Candidates vying to be Halifax's next mayor combat apathy and lack of awareness | Canada News Media
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Candidates vying to be Halifax’s next mayor combat apathy and lack of awareness

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HALIFAX – Candidates running to be Halifax‘s next mayor are fighting apathy and a lack of public engagement with municipal politics, experts and candidates say.

“I think that Haligonians, and probably a lot of Canadians generally, are checking out of local politics,” Alex Marland, a professor and political scientist at Acadia University in Wolfville, N.S., said in a recent interview.

“The irony of it is that municipal politics is actually becoming more important in people’s lives as cities get bigger, as the tax base increases, as cities are asked to do more and more.”

A poll conducted between Sept. 24 and Oct. 2 found that almost half of Halifax voters couldn’t name a single candidate in Saturday’s mayoral election.

The survey of 383 eligible Halifax voters conducted by Atlantic polling firm MQO Research found that 46 per cent of respondents either drew a blank or named someone not in the race — such as the premier or the outgoing mayor — when asked to identify candidates in the election.

Waye Mason, a municipal councillor who is running for mayor, said in an interview Tuesday that awareness of the election seems low based on conversations he’s having on people’s doorsteps.

“You are fighting uphill. It is as much about telling people that there is an election, as it is about selling yourself as the candidate they should vote for,” Mason said, adding that in recent days people’s interest and awareness seems to have increased. But he senses candidates are “also fighting against a general apathy and anger, post-COVID, that I think is stronger than we’ve seen before.”

Mayoral candidate and former Liberal MP Andy Fillmore agreed Tuesday that voters do not seem particularly tuned into the campaign, which he says could be tied to voter fatigue amid speculation about possible provincial and federal elections.

“This, along with the fact that there are 16 people on the ballot and multiple contested council races, may make it difficult to track who is championing what policy approaches,” Fillmore said.

The former MP added that voters have told him they feel apathetic about municipal politics after having negative experiences when contacting council with concerns.

Marland attributes the lack of knowledge and general apathy about the mayoral race to a decline in local journalism. The political scientist said that previously, prospective voters would get newspapers delivered and could easily tune in to what’s going on locally “simply by fanning through the paper.”

As local newsrooms shrink, Marland said many have turned their focus to news outside of Canada — particularly the ongoing U.S. election campaign.

Mason said he’s noticed a significant decrease in news coverage of Halifax’s municipal politics in the past few years. “We send out press releases and we go to debates, and there’s very little or no media there,” he said.

The councillor said during the mayoral election 12 years ago, “you would have cameras from every station, reporters from every outlet. And now it’s rare to see anybody there from a major media outlet. I think that’s really had an impact.”

Without consistent media coverage, Marland said, candidates are gravitating towards sharing their messages through social media, which may be effective at connecting with some voters — “but the reality is that the average person is probably not paying attention to that whatsoever.”

Lori Turnbull, a political scientist at Dalhousie University, said municipal contests tend to attract the least attention of any elections. She said this is due to the comparatively low media coverage and lack of involvement from political parties, which put great effort into advertising their candidates and campaign promises.

What’s different about this campaign, Turnbull said, is that Halifax will be electing a new mayor for the first time in more than a decade. Halifax Mayor Mike Savage announced in February he would not run again, and on Sunday he was appointed Nova Scotia’s lieutenant-governor.

“It’s been 12 years since there has really been any contest for who the mayor would be, so it’s been a long time since anybody has been thinking it would be anybody other than Mike Savage,” she said.

Polls show that the front-runners are Fillmore, Mason, and Coun. Pam Lovelace. The most recent poll, conducted Oct. 1-3 by Narrative Research for the Halifax Chamber of Commerce, found that 24 per cent of respondents favoured Fillmore, 19 per cent would vote for Mason and 12 per cent preferred Lovelace.

Of the 472 voting-age Halifax residents surveyed as part of an online panel, 32 per cent were undecided. Because the results come from a sample where residents have joined a panel to share their opinions, the polling firm does not apply a margin of error.

Peter Roth, a 29-year-old who lives in downtown Halifax and whose pronouns are they/them, made a point of seeking out the candidates’ platforms online. But they believe many in their age group may be tuned out of the election entirely.

“I think there’s a small subset of people who are engaged … but I don’t think anyone’s really excited about the vote, and I think people my age or a bit younger may not care,” Roth said in an interview Monday.

Roth said this is a problem, because they are the ones most feeling the pinch from the lack of housing and the high cost of living. Younger Haligonians, they said, “are arguably the most dissatisfied with this city but the least excited about politics.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 16, 2024.

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N.S. to build berm to protect Chignecto Isthmus, still wants Ottawa to pay for it

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HALIFAX – The Nova Scotia government says that in the coming days it will start building a 500-metre-long berm to protect a low-lying land link between the province and New Brunswick.

The Chignecto Isthmus is increasingly prone to flooding and other climate change-related damage, and the total cost to upgrade the land link is estimated to be $650 million.

New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have gone to court to get the federal government to pay for all of the project, while Ottawa says costs should be shared.

The Nova Scotia premier says that in the interim, his province will build the lengthy four-metre-high soil barrier along the LaPlanche River for $2 million to act as backup for the existing “aging and eroding” dike.

