Over the last four months, Manitoba's NDP government and its
hapless opposition have been more than happy to cede the political stage
in this province to the federal government. In stark contrast to the
House of Commons in Ottawa, Manitoba's Legislative building has been
operating under a consensual all-party code of silence since last November. All the
plebes, politicos, and politicians toiling away within the bowels of
the legislature since last fall's election have seemingly gone mute. And, this suits Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger just fine.
With Manitoba's provincial economy performing reasonably well and with the annual
flood
(drought?) drama still weeks (months?) away; Greg Selinger is under no pressure from his party to recall Manitoba's legislature. As for Manitoba's official opposition, currently flailing about
like a headless chicken in search of savior ... any savior... they too are in no hurry to
reengage the government. For these reasons, coupled with the fact that Ottawa is seemingly hellbent on stealing ALL the national, provincial and local headlines anyway, Greg Selinger may be forgiven for believing that "the silence" is golden. From his perspective, delaying the resumption of the 40th Manitoba legislature and continuing to govern by stealth is
political no-brainer. The NDP's stealthy governance not only makes for greater management
efficiencies; it also allows it all the time it wants to craft, define, refine, then redefine, re-refine, etc., etc., a new course for our future - all without having to respond to the
silly partisan questions that routinely arise
when a legislature is in session. As such, Selinger has no good reason to recall
Manitoba's legislature at this juncture. Err... save one niggling
thing... it's high time we regular citizens (i.e. Manitoba's average
Joe & Jane Blow's) were kept abreast of what exactly the NDP
government has planned for us in the days, months, and years ahead.
Now some will say: "But, but, we had an eight day session in late October that included
a throne speech. And, okay, okay, sure it passed no bills and ended early
- but really, what more did you Joe and Jane Blow's expect after our
election victory?" Well, in a word: Clarity. We Joe & Jane Blow's
want clarity on what specific bills the government intends to bring forward in a new session. We want clarity on how the
provincial government will adapt should Ottawa's fanatic fidelity to fiscal
retrenchment end up hurting either our provincial treasury and/or
our overall general welfare. We want clarity on how our provincial
government proposes to continue to strive to fix our public school system's abysmally poor
graduation rates. We want assurances the NDP government has plans in
place to insure that healthcare in Manitoba will remain viable,
available, and manageable in the face of finite front line resources. In
short, we want the kind of clarity that can only be achieved when the
process of governing is laid bare - the kind that only comes when a
Legislature is, in fact,
in session. After a break approaching
four months, with no end in sight, it's time Premier Selinger for you to tell us when you'll be calling an end to this post-election victory siesta. Manitobans expect some clarity. Bottom line, we deserve to
know when the Manitoba legislature will be recalled.
You just said it yourself -
ReplyDeleteWith Manitoba's provincial economy performing reasonably well and with the annual flood (drought?) drama still weeks (months?) away; Greg Selinger is under no pressure from his party to recall Manitoba's legislature. As for Manitoba's official opposition, currently flailing about like a headless chicken in search of savior ... any savior... they too are in no hurry to reengage the government.
Your words.
My words... STFU.
You forgot to mention Selinger is running up the Provincial deficit by spending like a drunken sailor.
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