Sunday, October 31, 2010

Thanks

In these 10% they are blaming the liberal party of Canada for the ecomonys problems..How many years have they been in power now? Enough playing the blame game.OK
http://owlsandroosters.blogspot.com/
Saskatchewan Conservative MP’s wasted $607,608.94 on flyers in 2009-10; Randy Hoback, Kelly Block and Tom Lukiwski biggest spenders

Sask. Conservative MP’s Randy Hoback, Kelly Block and Tom Lukiwski


Conservative Finance Minister Jim Flaherty’s annual fall update – delivered in a speech to the Mississauga Chinese Business Association on October 12, 2010 – reveals the depth of the Harper government’s financial mess:

▪ a record $55.6 billion budget deficit in the 2009-10 fiscal year
▪ a projected $45.4 billion deficit in the current fiscal year (2010-11)
▪ a combined, two-year deficit of $101 billion
▪ no surplus until at least 2015-16

To get the books balanced, Flaherty told the business crowd the government will continue to follow a three point plan laid out in Budget 2010 that involves ending the temporary stimulus measures contained in the Economic Action Plan; targeted measures to limit growth of direct program spending; and, undertaking a review of administrative operations, aimed at reducing overhead costs and improving service delivery.

Flaherty said the government will “exercise fiscal restraint.”

Chapter 4.1 of this year’s federal budget notes that, “The Government will lead by example, introducing legislation to freeze the salaries of the Prime Minister, Ministers, Members of Parliament and Senators for 2010–11, 2011–12 and 2012–13. It will also freeze the overall budget of Ministers’ offices and calls on Members of both Houses of Parliament to do the same. It will also maintain the freeze at 2008–09 levels on departmental spending on travel, conferences and hospitality.”

The restraint, however, does not appear to extend to MP’s printing expenses where spending is out of control.

Each year the Speaker of the House of Commons, on behalf of the Board of Internal Economy (BOIE), tables the consolidated Individual Member’s Expenditures report pursuant to BOIE By-laws. The 2009-10 report was tabled October 28, 2010.

Thanks to http://owlsandroosters.blogspot.com/ in bringing this forward.

The document details member spending on staff, office rent, supplies, travel and printing — which includes costs incurred for producing two types of flyers: householders and ten percenters.

Householders are oversized, often two-colour newsletters sent by MP’s to inform their constituents about parliamentary activities and issues. MP’s are allowed to print and mail up to four householders per calendar year per household in their constituency, which on average represents 45,000 households per householder.

Ten percenters are single page photocopied black and white flyers reproduced in quantities not exceeding 10% of the total number of households in a MP’s constituency. MP’s may print and mail an unlimited number of ten percenters per year however each ten percenter must have a 50% difference in textual content from other ten percenters produced that year and can only be distributed within the MP’s own constituency, which on average represents 4,500 copies per ten percenter. Ten percenters are usually nasty and highly partisan. They’re also taxpayer funded.

Records indicate that since the Harper Conservatives took office in January 2006, the cost of printing has increased a whopping 148.68 per cent going from $5.94-million in 2005-06 to $14.77-million last year. The five-year totals are as follows:

2005-06: $5,940,826
2006-07: $7,852,378
2007-08: $9,408,531
2008-09: $10,062,553
2009-10: $14,774,107

At the provincial level, Saskatchewan’s 13 Conservative MP’s blew an astounding $607,608.94 on flyers in 2009-10, an increase of 32.14 per cent over the previous year.

Since 2006-07, spending on householders and ten percenters by Saskatchewan Conservative MP’s has risen 125.75 per cent.

The biggest culprits last year were Randy Hoback (Prince Albert) $73,116.60, Kelly Block (Saskatoon-Rosetown-Biggar) $67,358.15, and Tom Lukiwski (Regina-Lumsden Lake) $59,888.64.

Hoback and Block were newly elected October 14, 2008. In less than 18 eighteen months they have managed to top the list as the biggest wasters of taxpayer money on flyers among Saskatchewan MP’s.

In Block’s case, since the summer of 2009, she has mailed out at least 30 ten percenters, most of which are partisan and say nothing about Block’s activities as an MP. They serve little purpose other than to praise and promote Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party of Canada.

Block sends out so many flyers that sometimes constituents receive two different ones on the same day. The most recent examples of this were September 13 and 23, 2010.

The subject matter of Block’s ten percenters ranges from scaring people into thinking that crime is so rampant that people aren’t safe in their own homes, to heralding cuts to the GST (which are costing $76 billion in forgone taxes between 2008 and 2013) that most economists worth their salt say is reckless, to the creepy ongoing obsession with the long-gun registry, or talking up the Harper government’s pathetic response to calls for improved Unemployment Insurance (EI) benefits in Budget 2009, which the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives called the “biggest single failure of the budget.”

One area that Block’s ten percenters don’t address is the obscene corporate tax cuts that the Harper government has implemented. According to Les Whittington, a reporter in the Toronto Star’s Ottawa Bureau, between 2008 and 2013, these cuts alone will reduce the cash-strapped federal government’s tax take by a cumulative $60 billion. [Analysis: Jim Flaherty’s sacred cows — corporate tax cuts (Toronto Star, February 24, 2010)]

The Harper government intends to continue with its planned corporate tax cuts no matter how damaging they are to the federal treasury.

“We are staying on course to having the lowest corporate income tax rate in the G7 by 2012,” Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said in his budget speech March 4, 2010.