Houston says in a statement that this work needs to be done now in order to protect people living and working in Amherst, N.S., from extreme weather.

Climate researchers have forecast that one severe tidal storm moving up the Bay of Fundy is capable of overcoming dikes, flooding communities, disconnecting the province from the rest of Canada, and stopping ground or rail transport of goods and services.

“While we put contingency plans in place like this berm, we need the federal government to acknowledge the national importance of the Chignecto Isthmus and take the climate change threats we face seriously,” Houston said in a statement.

“I am again calling on Liberal MPs to show leadership on this crucial issue, fully fund the project and do what is right for Nova Scotians.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 15, 2024.

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New Brunswick election: Fewer events, promises mark Tories’ ‘super quiet’ campaign

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FREDERICTON – New Brunswick Progressive Conservative leader has been noticeably more absent on the campaign trail compared to his two main opponents — and has made significantly fewer election promises.

Since the Sept. 19 election call, there have been at least 10 days on which Tory Leader Blaine Higgs has had no public events. Higgs, who is vying for a third term as premier, was also absent from the second leaders debate, held Oct. 9.

“Maybe that’s to keep you guessing,” he said with a laugh at a news conference last week when asked about his availability, or lack thereof.

On Saturday, the Tories released their platform with no fanfare and no advance notice. It is two pages long and contains 11 promises, including a two per cent cut to the harmonized sales tax, at a cost of $450 million a year. It also promises to continue to “respect parents” — a reference to a 2023 policy change requiring teachers to ask parents before using the preferred pronouns of trans students under 16.

The lack of detail is the point, it seems. “Our Progressive Conservative New Brunswick team will not try to buy your vote with 100 promises,” Higgs said on Page 2 of the platform, which doesn’t include a total cost for the 11 promises.

New Brunswick’s Progressive Conservatives are conducting a “super quiet” campaign, says J.P. Lewis, a political science professor at the University of New Brunswick in Saint John. It goes against the norm of how parties have traditionally campaigned in provincial or federal elections, he said.

“It does fit with the fact that they aren’t announcing much, and it fits with (Higgs’s) attitude that, campaign promises can get governments into trouble because it ties them to expenses that can have an effect on the provincial purse,” Lewis said.

Higgs, however, maintains that his schedule is rather charged — just not when the media are around.

“We’re not making announcements every day,” the Tory leader said last week. “We’re visiting in communities. We’re talking to people. We’re visiting different ridings with their candidates, and we’re out there …. being seen for the people who are going to support us.”

“But rest assured, these are full days. And if you have any doubt, ask my wife.”

Still, Lewis says Higgs’s schedule is “very different” from what Canadians are used to.

“You could see a leader taking maybe a day off a week, but it when it becomes multiple days off … I think it’s very, very different than what we’re used to.”

The Liberals and Greens, meanwhile, have chosen a contrasting approach, with events on almost every day of the campaign.

Liberal Leader Susan Holt’s campaign said she has so far taken off two days, including Thanksgiving Monday. Her election platform, at 30 pages, contains roughly 100 promises, including to build 30 community care clinics across the province and remove the provincial sales tax on electricity bills for residential customers. The Liberals costed platform is about $1.2 billion in new spending over the term of a majority mandate.

In an interview Tuesday, Holt said Higgs has been “absent” this election.

“We’ve been told he’s been hidden by his campaign team. They don’t want him out at all for fear that he’ll say something else that offends and disrespects New Brunswickers.”

The Green Party campaign said Leader David Coon took off Thanksgiving Sunday. His party’s platform contains more than 100 promises, including to invest $380 million annually to fix the primary health-care system, and implement a guaranteed livable income. The promises would add $2.9 to $4 billion to the province’s expenditures over a majority-mandate term.

Higgs, Coon said, is being kept away from the campaign trail by “handlers” out of fear he will speak too much and say things that will make him unelectable.

“All he’s offering is to keep doing the same thing he’s done for the last six years …. He’s travelling around in an empty bus, blowing diesel fumes into the atmosphere, achieving nothing.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 15, 2024.

— With files from Michael MacDonald in Halifax.

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Chiefs gather to vote on landmark $47.8B child welfare reform agreement with Canada

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OTTAWA – First Nations chiefs are gathering in Calgary today as they prepare to vote on a landmark $47.8-billion child welfare reform agreement with Ottawa.

The deal was struck in July between Canada, the Chiefs of Ontario, Nishnawbe Aski Nation and the Assembly of First Nations after a nearly two-decade legal fight over Canada’s underfunding of on-reserve child welfare services.

The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal said that was discriminatory, and tasked Canada with coming to an agreement with First Nations to reform the system, along with compensating children who were torn from their families and put in foster care.

Chiefs in Ontario voted in support of the agreement last week, but the AFN is set to discuss three resolutions calling for the deal to be struck down or renegotiated.

Chiefs have raised concerns since before July that the agreement was being negotiated in secret, while experts have said the deal doesn’t go far enough to ensure Canada’s discrimination never happens again.

The Assembly of First Nations special assembly continues until Friday, with chiefs expected to vote on the deal Thursday.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 16, 2024.

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