Tag: canadian politics

  • Scott Brison Resigns, Student Vote May Decide Riding

    Scott Brison Resigns, Student Vote May Decide Riding

    Kings-Hants MP Scott Brison has resigned as President of the Treasury Board and will not run as the Liberal candidate in the 2019 election . He has been an active member within the community for nearly 22 years, most recently winning Kings-Hants in the 2015 election with 71% of the vote. On January 10th Brison announced his resignation as President of the Treasury Board from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet due to personal reasons and to focus on his family .

    Brison was first elected in 1997 in Kings-Hants as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party. He was described as a Progressive Conservative “Young Turk” for his youthful outlook on politics. In 2000, Brison resigned as an MP to allow former Prime Minister Joe Clark to take his seat in Commons. He was then appointed as co-chair of the Tories, Election and Policy Platform Committee and then proceeded to become the vice-president of investment banking at Yorkton Securities in Toronto.

    In 2003, Brison crossed the floor to sit as a Liberal MP after the merger of the Progressive Conservatives and Canadian Alliance into the Conservative Party of Canada. Throughout Brison’s political career he had sparked attention for being the first openly gay member of Parliament. This was significant for young people, especially around Acadia University’s campus.

    Brison has consistently encouraged young people to get involved without fear. His resignation received large support from the community, but many were surprised by the news. It was rumored that Brison was going to take a smaller role within local politics, but in recent interviews Brison had expressed that was not the case, stating that his resignation is a family decision and will allow him to try a different path other than politics.

    “I’m not leaving federal politics to jump into [more] politics,” he said. “My intention is to consider options and opportunities outside of politics.” Given Brison’s background – having graduated from Dalhousie University in commerce – it would not be surprising to see a new small business prosper within Kings-Hants.

    With Brison choosing not to reoffer in October, there will be an opening for a new Liberal candidate in Kings-Hants. Acadia professor Dr. Andrew Biro had analyzed a possible switch from a Liberal riding to a Conservative one. Prior to 2003, Kings-Hants and the large majority of the Annapolis Valley had voted Conservative. 

    The biggest issue to consider is how a future MP in the Kings-Hants riding could benefit students, as well as small businesses. Hannah Dawson-Murphy, a Conservative nomination candidate for West Nova and current Acadia student, had expressed desire “to see more attention on student issues in this election, and I would like to see more students involved in the political process.”

    Dawson-Murphy noted how “the CPC’s plan is to stimulate the economy, help families prosper, and lower taxes, which will hopefully be attractive to students across Canada. As for Wolfville in particular, I think it’s important that the next MP for Kings-Hants works with small businesses and other industries that will grow the area and attract young people.” This could mean far more part-time jobs and co-op opportunities. Dawson-Murphy strongly emphasized that Kings-Hants needs an MP who actively listens to small business owners, families, and students.

    Another Acadia politics professor, Dr. Erin Crandall, expressed the possibility of slightly different outcomes. “I anticipate that all three major federal parties (Liberals, Conservatives, and the New Democratic Party) will view this riding as competitive. It will make for a very exciting local election and one where Acadia students’ votes could play a decisive part in deciding the winner.” 

    Conservative Party candidate for Kings-Hants Martha MacQuarrie did not immediately respond to The Athenaeum’s request for comment.

    Josée Léger is a third year Politics student and News Editor of The Athenaeum

  • In Defense of a Centrist

    In Defense of a Centrist

    I am a centrist. For many in the world of politics that means I am apparently an unprincipled flip flopper who will go wherever the political winds take me. For them, my want to find a reasonable compromise is something dirty. I am writing this to call ‘bullshit’. Being centrist, the want to find a desirable outcome for all involved, is how empires are built. The world, including Canada, seeks the common ground, where we can work together, rather than tear each other apart. The strength of centrism can be proven in the three pillars: public policy, economic issues, international issues and social issues in both the proven success of the middle ground and the failure of extremes. 

     

    To spend or not to spend. That is the argument of the left and the right. That you either need to throw money at every problem or turn off the tap and let everything die. With Centrists, the plan is to invest. If we can improve something we put time, effort and resources into it and if it is a boondoggle we get rid of it. You see this in the success in thoughtful, moderate leaders. Internationally, Barack Obama brought the United States out of the worst economic crisis since the great depression, nationally, Justin Trudeau’s investments have produced the strongest economic growth in Canada in 20 years and locally, Stephen McNeil has put Nova Scotia into a solid financial standing over more than a decade of mismanagement under the Conservatives and NDP. Centrist policies and principles work, producing stability and confidence. 

     

    In the last 60 years, the global state has dramatically changed. Nuclear states have emerged, the borders of the world have been thrown into flux and the invention of the internet has made the world more connected than ever. The reactionaries on both side of the political spectrum would have you fear every twitch that changed the global balance but centrists have found the formula to lasting peace. Non-interventionists would have you believe that we need to cut ourselves off from the world, make sure no one can come into our borders, or in other words: making sure that you stay on your side of the wall. If we went with their way we would fall into chaos and the rest of the world would continue. On the flip side, there are those who want to cut nations off from one another and over exert their control, creating foes rather than friends. As a moderate, I have seen the success of seeking change through dialogue, finding accommodations that promote cooperation, prosperity, and peace. We find the proof in the Iran Nuclear Deal, the NAFTA agreement and the Paris Climate Accord. Ending conflict with words rather than bricks that would be thrown or used to build walls. 

     

    Finally, we come the numerous problems that plague the fabric of our social infrastructure and our mortality. We on both sides of the political spectrum hurl insults at each other rather than offer solutions. The societal wrongs that we faced are viewed as a weapon in the political blame game rather than challenges to overcome. Centrists have been able to largely duck the mud being thrown. We work hard for the necessary changes, building a foundation to grow rather than trying to fix everything in one big swing of a sledgehammer. It is probably the thing that makes centrist so unloved sometimes, because we offer reality and hard work rather than the quick fix. In the battle for civil rights, marriage equality and more we see that the ultimate victory was not won over night but in hard, incremental steps because society is often unready for a big leap. It can be the harder and the more frustrating route but is the right one. 

     

    Left, right, tradition or change there always seems to be a balance somewhere that moves us forward but also closer together. We must respect each other, but be bold enough to make new strides. It is the imperfect perfection of moderation, the only proven method of progress and stability and it is why, despite the naysayers, I am sticking by it. 

     

     

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