Ontario PCs in Majority Territory

 In the afterglow of the unofficial beginning of summer the race for Queens Park is beginning to heat up. Today, Nanos released a poll showing that a majority of Ontarians would vote for the Ontario PC party if an election was held today. The Ontario PCs have the trust of over 41% with a Liberals  trailing at a stagnant 34% .


The underlying story of these numbers is a notable improvement of the provincial NDP they are perhaps basking in a bit of a orange glow after Jack Layton’s big win earlier this month. Moreover pocket book issues are still front and center for most Ontarians this is all good news for the Ontario PC Party, who have their last AGM before the elections scheduled for later this week .


 Furthermore, the Ontario Liberals are beginning to expose a soft underbelly of support in Toronto. On Monday  the conservative incursion into Toronto was complete with a 17 vote, recount win in the traditionally red riding of Etobicoke-Centre.  it seems that Toronto could be primed for the Ontario PC message this fall. In short, good news for conservatives all around, however the  Liberals have a lot of catching up to do.

NDP # Hashtag Fail

This is a satirical  website that explores some of the more interesting characters or I mean candidates for the NDP in Québec. It looks like background checks weren’t a high priority for Jack and his team. [Read this]

srsly jack? where did you find these people? They’re not serious candidates. And apparently they can’t even pretend to take their possible jobs seriously enough to clean up their Facebook profiles. NDP candidate #fail.

The High Price of Clean Energy

This is a pocketbook issue that could hit the Ontario Liberals hard during this fall’s provincial election.

From Toronto Sun

First, we’re paying inflated prices for expensive and inefficient wind energy, one reason we’re facing an estimated 45% hike on our electricity bills over the next five years.

Second, because under the contracts the Liberal government signed with wind developers we have to use wind energy even if we don’t need it, consumers are also subsidizing the sale of cheap, surplus electricity to the U.S. and Quebec.

This electricity is so cheap the price often falls below zero-cents-per-kWh, meaning we literally have to pay other jurisdictions to take the surplus off our hands.

And yet as Ontario residential hydro customers, we can’t access this cheap electricity for ourselves.

In fact, this has already occurred more than two dozen times this year — usually for an hour or two at a time — costing Ontario electricity customers millions of dollars.

Dirty Tricks in Edmonton Strathcona

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This is a touching account from a couple who were  victims of dirty tricks in Edmonton Strathcona.


From Edmonton Journal 


Rod is an artist. Anne runs her own small business. They’re in their mid 30s – no kids yet. They love living near the University of Alberta campus and Whyte Avenue, walking up to 82nd for dinner and shopping.


“We chose this neighbourhood for its diversity, and for being close to the university, where we can express our own opinions, whatever they are, without repercussions,” Rod says.


And in that spirit, they decided to get involved with this federal election – more involved that ever before. All around them, says Rod, they saw Linda Duncan signs popping up. But Rod isn’t an NDP supporter. He’s worried about the economy, and he thinks Stephen Harper and the Conservatives offer the most economic security.


And so, he called the campaign office for their candidate of choice – Ryan Hastman – and asked for sign, a big one.


The Hastman campaign delivered, with one of the big 6 ft by 4 ft placards.


 And all was well until the evening of April 20th. It was about 8:30 in the evening, and still daylight. Rod and Anne were just walking home from dinner on the avenue. They arrived home to find two young men trashing their sign.


“These two young fellows were just openly on our lawn, on our property, destroying our sign,” says Anne. “I was absolutely shocked.”


Anne and Rod says the two men were undeterred by the presence of witnesses.


They watched from the sidewalk as the vandals knocked the heavy sign over, and then proceeded to jump on it. This time, says Rod, they didn’t confront the sign-wreckers. They followed them at a discreet distance, called police on their cell phones, and they watched while police caught the vandals, gave them tickets, and let them go.
I guess ” open equality” only applies  when you vote NDP. Also a big thank you to  Ardvark for originally posting these photos.
“I’ve always been taught that the right to vote is something we should hold in high regard,” says Anne. “It’s a little bit disheartening that we can’t express our views on a basis of open equality. I always thought this neighbourhood was a place for intellectual discussion. But I am feeling a little bit insecure in our neighbourhood. We’re keeping to ourselves right now.”

I guess ” open equality” only applies  when you vote NDP.Also a big thank you to  Ardvark for originally posting these photos.