Greg Sorbara. The consultant crowd and stakeholders were a bit less present than in major fundraising events, but several hundred Liberal stalwarts plus some of the rest of us forked over $750 a seat.)

We don’t yet know how much will be donated in the 2012-13 contest or whether it will cover campaign spending.  Elections Ontario postings of contributions to and expenditures by the six candidates who contested the 1996 race were uniformly though not hugely in the red.  Donations totalled $1.1M and aggregate expenses were $1.3M.  (There were actually seven candidates but party activist Greg Kells did not file the required financial return.)

Dwight Duncan, or perhaps his CFO, deserves special mention for keeping his 1996 expenses of $249K
within $700 of his campaign contributions of $248K.  Splendid credentials for a Finance minister.


WTO strikes down Ontario-first renewable energy buying program.

The World Trade Organization decision striking down the preferences for Ontario producers of solar panels and wind turbines that are central to Ontario’s Green Economy industrial strategy comes at an awkward time for the McGuinty government for two reasons.  (And it‘s a pain to try to get information from the WTO, which doesn’t use sensible disclosure protocols.)

First, the decision further undercuts the financial basis for the production of renewable energy, in pursuit of which wind farms sprouted all over south western Ontario, reminding voters that they had been imposed over local objections.  And what’s left of the government’s connected programs to create industrial employment, produce affordable electricity and clean the air?  And second, it appears that in both crucial arenas the McGuinty strategy of abandoning negotiated compensation in favour of legislative imposition is going down to judicial  or — if you prefer — quasi-judicial defeat.

 

Nov 192012
 
Over 300 people attended Peter MacKay's Halifax International Security Forum.

Making the world safe for Peter MacKay.

by Stephen Kimber

The idea for this past weekend’s fourth annual Halifax International Security Forum, Peter MacKay told the Globe and Mail, was born because our defence minister “got a little tired” of traveling to other global security conferences in places like Munich where the discussions were all “Europe-America, Europe-America.”

Voila the Halifax Forum.

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Nov 162012
 

Opposition calls for recusal due to close connections with Premier Clark.

by Bill Tiemleman

[Editor's note: As Bill Tieleman's column went to publication, he learned that Conflict of Interest Commissioner Paul Fraser had just announced he will recuse himself from investigating MLA John van Dongen's complaint against Premier Christy Clark.  Fraser's news release is here.

The short version is this direct quote: "I now recuse myself from any further substantive involvement in this matter."]

Here is Bill Tieleman's original column:

Careful supervision of the disclosure process proves the adage that 'sunlight is always the best disinfectant.
– BC Conflict of Interest Commissioner Paul Fraser

Would you go to a doctor who couldn't diagnose a common cold? Or hire a plumber who didn't spot a leaking pipe?

So why does British Columbia have a conflict of interest commissioner who doesn't recognize a conflict when he's in one himself?

Only in BC you say? Pity indeed that Paul Fraser sees nothing wrong with investigating a complaint by independent MLA John van Dongen against Premier Christy Clark's actions while the commissioner’s son John Paul Fraser:

“No matter what Fraser does, the fact that his son is a friend of Ms Clark and is employed in a senior position in the government means there will be a perception of bias.”

  • Holds a senior BC government political job doing communications for Clark and her colleagues;
  • Worked on Clark's successful BC Liberal party leadership campaign;
  • Used to work for the father of Clark's son, her ex-husband political consultant and former lobbyist Mark Marissen.

Not understanding that such a perceived conflict of interest clearly disqualifies Fraser from ruling on van Dongen's complaint is astonishing!

Fraser told the Vancouver Sun's Jonathan Fowlie that he had no trouble dealing with van Dongen's investigation request.

"I don't perceive a problem in making a decision in this case that will have nothing to do with my son's career," Fraser said.

"If I had any difficulty, or felt that I in any way couldn't handle this file like I do every file — on the basis that I will go where it takes me, and I will make the decision that needs to be made without, dare I say it, fear or favour — then I should pack it in," he added.

