babble-intro-img
babble is rabble.ca's discussion board but it's much more than that: it's an online community for folks who just won't shut up. It's a place to tell each other — and the world — what's up with our work and campaigns.

Nova Scotia NDP Train Wreck. What happened? What now?

KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

V


Comments

KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

How about an informal agendaless get together Saturday 26 October or 2 November?

What comes to mind is a daytime locale in metro where people sit at tables for seperate converstations, but can also be all addressed by anyone who chooses to do that.

 

That this be hosted by the local babble community, but word of mouth spreads who will come.

What do people think?

Alternative suggestions?


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

There of course the possibility of something more structured.

It would have advantages. Personally, I don't think that would be appropriate or desirable.

 

[Not to mention that I would not have the heart or will to organize something like that.]


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

The timing is also up for suggestion.

There is no hurry. But I would be willing to bet that people would like the opportunity to talk with folks outside their usual circle of friends and acquaintances.

Two or three weeks sounds like plenty of time for the word to get around. I do not see that waiting longer achieves anything.


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

After some discussion of suggestions here, whether and how to do this, I am willing to oganize the venue.

It needs to be somewhere amiable, not generally busy on a mid-day Saturday. And decent acoustics. In a room with deficient acoustics it does not take many people at all for a few hard of hearing people like myself- and I've been that way since my 20s- to be effectively out of the discussion.

 

I would also consult on the time with at least a couple people I can think of who might like to join in, but would not want to publicly announce in advance their participation.


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

If this happens, I see the participants as people who are or have been involved with the NS NDP.

Anyone will be able to come. But it is guaranteed to be only a talking shop if the discussion includes much from people who have never had any time for the actually existing NSNDP.


knownothing
Offline
Joined: Mar 24 2011

It's not a train wreck. Get a grip and close the thread.


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

As is said, sometimes bad press is better than no press.

[But what would have qualified as a train wreck?]


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

Here is the Letter to Caucus circulated last year, and referred to by Ralph Surette as a watershed point.

When I googled for it, it was in this babble thread: 

DEXTER GOVT: Managing Communications with the Base on a Diet of Austerity Budgets and Tax Cuts

 

 

 

The Base Bites Back

Here's a letter that went to all Caucus members. And from there has been circulating very quickly.

Significant chunks of the base are always unhappy with NDP governments. But there is a difference between being disgruntled, and being terminally pissed.

 

Molly Hurd and Lars Osberg

6271 Summit Street 
Halifax, NS 
B3L 1R6

Sunday, June 23, 2012


Dear NDP Caucus Member,

We are writing this letter - as supporters who have worked for, and donated to, the NDP 
through many past elections - because we would like to support the NDP in the next Nova 
Scotia provincial election, but we are now trying to see the point.

We supported the NDP, through many years, because we think Nova Scotia needs 
changes. Although in many ways this is a wonderful place to live, Nova Scotia could do better. 
For many years, while in opposition, the NDP spoke to the values of social justice, equality of 
opportunity and environmental sustainability that we think to be important. One can only 
imagine what the NDP, when in opposition, would have said about the priorities of a provincial 
budget which:

• Gave (via forgivable loan) $304 Million to the Irvings 
• Cut the tax rate for large corporations; 
• Forced spending cuts on health care, and primary, secondary and post-secondary 
education. 

We recognize that building a fairer, more sustainable and more beautiful province will 
take resources. However, even before the provincial budget was presented, the Premier 
announced that the government's over-riding priority, once budget balance is achieved, will be to 
cut the HST and reinstate the rates of provincial income and sales taxation established by the 
previous Conservative government.

One cannot expect to receive public services without paying for them. The Dexter pledge 
to restore the previous Conservative government's tax rate policy will tie the hands of a reelected 
NDP government for the long-term. If the over-riding priority of an NDP government on 
the tax side is to reinstate the tax rates of the previous Conservative government, then budget 
balance implies that on the expenditure side one cannot expect that Nova Scotians will ever 
receive better public services than those provided under previous Conservative and Liberal 
governments.

