Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
This Hoary Old House
by C. L. Cook It's an old argument, uttered by too long-serving majority governments far from the next poll, confident their opposition can't touch them, and complacent in comfortable illusions of the constituents' short memory; trotted out specifically to justify hefty pay hikes to themselves (and by default to their opposite numbers across the floor), it goes: "We must pay more to attract 'quality' candidates to public service..."
Premier Gordon Campbell "mugs" for the
camera in a Hawaiian jail photo-op.
And so it is again, as British Columbia's ruling Liberal Party, after a controversial cancellation of the Fall sitting of Legislature, opens the Spring session with a bald-faced cash grab, quaintly called the, 'Legislative Assembly (Members' Remuneration and Pension) Statutes Amendment Act, 2007.'
One has to admire the bottle displayed by this precocious six
year old government, exemplified by the ever-irascible House leader,
Mike de Jong who elegantly described to the press last Autumn the
failure of the government to sit thus:
"We're not sitting just
for the sake of sitting or passing laws just for the sake of passing
laws;" adding for the dim and incredulous: "that's not how I measure a
successful government."
Clearly, Premier Gordon Campbell needs
an upgrade, but it doesn't mean we (the people) will be getting someone
better attuned to the responsibilities and duties of (the people's)
mandate. Sadly, the extra moolah, and dream pension plan will not buy a
hotshot, mid-season replacement player to take us all the way; it's
just more tax money going into the pockets of the same people
Campbell's logic instructs aren't worth the money they're getting now.
These feeble assembled, so lame Coach Campbell benched the
whole team for the first half of the season, we're now told are
deserving an average 29% pay hike, and a 42 million dollar, 1 dollar
gets you 5, retroactive pension top-up. Imagine: Your pension getting a
juicy plumping, backdated a decade!
Keep imagining. Unless your name ends with mla, you're getting squat.
You
who have watched wages stagnate as prices rise for the last two
decades; you who have suffered ever longer work hours for less, while
your rent rose, leaving you with never quite the security to jump into
the housing, or other capital market "booms" will never get a
sweetheart deal like the one cooked up on Belleville Street. Homemade,
and hot out of the oven, it's a red letter day for the province's
"law-makers," regardless their quality or cut.
Yammering Your Cake and Eating it Too
Cunningly,
the Liberals employed tactics seen in the far east (Ontario), where
another liberal pay rise for legislators used "opt out" clauses to cow
opposition criticism; and like-wise, the NDP here, as there, chose
today to accept the meaty pension, but say they will donate the mean $22,000 salary
bump to riding priorities each MLA would see addressed. This the
opposition hopes will salvage an indignant high-ground on the issue to
better lambast the Liberals; while their foil in government will
counter those howls as hypocrisy.
Thrust and Parry; Attaque
au Fer et Liement
The parties will fence over Bill 37, while a quiet
complicity profits both to let it slide; or so a cynic would conclude.
But, perhaps in the vacuum the Liberals' absence in the Legislature
created for the New Democrats, (as seen with their Chair position on the
future of fish farms and aquaculture in British Columbia), perhaps this
"charity at home" angle can work to highlight, in every riding
fortunate enough to have a sitting NDP member in the Legislature, and
point out just how much work still left to do there is in this province;
even if the Liberal government doesn't deem the challenges we face
worthy of an active government, holding open debate in a functioning,
accountable House of Government: For any price.
Chris
Cook is a contributing editor to Pacific Free Press, and host Gorilla
Radio, a weekly public affairs program, broadcast from the University
of Victoria, Canada. You can check out the GR Blog here.