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N.B. Liberals promise to partner with municipalities for ‘tailored’ solutions

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FREDERICTON – New Brunswick’s Liberal leader says the province needs to move away from a “one size fits all model” if it wants to achieve growth and progress.

Speaking at an event organized by the Fredericton Chamber of Commerce and the University of New Brunswick, Susan Holt said on Tuesday that what may seem like a suitable model of development in one part of the province may not necessarily work for another because of differences in population, community and geography.

She says such growth can be achieved through partnerships with local communities, universities and governments to understand problems and “deliver a tailored program.”

Over the course of the evening, Holt also talked about public safety and immigration, issues that have generated animated discourse.

She says that if elected on Oct. 21, a Liberal government would partner with municipalities and community services to improve mental health supports and tackle crime.

The Progressive Conservative party has promised “harder and harder lines on crime” if it is re-elected.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 9, 2024.

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Saskatchewan Party candidate says sorry for using racial slur a year ago

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REGINA – A Saskatchewan Party candidate apologized Tuesday after it came to light that he used a racial slur in the government caucus office a year ago.

David Buckingham, who is running again in Saskatoon Westview in the Oct. 28 election, said it was wrong.

“There was one occasion where I repeated a racially inappropriate word, as I was recounting a story of another individual using that word,” Buckingham said in a statement.

“That was wrong and I should not have used that word, regardless of the context. I immediately apologized to caucus staff, realizing it was a wrong thing to say, and then apologized to my caucus colleagues at the first opportunity.”

His apology was part of a statement issued by the party.

“The Saskatchewan Party does not tolerate any form of racism within the party, government or caucus,” it said in the statement.

“Mr. Buckingham realized he should not have done that, apologized and took sensitivity training.”

Buckingham is seeking a third term in the legislature. He was elected in 2016 and 2020 and has served as the Saskatchewan Party government caucus chair.

The apology came after Buckingham’s former caucus colleague Randy Weekes recounted the story to reporters earlier in the day.

Weekes, who was Speaker during the last legislative sitting, says a caucus staff member told him she overheard Buckingham use the racial slur referencing a Black person.

Weekes said the woman, who is Black, was traumatized and reported Buckingham to human resources.

She later quit, Weekes said.

“Her responsibilities were downgraded,” Weekes said, adding the woman doesn’t want to speak publicly.

“The young woman has been taking counselling courses through the church,” he said.

Weekes is not running in the election. He lost the Saskatchewan Party nomination for his constituency of Kindersley-Biggar last year.

He later quit the party, accusing those in the government caucus of bullying him.

He made headlines earlier this year when he said Jeremy Harrison, the trade and export development minister, had taken a gun into the legislature nearly a decade ago.

Harrison initially denied it but later said he remembered taking a gun into the building while on his way to go hunting. Harrison was removed as government house leader but kept his cabinet position.

Weekes said he is publicly supporting the NDP in the election.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 8, 2024.

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Harris is still introducing herself as she sets out on a media tour with voting already underway

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NEW YORK (AP) — When Vice President Kamala Harris sat down for an interview with podcaster Alex Cooper, the conversation didn’t start by parsing policy positions. The goal, Cooper told the Democratic nominee, was “to get to know you as a person.”

And that was just fine with Harris, who said she was on the popular “Call Her Daddy” podcast because “one of the best ways to communicate with people is to be real.”

Long past the midway point of her unexpected presidential campaign and with voting already underway, Harris is still introducing herself to Americans who will determine this year’s presidential election.

On Tuesday, her media blitz is taking her to studios across Manhattan as the Democratic nominee tries to reach as many people as possible in the shortest period of time. It’s a sharp shift after largely avoiding interviews since replacing President Joe Biden at the top of the ticket, and it’s an acknowledgment that she needs to do more to defeat Republican candidate Donald Trump.

Harris began the day with the women of ABC’s “The View,” and was later to speak with longtime radio host Howard Stern and tape a show with late-night comedian Stephen Colbert. The trio of appearances came after Harris granted interviews to CBS’ “60 Minutes,” which aired Monday night, and Cooper’s podcast, which was released Sunday.

“Call Her Daddy” is often raunchy, with frank talk about sex, but Harris and Cooper began by talking about their mothers.

Harris said her mother’s first instinct was never to comfort her eldest daughter when she ran into problems. Instead, she asked, “What did you do?”

Although that might sound cold, the vice president said, “she was actually teaching me, think about where you had agency in that moment, and think about what you had the choice to do or not do. Don’t let things just happen to you.”

It’s interactions like those that Harris’ team is prioritizing for the vice president in the final four weeks before Election Day. She has yet to give an interview to a newspaper or magazine, but her staff is pondering additional podcasts where they believe Harris can reach voters who aren’t following traditional news sources.

Anna Greenberg, a Democratic pollster, said Harris has to energize people who have tuned out politics because they believe “all the politicians are the same, they all say the same thing, they don’t know anything about my life, I can’t relate to them at all.”

“They want to like and trust you,” she said.

On The View, Harris was pressed on how she’d govern distinctly from Biden, even as she said she couldn’t name a single decision from the past four years she would have made differently.

“We’re also different people and I will bring those sensibilities to how I lead,” she said.

Jennifer Harris, the former White House senior director of international economics, said Harris has a steeper hill to climb because of the way she became the Democratic nominee.

“We did not have a good long primary to meet Kamala Harris in the way most voters are accustomed to,” she said. Harris has to find a way to demonstrate the instincts and principles that ”will be guiding any number of hundreds of specific policy questions that will come up in the course of the presidency.”