Indeed, in addition to the revenue from income and sales taxes, the previous Conservative 
government could, and did, spend the money from temporary increases in revenue from offshore 
natural gas and equalization - revenues which are now gone. And this NDP government has also 
chosen to forego over $90 Million per year in revenue by exempting home heating fuel from


sales taxation (a policy choice which provides the biggest benefits to those with the largest 
houses, least insulation and highest thermostat settings). So when the NDP now promises to 
return to the previous Conservative government's tax rates, one cannot expect that this will 
provide enough revenue to pay for the level of public services actually provided by the previous 
Conservative government, let alone honouring long-standing NDP commitments to reduce 
poverty and improve healthcare and education. 
houses, least insulation and highest thermostat settings). So when the NDP now promises to 
return to the previous Conservative government's tax rates, one cannot expect that this will 
provide enough revenue to pay for the level of public services actually provided by the previous 
Conservative government, let alone honouring long-standing NDP commitments to reduce 
poverty and improve healthcare and education.

We recognize that government must pay its bills. We know that if tax rates on Nova 
Scotia's more fortunate citizens increase, to pay for the services which will benefit all members 
of the community, then we personally will pay more taxes. We think that it is only fair that those 
of us who have received greater financial benefits from the community should also pay more to 
support the community - and in past elections, we worked for, and donated to, a party that we 
thought shared these values of social justice and would change Nova Scotia for the better.

However, a party whose principle taxation pledge is to bring back the tax rates of the 
previous government is not a party of change. And there is nothing new about the expenditure 
priorities of the last NDP budget - indeed, there is a long tradition of Nova Scotia governments 
throwing millions of taxpayer dollars at large industrial employers, from Clairtone to Sydney 
Steel, in attempts to maintain blue collar jobs, while starving education and social services. So 
if the NDP now actually stands for anything fundamentally different, for any change from 
previous governments, it is hard to see what it is. And if the NDP is not a party of change in 
Nova Scotia, why should those who want change support it?

Yours sincerely,

Lars Osberg and Molly Hurd 
Jackie Barkley 
Carl Boyd 
Helen Castonguay 
Milton Chew 
Theresa Chu 
Joeanne Coffey 
Blanche and Tom Creighton 
Michael Cross 
Gwen Davies 
Patricia De Meo 
Dick Evans 
Anne Marie Foote 
Heather Frenette 
Ruth and Herb Gamberg 
Jim Guild 
Judy and Larry Haiven 
Jane and Steve Hart 
Patricia Hawes


Barb Keddy 
Marie Kettle 
Pat Kipping 
Winniefred Kwak 
Heather MacDonald 
Innis MacDonald 
Margie Macdonald 
Sheila MacDonald 
Jane MacMillan 
Leanne MacMillan 
Ann Manicom 
Carol Millett 
Wayne Mundle 
Paul O'Hara 
Brian O'Neill 
Donna Parker 
David Roback 
Olga Scibior 
Linda Scherzinger 
Wendy Watson Smith 
Linda Snyder 
Sarah Wakely 
Cliff White 
Rita Wilson 
James Wolford 
Carole Woodhall 


knownothing
Offline
Joined: Mar 24 2011

KenS wrote:

As is said, sometimes bad press is better than no press.

[But what would have qualified as a train wreck?]

Well they still finished 2nd in pop. vote and there wasn't any huge scandals.

They still have 7 seats in the legislature.

If they'd have got less than 20% in the pop vote, got no seats, and if people went to jail for corruption I would call it a train wreck.

In fact, nobody can even say what exactly they did wrong, except suffer from high expectations.

 


Stockholm
Offline
Joined: Sep 29 2002

I still don't get why the NDP lost by such a wide margin in Nova Scotia. i ask people over and over "what was so bad about Dexter?" and the answer i always get was "he's wishy-washy"...this is a province that has had a host of bland premiers from Bob Stanfield to John Hamm - it remains a mystery to me....and i find it hard to believe that McNail the appliance repairmen is going to be any less 'wishy-washy" than Dexter was.


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

There are two threads to talk about what was wrong or not wrong with the NS NDP. I'm sure I've answered that question from you before Stock, let alone essentially the same ones from others. But you can put the same question tthere if you want, and I'll address it again.

I posted that letter here because its in the sprit of questioning. It isnt the same things I would have emphasised. And it was written last year.

Now we are in a place no one I know expected us to be.

Everybody outside NS has an opinion about what happened. But we here actually have to do something.

