Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
International

New Brunswick Premier David Alward banks on natural resources as election begins

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 20 Aug, 2014 03:01 PM
    FREDERICTON - David Alward is counting on voters to back his plan to develop New Brunswick's natural resources as a path to prosperity when the Progressive Conservatives make their case for a second term in office when the province's election campaign officially begins Thursday.
     
    The 32-day campaign is expected to be fought on which party can improve the economic fortunes of a province that is mired in red ink and sported the second highest unemployment rate in the country at 10 per cent in July.
     
    Alward has faced a backlash as he tries to develop the province's natural resources through a new forestry plan that increases the amount of wood that can be cut on Crown land and the creation of a shale gas industry.
     
    Despite the opposition, Alward has pressed ahead, saying that not proceeding with shale gas exploration would be too risky for the province's economy.
     
    "We're saying 'Yes' to developing our shale gas resources, and we're saying 'Yes' to developing natural resources in a responsible way," Alward said this week.
     
    First Nations chiefs in the province have gone to court seeking an injunction to block the forestry deal, and testing work for shale gas by a company in the Rexton area became the scene of a riot last year when the RCMP enforced an injunction to end a blockade at a compound where exploration equipment was stored.
     
    Before the campaign formally began, Liberal Leader Brian Gallant focused many of his promises on the economy and cutting a deficit forecast to be $387.3 million this fiscal year.
     
    Gallant said his party would find at least $250 million in savings from the provincial budget and redirect the money into areas that would create jobs and grow the economy.
     
    "We need to fill the skills gap," Gallant said. "That's one of the biggest complaints of businesses in the province, so we need to invest strategically in education, training and literacy."
     
    The Liberals have been critical of the Alward government's failure to honour a promise in the last election to balance the budget by the end of its mandate.
     
    The Tories now say they can have a surplus in three years, while the Liberals said Wednesday it would take them six years to balance the books. In the meantime, the Liberals would add $1.5 billion to the $12.2 billion provincial debt.
     
    The Progressive Conservatives had 41 members in the legislature before dissolution, the Liberals 13 and there was one Independent. This election will be fought on a new electoral map that cuts the number of seats in the legislature to 49 from 55.
     
    Don Desserud, a political scientist at the University of Prince Edward Island and a longtime observer of New Brunswick politics, said voters are getting tired of the main two parties in the province.
     
    "People are changing their vote, they're changing their affiliation with parties because they're all seeking that magic solution — that great, white knight that's going to solve the great list of problems that the provinces have," Desserud said.
     
    He said Alward has no assurance of getting a second term. The former Liberal government led by Shawn Graham became the first one-term government in the province's history when it went down to defeat four years ago.
     
    New Democrat Leader Dominic Cardy is hoping voter discontent will prompt people to take a good look at his party when they cast their votes on Sept. 22.
     
    "We've got the party ready to govern and a team of candidates ready to be cabinet ministers," he said.
     
    The New Democrats have attracted Bev Harrison, who sat in the legislature as a Tory, and former Liberals Abel LeBlanc and Kelly Lamrock to run as candidates. But the NDP has never elected more than one member to the legislature.
     
    Geoff Martin, a political scientist at Mount Allison University in Sackville, N.B., said the new candidates from other parties could be seen as a negative among staunch New Democrats as the party looks for a breakthrough in this campaign.
     
    "I guess I would be a little surprised to see a lot of success for Bev Harrison, Abel LeBlanc, Kelly Lamrock and so on, in part because they do have baggage and they were associated with a different political party," Martin said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    The $1.5m golden nugget: World's largest gold crystal is here

    The $1.5m golden nugget: World's largest gold crystal is here
    A heavy piece of gold, found years ago in Venezuela, has now been identified as the world’s largest single crystal of gold. Worth an estimated $1.5 million (about Rs.9 crore), the rare lump of gold weighs 217.78 grams and is the size of a golf ball. 

    The $1.5m golden nugget: World's largest gold crystal is here

    Crimean parliament adopts new constitution

    Crimean parliament adopts new constitution
    The Crimean parliament Friday voted unanimously in favour of a new constitution that proclaims it a legal and democratic state within the Russian Federation.

    Crimean parliament adopts new constitution

    Genetically modified mosquitoes to combat dengue in Brazil

    Genetically modified mosquitoes to combat dengue in Brazil
    The world’s largest ever swarm of genetically modified mosquitoes has been released in a Brazilian town to combat dengue -- a leading cause of illness and fatality in the South American country, the media reported Friday.

    Genetically modified mosquitoes to combat dengue in Brazil

    World Bank for focus on world's poorest topped by India

    World Bank for focus on world's poorest topped by India
    With close to one-third of the world's extreme poor concentrated in India and another one-third in four more countries, a sharp focus on them will be central to ending extreme poverty, says a new World Bank paper.

    World Bank for focus on world's poorest topped by India

    Australian aircraft detects possible signal in MH370 hunt

    Australian aircraft detects possible signal in MH370 hunt
    A Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) AP-3C Orion aircraft has detected a possible signal consistant with the missing jet in the vicinity of the Australian Defence Vessel (ADV) Ocean Shield, an official confirmed Thursday.

    Australian aircraft detects possible signal in MH370 hunt

    Russia slams NATO over Ukraine

    Russia slams NATO over Ukraine
    NATO cites "increasing militarisation of Russia" to prove that the bloc is still needed in the 21st century, Xinhua quoted the Russian foreign ministry as saying in a statement.

    Russia slams NATO over Ukraine