Tag: #canadianpolitics

  • You’re in Class, She’s Running for Parliament

    You’re in Class, She’s Running for Parliament

    Stepping out of class, Hannah Dawson-Murphy’s phone goes off. She answers it and speaks briefly to her campaign manager. She drops by her professor’s office to hand in an assignment before heading to an event in the Annapolis Valley.

    Dawson-Murphy is seeking the Conservative Party nomination in the riding of West Nova so she can run for Parliament in 2019. Although there is no clear date for the nomination of the Conservative candidate, the election date is creeping up fast.

    “I could have waited [to run], but I decided not to,” she laughs. “My family was always really political.” Her home of Charlottetown provided a political base she could build on. She’s been watching Question Period ever since she was 10 and paying attention to the federal scene. “When I was a kid the Mayor of Charlottetown showed up to this community barbeque we were all at and I was playing bingo with my friends. I remember I asked him if he would sign my bingo card”. From then on she was hooked.

    She grew up in Charlottetown until she was 11, before moving to Berwick, Nova Scotia. In high school she was part of the debate team, Model UN, and student council. However, it was through Cadets that she discovered others with a passion for Canadian politics.

    “The people were really the main thing that drew me to the Conservative Party.” When Dawson-Murphy joined the military she found that her love for the party grew as she realized her views aligned with the Conservatives. “Conservatives are one big team. We help each other out.”

    “I’ve never been someone not fiscally conservative in the things I do,” she said. “I’m one to save a lot of money and it’s helped so far.” The amount she sees Conservative MPs working for their constituents is where she finds continued admiration for the people in the party.

    Dawson-Murphy is hopeful for the Conservative Party after their loss in the 2015 federal election. “The Liberals have a lot of appeal with young people, but I think young people are starting to see through that” she noted. “[They] don’t see Conservative values as their values because they don’t have a family, most of them aren’t paying a lot of taxes, a lot of them don’t see eye-to-eye yet. Issues like post-secondary education and marijuana are ones that resonate more with younger voters”.

    Democracy is what she wants to bring to West Nova should she be elected. On her campaign website Dawson-Murphy noted that bi-monthly town hall meetings, longer office hours during constituency weeks, and mail out questionnaires over controversial legislation would be hallmarks of her time as the MP for West Nova.

    Dawson-Murphy also noted that if she were to be elected she would be the first female Conservative MP ever from Nova Scotia. “I think the fact that we’ve never had a Conservative woman MP is a huge barrier that needs to be overcome. When people talk about gender parity it’s interesting because I feel like I’m out of the circle. The truth is I’m working just as hard as any other woman for office. I want to change how people view Conservative women who are running for elected office because I think a lot of people think it’s a men’s game. It’s really not.”

    Mental health, representation, and jobs are three key points in Dawson-Murphy’s platform. “West Nova struggles. I understand that because I grew up with the same kind of income a lot of residents here did, but I want to help them through that. Lowering their taxes and showing them they’re not alone and showing them that they deserve better.”

    The Trudeau government’s small business and carbon tax proposals do not make Dawson-Murphy happy. “That’s going to hurt a lot more people than it’s going to help. Yes, I think climate change needs to be tackled, but [a carbon tax] is a way I personally don’t agree with. We should not tax hard working Canadians to fulfill [that] goal because taxpayers don’t deserve that.”

    She is not your stereotypical Conservative, though. Dawson-Murphy has marched in pride parades and assists refugees. “I’m not far right nor far left. I’m in the centre of the right.”

    First she must win the nomination of the party, which can occur at any point during the next year. After submitting all the necessary paperwork, the local riding association votes on who should represent their party in the 2019 federal election. So far Dawson-Murphy is the only declared candidate.

    She is very fortunate to have the support of Lisa Raitt, former Conservative leadership candidate. Raitt gives Dawson-Murphy a phone-call every few days to catch up, reinforcing the tight-knit community within the party.

    “I actually think I can win” Dawson-Murphy smiles. As she speaks her smile stretches from coast to coast. “It’s taken a long time for me to say that, but I think I can do this.”

