Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Report Ranks Former Ontario Premier Mike Harris Best, Pauline Marois Worst

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2015 01:16 PM
    VANCOUVER — A new Vancouver-based think-tank says it has conducted a performance review of 80 premiers since 1981 and former Ontario premier Mike Harris, a Tory, was rated the best while Quebec's PQ premier Pauline Marois was the worst.
     
    Aha! Insights Inc. has produced its inaugural report, called "Premier Class: Canada's Best and Worst Leaders."
     
    The study only assesses four current premiers but concludes that of those, Saskatchewan's Brad Wall of the right-wing Saskatchewan Party is at the top while Ontario's Kathleen Wynne, a Liberal, takes last place.
     
    Co-author Mark Mullins, CEO of Aha!, says the study used 11 fiscal and economic outcomes, such as job growth, balanced budgets, and business investment.
     
    He says the conclusion is that "leadership and fiscal and economic policies really do matter."
     
    Overall, the study suggests Alberta has had the best set of premiers since 1981, followed by British Columbia and Ontario; Quebec's premiers as a group were in last place.
     
    "This study can serve as a reference guide to the federal election," says co-author Mark Milke.
     
    "Three decades of evidence shows there is a close link between premiers' party affiliation and what they achieve in office."
     
    The report shows small-c conservative premiers dominating the rankings, taking nine of the top 10 spots and two thirds of the top 20, though every party has at least two premiers in the bottom 10 spots.
     
    The report lauds Harris for running a lean government, with low revenue and spending levels, and slow growth in spending and public sector jobs, while knocking Marois for large budget deficits, a decline in private-sector jobs and declining business investment.
     
    Six current premiers — Rachel Notley of Alberta, Philippe Couillard of Quebec, Brian Gallant of New Brunswick, Wade MacLauchlan of Prince Edward Island, Paul Davis of Newfoundland and Labrador and Stephen McNeil of Nova Scotia — were not assessed.
     
    The think-tank says the six have been in office for less than two years "and therefore have fairly limited track records."
     
    It says Wall, who has an overall ranking of 13th, has done a good job with economic growth and attracting people from other provinces but says his weakness is a very high level of government spending.
     
    "This may be an Achilles heel for him, leading to longer-lived structural deficits, given ongoing weakness in resource prices and government revenues," says the report.
     
    It says Wynne, who has an overall ranking of 36th, has constrained spending and public-sector jobs growth, but her government has produced a series of large deficits "that are delaying a needed fiscal adjustment."
     
    In addition to the report, Aha! says it has produced a free set of premier playing cards with face values equal to each premier's ranking — Harris, for example, is the ace of spades and Marois is the two of clubs.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Government To Take Controversy Over Face Coverings To Supreme Court

    Immigration Minister Chris Alexander issued a terse, one-line statement Wednesday to outline the government's next step.

    Federal Government To Take Controversy Over Face Coverings To Supreme Court

    Refinery Issues South Of The Border May Bump Up Gas Prices In Western Canada

    Refinery Issues South Of The Border May Bump Up Gas Prices In Western Canada
    Dan McTeague predicts motorists from Thunder Bay to British Columbia will be paying more when gas prices jump as much as five to seven cents a litre. 

    Refinery Issues South Of The Border May Bump Up Gas Prices In Western Canada

    Small Plane That May Have Had Wrong Fuel Crashes In Manitoba; 8 Injured

    Small Plane That May Have Had Wrong Fuel Crashes In Manitoba; 8 Injured
    A plane that crashed in northern Manitoba, sending eight people to hospital, may have had the wrong fuel.

    Small Plane That May Have Had Wrong Fuel Crashes In Manitoba; 8 Injured

    Vancouver Searching For New City Manager After Announcing Penny Ballem Out

    Vancouver Searching For New City Manager After Announcing Penny Ballem Out
    Mayor Gregor Robertson said Tuesday that council voted in an in-camera meeting to end Ballem's contract, under which she will receive $556,000 in severance.

    Vancouver Searching For New City Manager After Announcing Penny Ballem Out

    P.K. Subban Pledges $10 Million To Montreal Children's Hospital

    P.K. Subban Pledges $10 Million To Montreal Children's Hospital
    The hospital is calling the money the largest philanthropic commitment ever made by a professional athlete in Canada.

    P.K. Subban Pledges $10 Million To Montreal Children's Hospital

    Canada's High Immigrant Population Impacts Literacy Survey Scores, Report Says

    Canada's average showing in an international survey of adult literacy doesn't paint the full picture of where the country stands due to its high proportion of immigrants, according to a new report.

    Canada's High Immigrant Population Impacts Literacy Survey Scores, Report Says