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Maybe he knows his feces, but some of his stumbles makes one question how he pulls together a team and with who.Bruce Monkhouse said:So maybe he's knows what he is talking about??.........just askin'......
Maybe he knows his feces, but some of his stumbles makes one question how he pulls together a team and with who.Bruce Monkhouse said:So maybe he's knows what he is talking about??.........just askin'......
Is Tim Hudak Canada’s new Conservative revolutionary?
SUBSCRIBERS ONLY
Campbell Clark
The Globe and Mail
Published Wednesday, May. 14 2014
Is Tim Hudak Canada’s new Conservative revolutionary?
He’s running on cutting corporate taxes and slashing 100,000 jobs from the public service, and in his second term, chopping income taxes by 10 per cent. His rhetoric is an echo of Mike Harris’s Common Sense Revolution and builds from the idea that government is bad for the economy.
If he wins the Ontario election, he’ll take the nexus of Canadian conservatism back to Queen’s Park. And Stephen Harper’s government, eight years in power, is likely to hear a sucking sound as young conservative staffers and a lot of the energy of Canada’s right heads down the road to Toronto.
It’s still a big if. Mr. Hudak shifted his campaign to the right, risking a backlash by promising to cut 15 per cent of the public service, when it seemed obvious that occupying the centre was the easy way to beat the incumbent Liberals. Especially since the premier, Kathleen Wynne has veered left.
Polls suggest most voters feel a desire to boot the Liberals from office, so it seemed that Mr. Hudak could win with the tried-and-true tactic of being inoffensive and asserting that it’s time for a change.
Instead, Mr. Hudak is promoting a full-bore, get-the-government-out-of-the-way message that’s rarely embraced by governments in Canada.
He calls equalization “welfare,” and uses the same word for corporate grants. He suggests that government tend to kill the economy. As he discussed his “million jobs plan” in Ottawa on Tuesday, he said 500,000 would be created naturally as long as Queen’s Park didn’t do anything, or in his words, “if we locked the door and said no legislators can come in and do any more damage to the economy.’ Those phrases aren’t the stuff of Canada’s Progressive Conservative mainstream. They’re the activist battle cry of the right that made Harris Tories, Mr. Hudak among them, political innovators in Canada.
Two decades ago, the Harris Tories, Mr. Hudak among them, promised to a right-wing shakeup. And when their zeal faded, and their fortunes waned, charter members like the late Jim Flaherty and Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird migrated to join Mr. Harper’s political-culture shift in Ottawa.
They rolled back funding for daycares, , cut the GST, turned Canada’s military image from peacekeeper to war-fighter, toughened crime sentences, and trimmed the civil service a touch. But Mr. Harper has been an incrementalist, symbolic battles like reforming the Senate have been abandoned, and his governing agenda is mostly light. They’re managing.
Elsewhere, Progressive Conservatives in Alberta and Atlantic Canada are centrist, and Brad Walls Saskatchewan Party is populist. Mr. Hudak is promising a small-government shake-up.
He has wrapped it up in a jobs agenda, promising to create a million jobs over eight years through policies like cutting corporate taxes and eliminating subsidies on wind and solar power.
That allows him to keep talking, relentlessly about creating jobs – the conversation that voters, according to polls, want to hear.
The specifics of the plan – a preposterous set of precise predictions of the number of jobs that will be created over eight years by each policy measure – make you wonder how Mr. Hudak, who has a Master’s degree in economics, can keep a straight face.
It claims 40,384 jobs (not 40,380) will be created from cutting wind and solar energy subsidies. Another 96,000 are supposedly to be created by reducing traffic gridlock in the GTA, an analysis the Conservatives have made, they say, based on several other studies.
They claim 170,240 jobs will be created by changing labour rules so that companies can hire one trades apprentice for every journeyman, and Mr. Hudak claims that – Hey Presto – that will happen overnight, apparently without worrying about companies labour needs. “I can do it in a second and create 200,000 jobs,” he told reporters.
Plenty of conservative economists will argue that cutting corporate taxes will create jobs, but serious ones won’t promise it will create 119,808, as Mr. Hudak does.
The Million Jobs Plan, such as it is, is just a vessel. The numbers are a bit of salesmanship, to transform his smaller-government, lower-tax agenda into a jobs plan.
But no one can claim he’s hiding the agenda. He’s telling voters it will take tough medicine, but that’s what you will get with the Hudak Tories. And if he wins the conservative revolutionaries will be back in Ontario.
E.R. Campbell said:Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail is an interesting take on the interplay between federal and provincial politics:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/globe-politics-insider/is-tim-hudak-canadas-new-conservative-revolutionary/article18654308/#dashboard/follows/
Members may recall that both Ralph Klein, in Alberta (1992-2006), and Mike Harris, in Ontario (1995-2002) were elected, in large measure, in response to high spending Conservative (1984-1993) governments in Ottawa.