  • Justin Trudeau: Still a Drama Teacher

    Justin Trudeau: Still a Drama Teacher

    “I was very much optimistic about what his performance would be and honestly I’ve found it poor at best”

    Picture by Matthew S. Duboff

    I’ll let you in on a little secret: Justin Trudeau is still a drama teacher. Now, he’s just a drama teacher that turned out to be bad at politics. He seemed perfect at first, I will admit that. The promises to the middle class, the legal weed, the environmental protectionism, and that hair, all very sexy indeed. But nearly two years after these promises, where do we find ourselves? I’m not an expert on the topic but I would say we’re right where we started… adjacent. So, in this article I’ll be exploring Trudeau’s four biggest election promises, what they were, where they went, and where they are. And, just because I think it would be fun, I’ll rate them on a scale of one to five, one representing a monumental crash and burn, five representing a well delivered promise. To keep me honest, I’ll rate them based on promise broken versus promise delivered considering that where you stand on key issues can dictate how you feel about them. 

    Promise #1: Syrian Refugees 

    JT promised that he would bring in 25,000 Syrian refugees by year end 2015. Well, what can we say about this one, it did happen, it just happened two months later than it was supposed to. With 54% of Canadians either moderately or strongly opposing the initial promise it seems clear that this was not a priority for most voters. The only reason that it makes this list is because it was one of the best publicized. Due to the lack of support from the public and the late marks incurred for missing a deadline, I’ll grant him a three out of five on this one.  

    Promise #2: End First-Past-The-Post

    Next comes electoral reform, perhaps the most difficult endeavour a new government could undertake. At the beginning, it seemed that the PM was quite passionate about changing the way we elect our government, saying that he believed “fundamentally that we can do better”. This was a situation unlike the refugee issue, there was no late delivery. In February it was announced that the Liberal government simply would no longer pursue electoral reform at all. The letter to the Minister of Democratic Institutions Karina Gould read “A clear preference for a new electoral system, let alone a consensus, has not emerged… Changing the electoral system will not be in your mandate”. This was not a determination made without consulting the people, the government consulted 360,000 Canadians online and by telephone to ask their thoughts on electoral reform. The report on what they said, which I’ll gladly leave at the end of this article, is 111 pages long and assaults the reader with statistics. I won’t share my interpretation but it’s sufficient to say the questions posed to those who completed the survey were very general. How the Liberals handled the road to electoral reform was a complete embarrassment at best, one out of five, no questions asked.   

    Promise #3: Legal Weed

     The Liberal promise of legal weed is, in my opinion, one of the main reasons they were elected. At the very least we can agree that it won them some of the millennial vote. I would hate to quote myself but last semester I wrote on the topic in an article titled “This Bud’s For You” in which I stated that legal marijuana is a great idea but not for any of the reasons the Liberal party cited. I still stand by that statement. Further to this, the plan to legalize marijuana has been lined up conveniently around the time of the next federal election which is not likely a coincidence. The legal purchasing age, the points of sale and the penalties for driving under the influence of marijuana are still up in the air as it stands right now. In my home province of Ontario, many believe the Wynne Liberals are botching the point of sale issue. With no clear intention to allow the free market to develop the industry, my province intends to sell it through provincially regulated stores, the same idea as liquor stores. While I will say that it would be nice to pick up a six pack and a joint on a Saturday afternoon I also believe that in this case a large opportunity has been missed. Although the promise will be delivered, much has been left up to the provinces to figure out, and for that a four out of five is the result.   

    Promise #4: Short Term/Modest Deficits

    This promise simply didn’t turn out. The Liberal government has been a cash furnace from which few things have emerged. I don’t think that anyone really believed this and the promise was absolutely blown out of the water far sooner than even I expected. This promise needs no explanation, it just didn’t happen. One out of five.  

     What’s to say about this one folks. I’m disappointed. After the fogginess of my election night drinking wore off, I was willing to give Trudeau a shot. I was very much optimistic about what his performance would be and honestly I’ve found it poor at best. Agree with me? Great. Pissed off about this article? Even better.  

    Write for The Ath. Prove me wrong.

    Sources:

    http://nationalpost.com/news/canada/majority-of-canadians-oppose-trudeaus-plan-to-bring-25000-syrian-refugees-over-in-just-six-weeks-poll/wcm/79e46faf-92bd-4069-b8bb-dd1cc4fbaad0

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/justin-trudeau-syrian-refugees-canada-1.3335517

    https://trudeaumetre.polimeter.org/promise/5201

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/wherry-trudeau-electoral-reform-promise-betrayal-1.3962386

    https://www.canada.ca/en/campaign/electoral-reform/participate-in-canadian-federal-electoral-reform-consultations/mydemocracyca.html

    Christopher Vanderburgh is a fourth year Politics student and Features Editor of The Athenaeum

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