“Some argue that we should cancel these tax reductions. Our government will follow through on our commitment. Reducing the tax burden on businesses is a key part of Canada’s advantage in the global economy.” [Budget leaves corporate tax cuts intact (CBC News, March 4, 2010)]

The truth is, Canada is already competitive.

A KPMG study released May 12, 2010, assessing the general tax competitiveness of 95 cities in 10 countries found that Canada, at 12.2 per cent, has the lowest effective corporate income tax rate. Other G7 countries like the United Kingdom (20.2%), United States (28.3%), Germany (29.8%), Italy (33.4%), and Japan (36.3%) aren’t even close. Only France at 15.4 per cent is within striking distance.

The report also shows that Canada ranks second in both statutory labour costs and total effective tax rate, and is sixth on ‘other corporate taxes,’ which include capital taxes, sales taxes, property taxes, and miscellaneous business taxes.

Tax rates used in the study were in effect as at January 1, 2010, three months before Flaherty’s remarks.

Interestingly, Block’s website has a page titled ‘What Kelly has sent out’. There you’ll find a downloadable calendar, householders, and tax guide but no ten percenters. Why is that? Could it be that Block is embarrassed to show constituents just how much taxpayer money she has wasted on them over the past two years?




Ten percenter spreading fear over crime




Ten percenter promoting reckless GST cuts




Anti-NDP ten percenter

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Time to look at this mess

As a liberal I am not happy today with the results in Northwest. Our provincial party need to some major redoing. Why are not people not coming to the provincial party? is our message wrong? Is it because of our history? or is our leadership or lack of us in the party getting the message out. I will be the first to say that I was no help in this by election for various reasons. It time we all look at things and talk about the future of our party. because about 3% of the votes is terrible in a riding that we once held.

Tell me what you think? If you even care??


Gord Wyant wins Saskatoon Northwest byelection for Sask. Party
The StarPhoenix October 19, 2010 •Story•Photos ( 1 )
The Saskatchewan Party celebrated holding onto Saskatoon Northwest, as Gordon Wyant
By unofficial count, the lawyer and Ward 5 city councillor took the seat with 3,051 votes, defeating second-place finisher Jan Dyky of the NDP by a margin of over 1,300 votes.

Wyant’s 59 per cent of the vote marked an increase from the 54 per cent won by Sask. Party candidate Serge LeClerc in the 2007 general election.

Speaking to supporters at a celebration at the Ramada Golf Dome, both Wyant and Premier Brad Wall claimed a strong endorsement for the Sask. Party government and a rejection of the Opposition NDP.

“We had a significant percentage of the vote and I think what that says is that the people of this constituency, particularly, they’re saying no to the politics of envy, they’re saying no to the politics of loathing, they’re saying no to the politics of character assassination and we saw that coming up in this election,” said Wyant.

The win buoys the government just ahead of the new legislative session that begins next week.

Wall said byelections are often difficult for parties in power because voters want to send a message.

“The people of Saskatoon did send a message tonight,” he told the crowd.

“They want to see Saskatchewan continuing to move forward . . . they chose the future over the past.”

The byelection became necessary because of the resignation of LeClerc at the end of August. He had left the government caucus in the spring after the airing of drug allegations, which he has consistently denied.

Wyant had served as business manager for LeClerc in the last election, a fact that was pointed out in an NDP brochure which also slammed him for his work as a lawyer.

However, most candidates suggested that LeClerc’s situation otherwise played little role in the campaign.

The NDP had not won the seat since 1995 but Dyky, a health-care facilities manager, and party officials said a simmering undercurrent of dissatisfaction with the government over issues such as health care and cost of living had made Saskatoon Northwest winnable.

Both parties poured resources into the seat, each saying they would hit the Elections Saskatchewan spending limits for both party and candidate.

But NDP Leader Dwain Lingenfelter said Monday the party always knew Saskatoon Northwest — “one of our toughest urban seats” — would be a longshot.

“The strength of the campaign, if they had a strength, was their candidate Gord Wyant. He’s a very popular civic leader, he’s well-known, he’s been around for many years. Jan Dyky is new in the game,” said Lingenfelter, who rejected the notion the byelection win was a vote of confidence in the government and Wall.

“In a way, I suppose I hope he continues to believe that because the fact of the matter is that a lot of the people in the province aren’t happy with Premier Wall.”

Lingenfelter also scoffed at the Sask. Party claiming the high ground, noting the televised ad campaigns that have been targeting him specifically for most of the year.

Dyky said she was happy with the progress made during the 28-day campaign and said she intended to stand again in the 2011 general election.

This was the fourth byelection since the Sask. Party took office in 2007 but the first where the NDP had a chance to take a seat back from the government. The party did improve its vote to 33 per cent.

The three other parties contesting the race ended up being non-factors, with third-place Liberal Eric Steiner, fourth-place Progressive Conservative Manny Sonnenschein and fifth-place Green Party Leader Larissa Shasko each taking well under five per cent of the vote.

Voter turnout was 55 per cent.

Wall wouldn’t comment about what specific role Wyant would play in government beyond serving as MLA. He has said he does not intend to shuffle his cabinet before the next election.

Wyant’s victory will force a byelection to fill his city council seat.

After years of non-partisan civic politics, Wyant will enter one of the most partisan and hard-edged legislatures in years.

“I’m a very easygoing guy so we’ll have to wait and see how the partisan piece plays. But I’m confident I can adjust to it,” he told reporters.

jwood@thestarphoenix.com

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