Ironically, Paul Fraser's own message in last year's commissioner's report states:

"The work that this Office does is part of the covenant of integrity that Members of the Legislature have with the citizens of British Columbia. The work is important as a democratic safeguard to ensure that private interest is not allowed to trump public duty."

Hard to disagree with that concept.

Van Dongen's complaint
But it's even harder to see how the commissioner can rule on van Dongen's complaint — which alleges that Clark participated in some discussions on the $1 billion sale of BC Rail in 2003 but excused herself from others  because at that time Marissen was a consultant to CIBC World Markets, the firm supervising the privatization.

van Dongen is a former BC Liberal cabinet minister who quit the party in part over BC Rail issues.

Abbotsford-South MLA van Dongen is a former BC Liberal cabinet minister who quit the party in part over BC Rail issues and the government's payment of $6 million in legal fees incurred by former ministerial aides David Basi and Bob Virk, despite their making surprise guilty pleas in Oct. 2010.

He is also an intervener at his own expense at Auditor General John Doyle's court application to obtain government records about the indemnity granted Basi and Virk and other officials whose legal fees were charged to taxpayers.

Fraser is a well respected lawyer and neither his integrity, nor his son's, are being questioned. But his judgment is dead wrong.

The argument van Dongen makes is powerful.

"I believe there is a reasonable apprehension of bias on the part of the commissioner," he said in a statement Friday.

"I must stress that at this time I am not making an allegation that the commissioner is guilty of actual bias. I am simply saying that there is a basis for a reasonable apprehension of bias on these facts which requires that someone other than Paul Fraser carry out the duties under the Members' Conflict of Interest Act."

In a telephone interview Sunday night van Dongen said he finds it disturbing that neither Fraser nor Clark understand the principles behind his complaint.

"It's a real concern that neither Paul Fraser nor Christy Clark acknowledge the real issue here," van Dongen said. "There's a critical need to maintain the independence of the conflict commissioner. It should embody the highest principles of judicial independence."

'Totally unfair': Clark
On Friday in Kamloops, Clark claimed that it was "totally unfair" of opponents to question Fraser's integrity to go after her. "Paul Fraser is a highly respected lawyer in British Columbia. He was selected by a bi-partisan committee in the Legislature and he has never been accused of bias," she told the Kamloops Daily News. "

He's a man of great integrity. His reputation is absolutely spotless. It's totally unfair to drag his reputation through the mud as a way to launch a political attack on me," Clark alleged.

But van Dongen rejects that characterization of his objections to Fraser's role. "It isn't just the situation of his son being in a very senior position in government communications, it's the comments that Paul Fraser doesn't perceive that as a problem," he said Sunday.

'Fraser must recuse himself': Green leader Sterk
The request by van Dongen that Fraser remove himself from the investigation also has the strong support of Green Party leader Jane Sterk and Integrity BC, the watchdog group promoting political ethics and accountability.

In an email Saturday to this reporter, Sterk states: "Paul Fraser must recuse himself from investigating John Van Dongen's complaint against Christy Clark."

The whole point about “perceived conflict of interest” is it isn’t that a conflict exists, just that there is a perception of conflict which creates doubt.

"Van Dongen is making very serious allegations about Clark's potential conflict of interest on the BC Rail sale."

"No matter what Fraser does, the fact that his son is a friend of Ms. Clark and is employed in a senior position in the government means there will be a perception of bias."

"Fraser should ask a senior member of his office to undertake this investigation," Sterk concludes.

And Integrity BC also believes Fraser must remove himself from the investigation.

"The appearances of Mr. Fraser's conflict in this matter — which is already so rife with very real conflicts and additional appearances of conflict — should make it readily apparent to him that it is inappropriate for him to conduct this investigation. The public deserves no less," Integrity B.C. executive director Dermod Travis told this reporter by email Sunday.
 

NDP expresses trust in Fraser
But surprisingly, the BC New Democrats are supporting Fraser's position.

"We think Mr. Fraser has a high level of integrity over the past years and we support his judgement — we think he will do the right thing," NDP MLA Shane Simpson said.

