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JOHN DEMONT: Local politics hit at the heart of our daily lives – SaltWire Network

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Tip O’Neill, the fabled Boston pol, only lost one election in his life: his 1935 campaign for Cambridge City Council.

As he recounts in his autobiography, after the ballots were counted O’Neill’s dad pointed out that, perhaps, he had taken his own neighbourhood’s support for granted.

O’Neill had to agree: he had received plenty of votes in other parts of Cambridge, but hadn’t worked hard enough in his own backyard.

At this point I imagine the father clasping his hands on his son’s shoulders and looking him right in the eye.

“’Let me tell you something I learned years ago,’ he said, in words now emblazoned on the brain of every operative in every subsequent campaign. “All politics is local.”

The pair were talking from the perspective of the candidate. But I think the reason those words still matter all these years later is that their meaning resonates outside of the political backrooms: they are as true for the voter as they are for the politician.

And never more so than on Oct. 17, when most of our towns and regional municipalities elect their councillors and mayors, the folks who have real impact on our day-to-day life.

Oh sure, an MP, particularly if they sit around the cabinet table, can help deliver a big government procurement project or ensure that your region is not forgotten about when new federal legislation is being drafted.

But that is the high-level, big-issue, macro stuff.

Your member of the legislative assembly will fight for you to keep a school, ferry or mill open. If they are part of the government, they will go to bat to ensure that when the budgetary cuts come, the pain is softened in your region.

In a perfect world, your MLA, like your MP, will reflect the collective will of their riding on a whole range of issues.

Except do you want to get the potholes in your street filled, ensure that the garbage truck goes all the way down to the end of your block, and that your street gets ploughed?

Want the water coming out of your tap to lose its brown hue, and the skateboarders in the schoolyard next door to stop keeping you up at night?

Dearly need someone to investigate all the traffic going in and out of your neighbour’s home at funny hours of the day or night?

Need help getting a permit to build an extension on your house, to hold a fundraiser at the local community centre, to erect some lights in a dark corner of a walking trail?

Need to deal with an issue that falls under provincial or federal authority, but no idea how to deal with the folks in Halifax, or faraway Parliament Hill?

That’s where the folks on the ballots on Oct. 17 come in.

“Mayors and councillors deal with people on a day-to-day level on stuff that really matters to their lives,” Don Downe told me Friday.

As a longtime MLA for Lunenburg West, and Liberal cabinet minister who served eight years as the mayor of the municipality of the District of Lunenburg, he knows of what he speaks.

So does Cecil Clarke, now running for his third term as mayor of the Cape Breton Regional Municipality, who, as a Conservative, represented Cape Breton North in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly, where he sat at the provincial cabinet table.

“As an MLA and cabinet minister the focus was always on what we could bring in terms of big announcements,” Clarke said Friday during a break from the campaign trail.

“In municipal government you get to see the curbside realities that those announcements deliver.”

In other words, municipal politics is visceral and real. The issues are close to people. That is why those who choose to tackle them can have such an impact.

They solve your problems. They look after your interests. When need be, they even act as your link to the faraway MLAs in Halifax, and MPs on Parliament Hill.

Graham Steele, the author and former provincial cabinet minister in Darrell Dexter’s NDP government, has written that “a good councillor is gold. A good mayor can lift a whole town.”

There is nothing distant about these people. You run into them at the coffee shop and filling up at the service station, because, unlike those in the more rareified levels of politics, councilors and mayors seldom stray far from home.

“You can always get a hold of them,” said Downe. “You just call them at home.”

So get out and vote on the 17th in person in Halifax, or before then electronically or by telephone. It’s like O’Neill senior said, all politics is local, particularly the local kind.

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Gould calls Poilievre a ‘fraudster’ over his carbon price warning

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OTTAWA – Liberal House leader Karina Gould lambasted Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre as a “fraudster” this morning after he said the federal carbon price is going to cause a “nuclear winter.”

Gould was speaking just before the House of Commons is set to reopen following the summer break.

“What I heard yesterday from Mr. Poilievre was so over the top, so irresponsible, so immature, and something that only a fraudster would do,” she said from Parliament Hill.

