Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Who You Know, Not What You Know, Was Once A Factor In P.E.I. Politics

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 May, 2015 11:35 AM
    The days when getting your road paved in P.E.I. meant voting for the right politician might be gone, but Green Leader Peter Bevan-Baker says political connections still pose an obstacle for third parties trying to make a breakthrough in Monday's election.
     
    Though some historians say voting based on political rewards has waned, Bevan-Baker believes the effects of patronage remain.
     
    "I think you still see fear in some individuals whose jobs are dependent on the public purse. And there are many of them," says the 52-year-old dentist who is running in Kellys Cross-Cumberland, a rural riding southwest of Charlottetown.
     
    "Patronage plays an enormous role, sometimes very overtly and sometimes quite subtly."
     
    Bevan-Baker was also a Green party candidate in Ontario before moving to Prince Edward Island 13 years ago.
     
    Historian Ed MacDonald, who teaches at the University of Prince Edward Island, says the old days of families passing on political affiliation like treasured heirlooms are largely gone.
     
    In the years after Confederation there was widespread use of patronage in Canadian politics as a way of maintaining support, and P.E.I. was little different, he says.
     
    However, the Island's small scale magnified the impact of close personal ties.
     
    "You were expected to look after everybody in your riding. ... And people looked to you to get their road paved, looked to you to ensure their child got a job for the summer, looked to you to ensure electricity was extended to your area," MacDonald said.
     
    But former Liberal premier Robert Ghiz signalled a shift in the 2007 election when he shunned a party candidate who suggested Progressive Conservatives would be out of government positions if the Liberals won.
     
    After winning a majority government, the Liberals didn't repeat the prior practice of replacing seasonal workers based on party loyalty.
     
    Ghiz also introduced Participate in P.E.I., a website where people could apply for jobs with government boards, agencies and commissions.
     
    Still, he faced criticism when Liberals were appointed to a tribunal that oversaw workers compensation appeals and Tories were quietly dropped.
     
    Ian Dowbiggin, also a historian at the University of Prince Edward Island, says many people in the province also believe Ghiz didn't do enough to curb the provincial nominee program, which brought immigrants into the province if they invested in Island companies. In 2009, the auditor general released a report on conflict of interests that were related to the program.
     
    Dowbiggin says the better word for what happens today is cronyism.
     
    "It doesn't filter down to the people on the street, but privileges people in an affluent social class that's close to the government," said Dowbiggin.
     
    Liberal Leader Wade MacLauchlan has promised changes if the party is re-elected that are intended to bolster trust as a result of the fallout from both the immigrant investor program and the party's failed attempt to make P.E.I. the country's Internet gambling regulator.
     
    Tory Leader Rob Lantz started his campaign by making accountability a central plank, promising that all Progressive Conservative candidates would sign a pledge requiring them to uphold "honest and open government dedicated to the common good.''
     
    Dowbiggin says if the Greens or the NDP elect a candidate on Monday, it may reflect disaffection with the past practices of the two leading parties.
     
    "We may have crossed a watershed in the history of the province where I think the tolerance for this kind of cronyism has weakened considerably," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    PM Harper To Welcome Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi To Canada

    PM Harper To Welcome Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi To Canada
    Prime Minister Stephen Harper today announced that Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India, will visit Canada from April 14 to 16, 2015, making stops in Toronto, Ottawa and Vancouver.

    PM Harper To Welcome Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi To Canada

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Wanted AK47 Rifles To Be Recognized As Extremist: Trial

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Wanted AK47 Rifles To Be Recognized As Extremist: Trial
    VANCOUVER — A trial of a man accused of planting bombs on the grounds of the B.C. legislature has heard he wanted AK47 assault rifles to carry out his plan so people would know he was a Muslim terrorist.

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Wanted AK47 Rifles To Be Recognized As Extremist: Trial

    Full Parole For A Man Who Killed A Delta Police Officer

    VANCOUVER — A man who spent most of the last three decades in prison for murdering a Delta, B.C., police officer has been granted full parole. This is the second time 69-year-old Elery Long has been granted full parole.

    Full Parole For A Man Who Killed A Delta Police Officer

    72-year-old B.C. Man Accused Of Raping Disabled Girl Deported Back From U.S.

    72-year-old B.C. Man Accused Of Raping Disabled Girl Deported Back From U.S.
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man accused of raping a disabled child four decades ago has been deported back to the province from the United States.

    72-year-old B.C. Man Accused Of Raping Disabled Girl Deported Back From U.S.

    No Partial Stripping In Bars: Saskatchewan Government Peels Back Decision On Licensed Strip Clubs

    No Partial Stripping In Bars: Saskatchewan Government Peels Back Decision On Licensed Strip Clubs
    REGINA — Premier Brad Wall says the government is reversing its decision to allow licensed strip clubs in the province. He says he believes it was a mistake to change the province's provincial liquor laws last year to allow partial stripping in bars.

    No Partial Stripping In Bars: Saskatchewan Government Peels Back Decision On Licensed Strip Clubs

    CRTC Fines Vancouver Based Dating Service PlentyoOfFish $48,000 Under Anti-spam Legislation

    CRTC Fines Vancouver Based Dating Service PlentyoOfFish $48,000 Under Anti-spam Legislation
    OTTAWA — Canadian online dating website PlentyOfFish has paid a fine of $48,000 after regulators found the company violated its new anti-spam legislation.

    CRTC Fines Vancouver Based Dating Service PlentyoOfFish $48,000 Under Anti-spam Legislation