"This is an issue about Ms Clark, not Mr Fraser," said Simpson, MLA for Vancouver-Hastings.

Fraser has already conducted one investigation and rejected any wrongdoing on Clark's part since his son was appointed assistant deputy minister of Government Communications and Public Engagement on April 8, 2011.

That investigation was requested May 5, 2011 by a member of the public to determine if Clark had, in the words of the Commissioner's 2011 annual report:

"…Breached the Members' Conflict of Interest Act by appearing in and using government announcements while campaigning in a by-election to win her seat in Vancouver-Point Grey."

"The individual believed that government resources might have been used to 'facilitate' the premier's by-election campaign, including her attendance at public and media events," it stated.

And Clark certainly found lots of good news announcements to make before the May 11, 2011 vote that she narrowly won over the NDP's David Eby by less than 600 votes.

For example, on April 21, Clark celebrated Earth Day with a $4.7 million "green investment" grant to Simon Fraser University to fund a biomass energy project, speaking and watching a singing choir of happy kids.

And Clark announced $13.3 million in funding for a new home for families visiting their sick kids at Vancouver's BC Children's Hospital on April 28.

Fraser found no conflict in any of Clark's actions, responding directly to the member of the public five days after receiving the request to investigate, saying in a May 10, 2011 letter that:

"I can find anything in either written or electronic form that would support the suggestion that government resources were used in whole or in part, to promote the premier's by-election campaign."

"The fact that she is, at the same time, seeking election to the Legislative Assembly does not and should not prohibit her from carrying on her duties as premier, including making public interest announcements and attending events recording government policy and actions," he concluded.

Power of perception
Fraser's ruling may be completely fair, based on the facts he investigated.

But just as in the van Dongen situation, his letter of response did not disclose that his son was by that time working as a senior member of Clark's communications team, hired under an Order In Council that can be rescinded by the premier at any time.

Perhaps that isn't important. It might have made absolutely no difference to the member of the public who requested the investigation or to media who reported it.

But that's the whole point about "perceived conflict of interest" — it isn't that a conflict exists, just that there is a perception of conflict which creates doubt.

It's unfortunate for both Fraser and his son that their careers have collided in this way.

However it is far more unfortunate that Fraser not only didn't even perceive a problem but also failed to disclose that potential to van Dongen right from the start of the MLA's complaint.

Now the only solution is for Fraser to remove himself from the investigation.

But will other conflict of interest cases also put Fraser in an equally untenable position?

And it's troubling that Clark is already pointing to Fraser's report into van Dongen's complaint as the final word, saying to the Kamloops Daily News that she’ll be glad when Fraser's BC Rail probe is over: "because this will finally, with this report, stick a fork in it."

Is that the premier pre-judging Fraser's unfinished report in public? Not politically wise and definitely not reassuring.

Fraser's reappointment pending
In another twist of political fate, Fraser's own reappointment for another term as commissioner is due to happen shortly.

New Democrat MLA Leonard Krog declined all comment on Fraser's reappointment or even the status of it when contacted Saturday.  Krog sits on the all party special committee that will soon advise the Legislature on the matter.

It's time that the public had a little sunlight shone on the Conflict of Interest Commissioner's status and how he could continue in his job given his current conflicted state.

But given Krog's colleague Shane Simpson's comments on Fraser's position, there seems little doubt that Fraser will be reappointed to another five-year term with NDP and BC Liberal support.

Update
BC Independent MLA Bob Simpson agrees with John van Dongen call for Paul Fraser to recuse himself.

Earlier this morning I spoke with independent MLA Bob Simpson — Cariboo North — who says he agrees with van Dongen, Sterk and Integrity BC that the Conflict of Interest Commissioner should recuse himself from dealing with van Dongen's complaint.

"John van Dongen is correct in his contention that given the duration and twists and turns [of the B.C. Rail case] the premier should request a different process," Simpson said.  "Perception does count in these cases."

Fraser has since announced he will recuse himself from the investigation.