On Sunday Poilievre said increasing the carbon price will cause a “nuclear winter,” painting a dystopian picture of people starving and freezing because they can’t afford food or heat due the carbon price.

He said the Liberals’ obsession with carbon pricing is “an existential threat to our economy and our way of life.”

The carbon price currently adds about 17.6 cents to every litre of gasoline, but that cost is offset by carbon rebates mailed to Canadians every three months. The Parliamentary Budget Office provided analysis that showed eight in 10 households receive more from the rebates than they pay in carbon pricing, though the office also warned that long-term economic effects could harm jobs and wage growth.

Gould accused Poilievre of ignoring the rebates, and refusing to tell Canadians how he would make life more affordable while battling climate change. The Liberals have also accused the Conservatives of dismissing the expertise of more than 200 economists who wrote a letter earlier this year describing the carbon price as the least expensive, most efficient way to lower emissions.

Poilievre is pushing for the other opposition parties to vote the government down and trigger what he calls a “carbon tax election.”

The recent decision by the NDP to break its political pact with the government makes an early election more likely, but there does not seem to be an interest from either the Bloc Québécois or the NDP to have it happen immediately.

Poilievre intends to bring a non-confidence motion against the government as early as this week but would likely need both the Bloc and NDP to support it.

Gould said she has no “crystal ball” over when or how often Poilievre might try to bring down the government

“I know that the end of the supply and confidence agreement makes things a bit different, but really all it does is returns us to a normal minority parliament,” she said. “And that means that we will work case-by-case, legislation-by-legislation with whichever party wants to work with us. I have already been in touch with all of the House leaders in the opposition parties and my job now is to make Parliament work for Canadians.”

She also insisted the government has listened to the concerns raised by Canadians, and received the message when the Liberals lost a Toronto byelection in June in seat the party had held since 1997.

“We certainly got the message from Toronto-St. Paul’s and have spent the summer reflecting on what that means and are coming back to Parliament, I think, very clearly focused on ensuring that Canadians are at the centre of everything that we do moving forward,” she said.

The Liberals are bracing, however, for the possibility of another blow Monday night, in a tight race to hold a Montreal seat in a byelection there. Voters in LaSalle—Émard—Verdun are casting ballots today to replace former justice minister David Lametti, who was removed from cabinet in 2023 and resigned as an MP in January.

The Conservatives and NDP are also in a tight race in Elmwood-Transcona, a Winnipeg seat that has mostly been held by the NDP over the last several decades.

There are several key bills making their way through the legislative process, including the online harms act and the NDP-endorsed pharmacare bill, which is currently in the Senate.

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

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Voters head to the polls for byelections in Montreal and Winnipeg

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OTTAWA – Canadians in two federal ridings are choosing their next member of Parliament today, and political parties are closely watching the results.

Winnipeg’s Elmwood —Transcona seat has been vacant since the NDP’s Daniel Blaikie left federal politics.

The New Democrats are hoping to hold onto the riding and polls suggest the Conservatives are in the running.

The Montreal seat of LaSalle—Émard—Verdun opened up when former justice minister David Lametti left politics.

Polls suggest the race is tight between the Liberal candidate and the Bloc Québécois, but the NDP is also hopeful it can win.

The Conservatives took over a Liberal stronghold seat in another byelection in Toronto earlier this summer, a loss that sent shock waves through the governing party and intensified calls for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to step down as leader.

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

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Next phase of federal foreign interference inquiry to begin today in Ottawa

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OTTAWA – The latest phase of a federal inquiry into foreign interference is set to kick off today with remarks from commissioner Marie-Josée Hogue.

Several weeks of public hearings will focus on the capacity of federal agencies to detect, deter and counter foreign interference.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and key government officials took part in hearings earlier this year as the inquiry explored allegations that Beijing tried to meddle in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections.

Hogue’s interim report, released in early May, said Beijing’s actions did not affect the overall results of the two general elections.

The report said while outcomes in a small number of ridings may have been affected by interference, this cannot be said with certainty.

Trudeau, members of his inner circle and senior security officials are slated to return to the inquiry in coming weeks.

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

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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