Archive for the ‘Liberals’ Category

Ontario Liberals give NDP hard deadline to decide on budget

Ontarios Liberal government is ramping up the provinces deficit with a big-spending budget designed to either forestall an election or pay off at the polls in the event of a snap vote. The spending plan which hikes the shortfall to $12.5-billion outlines a sweeping, left-tilting agenda including a new provincial pension plan, billions of dollars worth of new infrastructure and piles of money for social services.

Finance Minister Charles Sousa said the government has to intervene to stimulate a sluggish economy. Weve taken the deliberate step and the conscious step to make these investments this year, he said. Thats going to propel our economy to a level that otherwise wouldnt occur.

The reasoning behind the document, however, is as much about politics as policy. The Liberals are banking that the budget will be hard for the NDP to vote against.

And if they do, they hope the new spending will win them the ensuing election. The Grits control only a minority of seats in the legislature and, with the Progressive Conservatives vowing to vote down the budget, need the NDPs support to avoid an election.

Just minutes after Mr. Sousa tabled the plan in the legislature, Premier Kathleen Wynne ratcheted up the pressure on NDP Leader Andrea Horwath to support it by giving her a one-week deadline to make up her mind.

We are eager to implement key aspects of the document immediately, Ms. Wynne wrote in an open letter. We need to begin the process of putting the new Ontario Retirement Pension Plan in place, of building infrastructure across the province, especially through our Moving Ontario Forward plan for transportation and transit, and of creating good jobs and growing the economy.

Ms. Horwath skipped the traditional news conference with reporters in the budget lockup, saying she would instead respond to the budget Friday. Ill be talking more in the morning, she said as she left the legislature.

The hefty deficit is $2.4-billion more than the governments target, but Mr. Sousa insisted he could still balance the books by 2017-18 using a combination of higher taxes on the rich and smokers, and brisker economic growth. The shortfall, he said, will fall dramatically to $8.9-billion next year.

But the blown deficit target could lead to a downgrade in the provinces credit rating in the weeks ahead.

Its obviously more than we expected and factored in, in our last review, said Mario Angastiniotis, who analyzes Ontarios finances for Standard & Poors. And thats disappointing. While saying its understandable given the weaker-than-expected economy that revenues are not growing as much as expected, Mr. Angastiniotis noted the lack of offsetting measures in the form of greater spending restraint.

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Ontario Liberals give NDP hard deadline to decide on budget

How Talk to Debate Liberals on Obamacare: Jim Frogue – Video


How Talk to Debate Liberals on Obamacare: Jim Frogue
Nationally recognized health policy expert Jim Frogue breaks down the real facts about Obamacare and how to discuss the legislation with your friends and fam...

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How Talk to Debate Liberals on Obamacare: Jim Frogue - Video

Racism that the Liberals don’t care about – Video


Racism that the Liberals don #39;t care about
I could #39;ve made the typical "it #39;s bad for White people to be racist, but Black people can get away with it!" type of video, but I chose to go with something ...

By: JamesEvangelical99

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Racism that the Liberals don't care about - Video

Young Liberals' Fight Club

'Black Ops': Young Liberal Aaron Henry. Photo: Rob Homer

They were Young Liberals on a covert mission, codenamed Black Ops. The dress code was black, the meeting time was 10pm, and it was BYO ladder. Their mission: to tear down ''illegally'' posted campaign posters on telegraph poles, allegedly including their own.

Inspired by the buff Brad Pitt in cult movie Fight Club, a former adviser to minister Chris Hartcher fired off an email on August 11, 2011, to whip the party's youngest members into action.

Aaron Henry, the author of the missive, assured the Independent Commission Against Corruption that they were not waging a covert war on their political opponents and were even removing their own posters.

Tim Koelma leaving ICAC. Photo: Rob Homer

''Come on Mr Henry! Are you telling us that ''Black Ops'' was Young Liberals sneaking out at night, removing your own signs?'' said Geoffrey Watson, SC, counsel assisting the commission.

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''It's a light hearted thing in order to help keep Young Liberals engaged and meeting us to go out and do work at 10pm at night,'' said Mr Henry.

An incredulous Mr Watson said that it was more likely the group was ''slashing'' the posters of their political rivals, but Mr Henry insisted this was a very small part of the crack team's work.

No one talks: Charles Perrottet leaves the ICAC with his counsel yesterday. Photo: Rob Homer

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Young Liberals' Fight Club

Federal Liberals adrift in Quebec: Hbert

MONTREALIs there much life for Justin Trudeaus federal Liberals in francophone Quebec in the absence of a unity debate? Not necessarily, according to the first Quebec-only poll released since the April 7 election.

The CROP poll suggests that the return to power of the provincial Liberals has left their federal cousins with little wind in their sails.

With all federalist indicators flashing green; with support for sovereignty standing at less than 30 per cent, the NDP is riding high among francophone voters (38 per cent) while Trudeaus Liberals (24 per cent) are being pushed back to the sidelines.

With numbers like that, Trudeau would hold his existing seats on the island of Montreal , where he enjoys the strong support of anglophone and allophone voters, but the party would remain shut out of the bulk of the province.

In the absence of gains in Quebec the Liberal leader could face long odds on winning enough seats to form a government in next years federal election.

There is little new to what plagues Trudeaus party in Quebec.

For almost four decades the party has done best when the PQ was solidly in the saddle provincially and poorly in more federalist circumstances.

Over the past few years, that trend has been compounded by the 2011 NDP sweep , the partys choice of Mulcair as leader and, more recently, by the PQs rout.

Philippe Couillards victory has killed the 2015 scenario of a federalist call to arms under the flag of the federal party that successfully fought the two Quebec referendums and that set out rules for a future vote on the provinces future in the Clarity Act.

It is a rare couple that looks for marriage counselling on the heels of renewing its wedding day vows.

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Federal Liberals adrift in Quebec: Hbert