There is, withing the broad Conservative base, a fairly large "small(er) government" wing. It is not as vocal as the social conservatives but it wants what it wants: less government and less spending. It fully accepts the need for government but it is certain that, at the margins, governments are too big and that they are inefficient, i.e. (at the margins, again) unproductive and even counter-productive. I, just for a personal example, believe that we could, without doing any real harm to anybody (except for the civil servants and political appointees who serve in them), cut 10% of the departments and agencies form this list and, more than that, maybe 15% from the 560 agencies that <sarcasm> 'serve' </sarcasm> the people of Ontario.
Does that mean I look forward to Premier Tim Hudak? "Yes" ... to the policies he is, currently, enunciating, and "No" ... to the man , himself.
recceguy said:I wonder if people are taking into consideration the cuts to the OPS that McGuinty and Wynne have already done.
Example: A southwestern office of the Ministry of Labour is supposed to have eight Industrial Inspectors. Through people retiring and others quitting in frustration over the last six years (and not being replaced), there are now at any one time, maybe three Inspectors in the field to cover two counties.
This result has seen an increase in industrial accidents (workers being killed or hurt) because the Inspectors do not have the time, due to those same accident investigations, to go in and do proactive workplace inspections in 'high risk' workplaces.
The same type of situation exists in almost all offices across the province.
Proposing to take another 15% from what is left, of that Inspectorate, will pretty well close the shop.
You'll save money, but more workers will be injured and killed as a result.
[ sarcasm]However, that would create job openings , wouldn't it? [/sarcasm] :
Since the list includes provincial appointments to things like college & university boards of governors, hospital boards, public health boards, local planning boards, police services boards, LHIN's (we know THEIR fate under a Hudak government*) and the like, do you want the province to have no reps on such boards (which the agency list shows) to reduce provincial costs, or just get rid of groups like the Rabies Advisory Committee or the Normal Farm Practices Board?E.R. Campbell said:Here is a list of the 560 agencies ... all, no doubt, filled with worthy, hard working people and some, like the Deposit Insurance Corporation,probablycertainly doing things that provide substantial benefit to Ontarians. But I challenge anyone to say that they cannot cut, say, 75 of them without doing any harm at all ... because some, indeed many of those agencies and boards, including those that cost very little, are "on the margins," but, as Lao Tsu said, "a journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step," and cutting marginal agencies is one step we need to take.
milnews.ca said:Since the list includes provincial appointments to things like college & university boards of governors, hospital boards, public health boards, local planning boards, police services boards, LHIN's (we know THEIR fate under a Hudak government*) and the like, do you want the province to have no reps on such boards (which the agency list shows) to reduce provincial costs, or just get rid of groups like the Rabies Advisory Committee or the Normal Farm Practices Board?
[sup]* - They'll be replaced by "health hubs – run by volunteer, skills-based boards and linked to regional hospitals – in charge of local planning, funding and service" (which would still appear on the big list if Ontario wants to nominate/appoint some of those volunteers).
I've skimmed the Sunshine List before, but thanks for the summary of how many some groups have - ouch!Hatchet Man said:I presume Mr. Campbell means paring down/elminating some of the actual provinically run entities on that list, vice appointments to their boards (since most of those appointments are unpaid, or paid very little).
This would be a much better starting point http://www.fin.gov.on.ca/en/publications/salarydisclosure/pssd/pdf/crown_2013.pdf
milnews.ca said:I've skimmed the Sunshine List before, but thanks for the summary of how many some groups have - ouch!
< >Fave translation from the Sunshine List: Operations Manager for OLG becomes "Chef, Exploitation" - exploitation boss.</ >
And as much as I love to hate TO, the results in a whole lot of other places in Ontario may not be all that different.Retired AF Guy said:Listened to CBC Radio on the way to work yesterday and they had a segment where they randomly asked a dozen or so people in Toronto what party and/or position these people held: Tim Hudak, Katleen Wynne, Andrea Horvath and Dalton McGuingty. Sadly, only one person got all four right. One women actually thought Hudak belonged to the Liberal party.
And you wonder why we end up with the governments we have. :'(
recceguy said:I wonder if people are taking into consideration the cuts to the OPS that McGuinty and Wynne have already done.
Example: A southwestern office of the Ministry of Labour is supposed to have eight Industrial Inspectors. Through people retiring and others quitting in frustration over the last six years (and not being replaced), there are now at any one time, maybe three Inspectors in the field to cover two counties.
This result has seen an increase in industrial accidents (workers being killed or hurt) because the Inspectors do not have the time, due to those same accident investigations, to go in and do proactive workplace inspections in 'high risk' workplaces.
The same type of situation exists in almost all offices across the province.
Proposing to take another 15% from what is left, of that Inspectorate, will pretty well close the shop.
You'll save money, but more workers will be injured and killed as a result.
[ sarcasm]However, that would create job openings , wouldn't it? [/sarcasm] :
PMedMoe said:Is there a link out there for "Elections for Dummies"? What I mean is, is there a chart (or whatever) that states what each party's stance is on different issues (in a nutshell, please)?
Crispy Bacon said:Conservatives: balance the budget, get Ontario back on track at all costs
Liberals: balance the budget - maybe - but let's improve upon the status quo
NDP: the kinder, more reasonable socialists, since the Liberals' budget was actually to the left of the NDP.