So a discussion about where to start seems in order.


Lens Solution
Offline
Joined: Dec 18 2010

knownothing wrote:

Well they still finished 2nd in pop. vote and there wasn't any huge scandals.

I just looked at the popular vote figures and it was basically a tie between the NDP and the PC's, so while the NDP technically finished about 0.5% ahead of the PC's, to be honest that's not exactly a big 2nd place win in the popular vote.

It's seats that matter in the eyes of the public and party position.  The PC's were smarter than I thought they would be.  They realized they wouldn't win but chose a small number of NDP seats to focus on and were able to take enough away in order to move up to Official Opposition.  I notice that all 3 Pictou seats (Centre, East & West) were NDP before - and all 3 went PC.  That was efficient regional targeting of seats by the PC's.


knownothing
Offline
Joined: Mar 24 2011

My point was that it wasn't a massacre and they still have lots of support from which to build. Second place by .5% is still second place. These are not polls we are talking about but election results.


cco
Offline
Joined: Apr 25 2005
Going from 31 seats to 7 isn't a massacre? I wouldn't enjoy being a foot soldier in any army you commanded.

knownothing
Offline
Joined: Mar 24 2011

Governments don't last forever, especially not NDP ones


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

We have a venue, a date [November 2], and a professional in restorative justice as facilitator. [So that it is not just a blame session, and everyone feels safe to participate.]
Details as this gets finalized. But looking at that Saturday evening, maybe beginning with a potluck.


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

V


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

Quote:

"There’s going to be a lot of questions, vigorous debate, maybe even recriminations about the result,” said Graham Steele, who served as the NDP’s finance minister before quitting politics.

“I expect it to go on for quite some time, not just months, but years.”

Story here, in which Howard Epstein said the same.

Which is why the restorative justice approach is required for the November 2nd meeting.

We have to be able to talk about what happened. But determining who was responsible is an endless finger pointing chimera, and all it gets is entrenching circle the wagons defensiveness from the infrastructure of the NDP.

 

If you want to discuss what is actually in that story, please do it in one of the threads where the NS experience and its lessones are being discussed.


Lens Solution
Offline
Joined: Dec 18 2010

Why did Graham Steele and Howard Epstein not run again?  It might have improved NDP prospects if they had.


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

Answer to your question in this other thread.


Wilf Day
Offline
Joined: Oct 31 2002

What happened? Another false majority government.  

Liberal voters cast 45.5% of the ballots, but elected 64 per cent of the MLAs: a manufactured majority for a one-party government.

Our first-past-the-post electoral system has a clever way of obscuring what really happened at the ballot box, says a political scientist.

What now? Will the Nova Scotia NDP finally get around to talking about proportional representation? It's only 13 months since the Electoral Boundaries Commission said:

Quote:
Reforming the first-past-the-post (FPTP) electoral system was suggested as a means of improving Nova Scotia’s representative democracy, by more accurately translating voter preferences into seats in the legislature. The distortions introduced by the current system, whereby only one member can be elected per constituency, with no allowance made for popular vote totals, can be a disincentive to political participation. This happens because all votes for losing candidates are, in effect, “thrown out,” and only those cast for the winning candidate in each riding count in terms of electing a representative. Some element of proportional representation is recommended as a means to “make every vote count.”

Comparative literature on this topic clearly shows that political systems using some form of proportional representation perform better than FPTP systems in terms of minority and female representation in elected legislatures. . . As well, the dynamics of the system, which tend toward coalition building, would promote more co-operation and accommodation among parties in terms of the legislative agenda.

There appear to be significant democratic benefits to be gained from incorporating some measure of proportional representation into the current FPTP electoral system. This no doubt explains why this option has been recommended by commissions and assemblies in a number of provinces over the past decade. The most popular recommendation in Canada has been to replace the FPTP electoral system with some form of mixed-member proportional (MMP) system, which combines some of the advantages of the existing single-member constituencies with greater proportionality.

Recommendation

The Commission is aware that the serious consideration and recommendation of alternative electoral systems is beyond its mandate. It is also cognizant that the adoption of a new electoral system represents a dramatic change to one of Nova Scotia’s key political institutions. It therefore suggests that the Nova Scotia Legislature initiate a process involving both extensive critical examination and public consultation on the current electoral system as well as possible alternatives to it.


