Canadian politics

Sep 102012
 

Oil sands boosters worried about public image, NDP.

 

Is the Harper government growing increasingly nervous about opposition to its push for massive oil sands development and the North Gateway Pipeline?

It would seem so listening to five Calgarians and a wannabe Calgarian from Quebec who were vying for the Conservative nomination for a by-election in the riding of Calgary Centre, home to dozens of oil company towers and one of the safest Conservative seats in the country.

They just didn’t sound that confident about the Prime Minister’s tactics for winning the hearts and minds of Canadians outside Alberta.

“Alberta needs some friends….We need to get out the message about our industry to Ontario, to the rest of Canada,” former journalist Joan Crockatt told a public forum last week.

Crockatt eventually won the nomination. Her journalism experience, she said, made her the best suited of all the contestants to tell Canadians just how important the oil sands are to the country’s economy. She also believes the PCs need to step up their defense of the oil industry rather than let environmentalists control the game.

Conservatives said the Harper government needs to do more to convince the rest of Canada that oil sands development is good for them.

“We are looking after our environment …we’re proud of what we are contributing to the national scene,” she said.

But Crockatt wasn’t the only Conservative vying for that prized nomination who believes the Harper government needs to do more to convince the rest of Canada that oil sands development is good for them.

Rick Billington, a lawyer and member of the Prime Minister’s constituency association board, said the energy industry needs a strong advocate and he was eager to take on the job because “Harper can’t carry the file alone.”

Jon Lord a former PC MLA and Calgary alderman said  “we need to tell our story better.”

If this seems a particularly Alberta view of the world, it isn’t. Apparently even some people from Quebec feel the same way.

Joe Soares who recently moved to Calgary from Gatineau, wore a white cowboy hat during the forum and was the most blunt about the need for the Conservatives to step up their game when it comes to defending the oil sands.

A one-time policy advisor in the PM’s office, Soares said NDP leader Tom Mulcair and “his socialist wrecking crew” reminded him of Pierre Trudeau and National Energy Program. That brought a few groans from some of the 350 people in the audience.

When asked what he would do if Mulcair became Prime Minister, Soares said (with a distinct John Wayne drawl): “I would give him a French lesson. No merci. Hands off our oil sands…they are not a disease.” His fans in the audience then shot up signs that read “Protect our Oil Sands.”

Most of the opposition to the Northern Gateway Pipeline which would move diluted bitumen from the oil sands through British Columbia to the coast, comes from British Columbia. But neither that project, nor that province, were mentioned by those vying for the Conservative nomination. After all, the Conservatives hold most of the federal seats in B.C so it wouldn’t have been wise to pick a fight with Alberta’s neighbour.

But it was clear that this group of active Conservatives is worried about the growing resistance to Alberta’s oil sands plans. And they are particularly worried about the impact that Mulcair and the NDP are having on public opinion. Nobody even mentioned the Liberals.

An opinion poll released only hours before the forum certainly confirmed those fears.

Commissioned by Sun News Network and conducted by Abacus Data of Ottawa, the national survey found that only 36 percent of respondents either strongly or somewhat agreed that “all Canadians benefit from the wealth generated from the Alberta oil sands”. Forty-five percent either strongly or somewhat disagreed with that idea.

Regionally, Albertans were most likely to agree (74 percent) while Quebecers (56 percent) and British Columbians (52 percent) were most likely to disagree.

Thirty-one percent of respondents said they either strongly or somewhat supported the Northern Gateway Pipeline, while 32 percent opposed it. According to Abacus Data, this represents a seven-point decline in support since January 2012 and a three point increase in opposition.

No wonder Conservative are worried. No wonder Alberta Conservatives want their Prime Minister to step up his sales pitch.

Sep 042012
 

So far, ten BC Liberal MLAs have announced they will not run again.

Now, cryin' won't help you, prayin' won't do you no good; When the levee breaks, mama, you got to move.

– Led Zeppelin – When The Levee Breaks (Originally written by Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe McCoy)

The BC Liberal levee broke last week.  By the end of political hurricane season, many of its MLAs will be adrift, not running for re-election.

The sudden resignations of Finance Minister Kevin Falcon and Education Minister George Abbott in just 24 hours only indicates the extreme severity of the storm Premier Christy Clark faces, not its length.