While Harris has unveiled some policy proposals during her two and half months at the top of the ticket — and she was using her Tuesday appearance on “The View” to discuss new plans to lower costs for those caring for children and elderly parents, her campaign said — she’s given prime billing to speeches about her “economic philosophy,” like one she delivered in Pittsburgh two weeks ago.

There, Harris pushed back against Trump’s claims that she’s advancing “communist” ideas. She embraced capitalism and positioned herself as a pragmatist who “would take good ideas from wherever they come.”

“As president, I will be grounded in my fundamental values of fairness, dignity and opportunity,” Harris said. “And I promise you, I will be pragmatic in my approach.”

Senior campaign officials have largely blocked out criticism from some corners that Harris hasn’t articulated more policy positions. Instead, they say that small yet pivotal numbers of still-undecided voters say they want to know more about Harris before making up their minds, and that the more those voters see Harris, the more they like her.

If policy papers alone won elections, Harris allies say, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would be wrapping up her second term or Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren would be in the throes of a reelection fight.

Even Trump this time around has articulated a deeper policy vision than either of his two prior campaigns, though he has worked to disavow association with the conservative “Project 2025” vision for the next Republican president produced by former aides and advisers.

Republican communications strategist Kevin Madden said defining Harris in voters’ eyes is the central challenge of the campaign.

“This race is actually pretty simple in the sense that the next few weeks are about who’s going to fill in the blanks on who Harris is,” he said.

Being a vice president confers a certain amount of basic name recognition. In October 2019, while Harris was one of many candidates in the Democratic presidential primary, AP-NORC polling found that about 3 in 10 Americans didn’t know enough about her to have an opinion. That share dropped to around 1 in 10 Americans by early 2021, when she and Biden took office, where it stayed until earlier this summer.

Now, nearly all Americans know enough to have at least a surface opinion — whether positive or negative — of Harris.

But that doesn’t mean perspectives on Harris are settled, or that Americans know as much as they would like about her. Harris’ favorability numbers shifted slightly over the course of the summer, suggesting that opinion of her may still be somewhat malleable.

Other polls indicate that while some voters are still looking for more information about Harris, views of Trump appear to be more settled. One-quarter of likely voters said they still feel like they need to learn more about Harris, according to a New York Times/Siena College poll conducted after her debate against Trump, while about three-quarters say they pretty much already know what they need to know about her.

Trump, on the hand, was more of a known quantity. One in 10 likely voters said they feel like they need to learn more about Trump, while roughly 9 in 10 said they pretty much already know what they need to know.

Harris’ running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, also is spending more time doing interviews to help people get to know him better rather than going deep on policy. In an appearance on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live” on Monday night, Walz talked about the “surreal” experience of being on the ticket, his background as a high school teacher and football coach, and even how he lists Harris in his phone contacts — as the “dry cleaner.”

On “Call Her Daddy,” Cooper told Harris that people are “frustrated and just exhausted with politics in general.”

“Why should we trust you?” she asked.

Harris answered by saying “you can look at my career to know what I care about.”

She continued: “I care about making sure that people are entitled to and receive the freedoms that they are due. I care about lifting people up and making sure that you are protected from harm.”

___

Megerian reported from Washington. AP writer Linley Sanders in Washington contributed to this report.

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Saskatchewan NDP promises more police; Saskatchewan Party proposes fertilization help

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REGINA – Saskatchewan New Democratic Leader Carla Beck promised more police officers on the campaign trail Monday, while the Saskatchewan Party’s Scott Moe offered some health-care help.

Beck told reporters in Regina an NDP government would hire 100 Mounties and municipal police officers if elected on Oct. 28.

She said the plan includes $10 million for more boots on the ground and another $10 million for addictions treatment and mental health services.

Beck said the money would come from redirecting funds from the incumbent Saskatchewan Party’s marshals service, which has been pegged to cost $20 million a year once operational.

“I’ve heard from so many families who are scared to send their kids down to the corner store after dark, people who are scared to walk their dogs, seniors who are afraid in their houses and people in rural communities who are concerned about the long and growing wait times to respond to RCMP calls,” Beck said.

“It’s time for change. You deserve to feel safe in your own home and in your own community.”

Saskatchewan’s crime rate increased this past year and has been ranked the worst in the country for 25 straight years according to statistics from the Canadian Centre for Justice.

Moe has introduced a new police force, known as the marshals service, to work with RCMP and reduce crime.

The service has been criticized by some municipal leaders and the union representing Mounties for being a waste of money. They say the money would be better spent on existing policing.

Earlier this summer, Moe announced $17 million to hire 100 municipal police officers, create safer communities and expedite police training.

In Regina on Monday, Moe announced a re-elected Saskatchewan Party government would make it easier for people to access fertility treatments and cancer testing.

He said he would introduce a 50 per cent refundable tax credit — up to $10,000 — to help cover the cost of a first fertility treatment.

“We want to make it more affordable for women, for couples and for families who may be in need of fertility treatments to start and grow their families right here in our province,” Moe said.

His party would also make it easier to screen for cervical cancer by allowing women 25 to 69 to have self-screening tests for the human papillomavirus infection, or HPV.

Since 2020, the NDP has pushed Moe in the legislature to cover some of the costs for fertility treatments.

Candidate Aleana Young said in a news release she was heckled and dismissed by Saskatchewan Party members when she raised the issue in the assembly.

Moe said Young is only making accusations.

“We can quibble about the timelines on when this is being brought forward, but the important thing is that it is a commitment by this (Saskatchewan Party),” he said.

The NDP has promised to cover the first round of in vitro fertilization treatment for families.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 7, 2024.

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