Lens Solution
Offline
Joined: Dec 18 2010

Darrell Dexter speaks out for the first time since the N.S. election

Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter held his last cabinet meeting Tuesday morning, one week after he lost his seat in the provincial election and saw the NDP government defeated.

“We all came together to do a job and that's now over, so we move on to what is next,” says Dexter.

Dexter says he hasn’t had a lot of time for self-reflection and did not have a clear answer when asked about his future as leader of the party.

“I'm going to deal with all of these things in due course, but no, I have no plans of resigning as leader today,” says Dexter.

-----

Video Story:

http://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/darrell-dexter-speaks-out-for-the-first-time-...


Ken Burch
Offline
Joined: Feb 26 2005

Lens Solution wrote:

Darrell Dexter speaks out for the first time since the N.S. election

Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter held his last cabinet meeting Tuesday morning, one week after he lost his seat in the provincial election and saw the NDP government defeated.

“We all came together to do a job and that's now over, so we move on to what is next,” says Dexter.

Dexter says he hasn’t had a lot of time for self-reflection and did not have a clear answer when asked about his future as leader of the party.

“I'm going to deal with all of these things in due course, but no, I have no plans of resigning as leader today,” says Dexter.

-----

Video Story:

http://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/darrell-dexter-speaks-out-for-the-first-time-...

Good Lord...there's the possibility he'd actually try to stay on as leader?  Does he want to get the REST of his MLA's out of the legislature NEXT time, just so nobody can form a future NSNDP government and show the man up?

This settles it...the NSNDP has to dump the guy, and now. 


Ken Burch
Offline
Joined: Feb 26 2005

Even when Dave Barrett stayed on as BCNDP leader after losing his seat, the party was still the official opposition in the BC legislature and had actually maintained the same vote share in defeat in '75 that it held when it won in '72(with an increase in its raw vote count of over 100,000 votes).


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

Dont worry. There is no doubt that Dexter is leaving. He's just observing the formalities of "talking to the party Exec first".... as if he ever bothered with that. 

The other reason to say for a couple weeks that he has not decided, is that even though no one in NS believes it, going through the motions slows reporters from jumping in to the shell shocked remnants with questions of "what now?"


jerrym
Offline
Joined: May 30 2009

Ken Burch wrote:

Lens Solution wrote:

Darrell Dexter speaks out for the first time since the N.S. election

Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter held his last cabinet meeting Tuesday morning, one week after he lost his seat in the provincial election and saw the NDP government defeated.

“We all came together to do a job and that's now over, so we move on to what is next,” says Dexter.

Dexter says he hasn’t had a lot of time for self-reflection and did not have a clear answer when asked about his future as leader of the party.

“I'm going to deal with all of these things in due course, but no, I have no plans of resigning as leader today,” says Dexter.

-----

Video Story:

http://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/darrell-dexter-speaks-out-for-the-first-time-...

Good Lord...there's the possibility he'd actually try to stay on as leader?  Does he want to get the REST of his MLA's out of the legislature NEXT time, just so nobody can form a future NSNDP government and show the man up?

This settles it...the NSNDP has to dump the guy, and now. 

There is no chance he is staying on as leader as he did not even ask for a recount of his Cole Harbour-Portland Valley riding loss by only 21 votes even though Jim Morton is asking for a recount for a 32 vote loss. In other words, he isn't interested in staying on as MLA, let alone leader, in view of the enormity of the loss. I am sure he is just giving the party a little time to get organized for a leadership race. 

http://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1159966-dexter-rules-out-recount

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/jim-morton-requests-recount-in...


felixr
Offline
Joined: May 6 2012

I think Dexter's opting for no recount was an attempt to preserve a little bit of dignity. Recounts are humbling affairs that often don't change the end result.


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

I dont know, if you want to look at a humbling affair: Maureen MacDonald won her seat, now she has to stick around.


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001

There are two threads for discussing the election and the substance of what happened to the NS NDP.

What lessons should the Federal NDP take from the Nova Scotia experience/coming nightmare?

Nova Scotia election drumbeat

 

Please leave this thread for discussing the workshop below, or some alternatives.

 


KenS
Offline
Joined: Aug 6 2001


Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Login or register to post comments