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Sep 032012
 

Calgary Centre by-election candidates want to see better sales job.

by Gillian Steward

The Harper government seems to be growing increasingly nervous about opposition to its push for massive oil sands development and the North Gateway Pipeline.

It would seem so listening to five Calgarians and a wannabe Calgarian from Quebec who were vying for the Conservative nomination for a by-election in the riding of Calgary Centre, home to dozens of oil company towers and one of the safest Conservative seats in the country.

Continue reading »

Sep 032012
 

Readers respond vigorously to column about electoral boundaries.

by Stephen Kimber

We are at the drain end of August when the non-news of summer just repeats itself.  Mayor Peter Kelly still refuses to rule out running for his old Bedford council seat; Lance Armstrong still proclaims his innocence; Conrad Black still wants his day in court. Wisely, no one pays any mind. So I was surprised last week when a column I wrote about that most seemingly esoteric of subjects — electoral boundaries — roused such passion.?  I've had online comments, Facebook postings, emails, phone calls, even supermarket line-up upbraidings…

My argument, simply put: the provincial government’s decision to order the supposedly independent electoral boundaries commission to come to a pre-determined conclusion to eliminate so-called protected ridings was an affront to the democratic process.

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Aug 302012
 

Calgary Peace Prize celebrates Gaza hero.

by Carolyn Pogue

On International Women's Day on March 8, I heard the most pro-woman speech I've heard in years. It was delivered by a man.

Upon receiving the 2012 Calgary Peace Prize, Dr Izzeldin Abuelaish of Gaza told his story to a sold-out audience at the Calgary Golf and Country Club. That's just about as far from Gaza as one could imagine.

There was no other sound than his voice in that room, not a whisper, no teaspoon clinking a cup, as Abuelaish spoke of the day in January 2009 when an Israeli shell struck his family home, killing three of his daughters and a niece. Rather than responding with anger, however, he dedicated himself to being a voice of peace and reconciliation.

 

“People are not important to the leaders from either side. You have to wonder if they have sons and daughters themselves.”

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Aug 222012
 

Alberta makes strides against homelessness.

by Gillian Steward

Between 1994 and 2006, Calgary had the fastest growing number of homeless men, women and children in Canada. There were plenty of new condo towers but there wasn't enough housing for many of the people who laboured to build those glass palaces.

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Aug 222012
 

from Inside Queen's Park, Vol 25 No 18.

by Inside Queen's Park

As you were ?
IQP has carefully mapped the outcomes of all Ontario provincial by-elections held from 1977 to 2011 — 48 in total. Do their outcomes illuminate the pair now being conducted?. The first thing to note is that the partisan stripe of the ridings contested in by-elections changed in only 14 of those contests (29 percent, less than a third) — which is to say that the seats in contention in the other 34 by-elections (71 percent, well over two-thirds) stayed in government or opposition hands just as they had started out.

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Aug 222012
 

Check your beliefs — but don't expect clarity!

by Bill Tieleman

If any ideology is so serious that you can't have fun while you're doing it, it's probably too serious.
– Author Larry Wall

Are you right-wing or left-wing? Are you a social liberal or conservative?

What exactly is your ideology? And how can you tell?

These are tough questions anytime and more difficult still at a time when religion is fading as a moral compass, and millions of different issues bombard us through electronic media.

 

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Aug 222012
 

Electoral boundaries commissioners being used as political cover.

by Stephen Kimber for Metro

You could be forgiven for assuming Nova Scotia Justice Minister Ross Landry actually believes in the democratic process.

"It's very important that we look at our demographic structure in Nova Scotia… and how we get fairness and equity into the system," he told reporters last week as his government-appointed, government-instructed "independent" electoral boundaries commission wrapped up public hearings on his government-ordered, revised second edition of its first rejected interim report.

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Aug 082012
 

Former NS Cabinet minister mishandled $25,000.

by Stephen Kimber for Metro

You could — in a law-school-essay, sentencing-guidelines way — justify Justice David MacAdam's decision to sentence disgraced former MLA Richard Hurlburt to house arrest instead of clapping him off to jail. But not in the real world. Richard Hurlburt repeatedly violated the trust of his electors while bilking taxpayers of more than $25,000, and then attempted to justify his actions — until the truth trapped him.

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