Thursday, April 5, 2012

Get Informed

So I've been neglecting this election series. Again. April for a Grad Student is not a good time to focus on things other than school. Needless to say, I have some time this morning to catch up on Alberta Election 2012.

First, let's get some links to party websites and platforms so you can inform yourselves:

Platform: No specific document, but running largely on what they passed in the 2012 provincial budget
Tagline: Real Life Leadership






Platform: On the first day of the election, I was able to access the Policy Green Book, but it appears to no longer exist on the website, nor does their Alternative Budget 2012. What seems to be happening is progressive announcements of "pledges." The first three of five are Balanced Budget and Savings Act, Wildrose Family Pack, and Alberta Energy Dividend
Tagline: Putting Families First

Leader: Raj Sherman
Tagline: Yes. Good People. Big Ideas. 
                                           Better Government


Leader: Brian Mason
Platform: There doesn't appear to be one single document for the platform, but this website links them all together including a costing sheet for their platform.
Tagline: Because Alberta belongs to you.


Leader: Glenn Taylor
Tagline: Common Ground. Common Sense



Take a look. I know this is a lot of information, but it'll be worth it. I promise.

I'll try to post again this weekend on a specific topic. Trying to decide between oil sands development and health care. Stay tuned! Remember to check out Elections Alberta about how and where to vote on April 23rd, 2012.

Cheers,
Cait

Monday, March 26, 2012

28 Days...

You've got 28 days to make up your mind about who to vote for. On April 23rd, 2012, Albertans will head to the polls. 

This time last year I was writing about the federal election. This year, my home province of Alberta is holding an election. And for the first time in a long time, the outcome is not set. The Progressive Conservative Party of Alberta has some stiff competition in the Wildrose Alliance. 28 days will tell us if voters will stick with what they know and have known for four decades. 28 days will tell us if voters are tired of the status quo and will decide to vote for change. Either way, this is shaping up to be a pretty exciting election. 

That being said, I'm going to try to work my way back into writing blog posts about my favourite past time: Democratic Duty :)

That's right folks. I look at voting as being a democratic duty every citizen has that comes with citizenship in a free, democratic society. Because we live in a democracy, we are given the chance to choose our leaders, our representatives, and the folks who go to work to speak for their constituents. It's not that tough of a duty. 

Pick up a newspaper or log on to your favourite news site in the next 28 days and there will be a boat load of articles on the election, the candidates, the parties, the scandals, etc. 

Alternatively, find the party websites and read their platforms yourself. That's one of the best ways to get your information without having it being processed through somebody's else's lens first. I'll be posting the party websites with every post I publish regarding the election so you can verify for yourself what I'm talking about. 

There's also Vote Compass, which will give you a survey of questions regarding issues and place you on a grid in comparison to the parties. It's not a perfect system, and there are some definite flaws, but it's better than nothing. 

After you've done some of this, you then get yourself to your polling station on April 23rd and you vote. Simple!

So without further ado, I give you my pledge for this election. Last time I did this I was too ambitious. School got in the way of me writing every day. So I'll take it a little easy this time around (I am trying to finish my Masters Degree after all). So I pledge to post at least three times a week with a review on specific issues pertaining to Alberta's provincial election. If you have a request, please leave me a comment and I'll try to do a post on it.

As a side note, I will try with all my might to keep these reviews as non-partisan as possible. It's going to be a lot easier for me to do this at a provincial level because I don't actually adhere to one party's platform in my province. I'll try to do this because I want you all to get a fair glimpse of what's going on in the province and because I hope to be working for the government after I graduate and I can't be overtly biased. 

So tune in later this week for my first issue review.

In the meantime, go to Elections Alberta's website to find all the information you need to know about the technicalities of voting (how to vote, where to vote, when to vote, etc). Also, if you're an Albertan who will be away from your polling station on election day, this website will let you know what options you have in order to have your vote counted (using a special ballot or advanced polling days).

Cheers!
Cait

Sunday, July 10, 2011

A Cat in the Hand...

Hello readers,

There is nothing like having a cat in the house. I don't even need to have the cat sitting on the couch with me. I don't need the cat to be cuddled up to me. I don't even need to see the cat to be happy. I just need to know it's there.

I love cats. I love dogs too, don't get me wrong and I wouldn't define myself as either a dog or a cat person solely, but given the choice between a cat and a dog, I would probably choose a cat. I know some people think they're stand-offish and are only good pets when it suits their needs, but I've never met a cat I didn't like. Even working at a kennel where cats' worst personalities come out, I've always had a soft-spot for those fluffy felines.

I'm cat-sitting for my sister while she's chilling at the cottage. Alex is this beautiful little calico cat who has short hair and sheds like a little monster. She's got a very welcoming personality, very sweet, and very personable. She's a great cat to be cat-sitting.

She is not, however, my Oliver. Don't get me wrong, Alex is great, but there's nothing like cuddling with my Oliver. I even love his annoying little meow that my parents, my brother, and my soon-to-be sister-in-law HATE. He sounds a little effeminate, but it's adorable. And I miss him. As much as I want him to move out East with me (and my mother would be more than happy to shove him in a box and FedEx him out here pronto!) I imagine that where ever I'm living come September will not allow pets, and to be honest, it would be cruel to Oliver. He's an indoor farm cat (if such a thing exists). He likes to be able to go outside whenever he wants (and his little meow will definitely tell you when wants out) but also like to have a house to sleep in and take refuge in. A little condo in downtown Toronto would just not do him justice.

So, until I live somewhere that Oliver will appreciate (and mark my words, when I figure out where I'm going to live after my Masters, I'm going to find a place I can take Oliver with me) my parents, my brother, and my soon-to-be sister-in-law will just have to obey his beck and call and love him ten-fold in my absence, and I will have to do with my sister's cat as a stand-in for my love of felines.

Cheers,
Cait

Monday, July 4, 2011

Quick Update

Hello!

So, if it hasn't been apparent so far, I have been neglecting this blog. Completely and absolutely. I'm tracing it back to my deep-seated love of my summer so far. I think I tend to use writing and blogging as an escape from the mundane, or from discontent, I dunno. So far though, I've really needed no escape. I also realize that my productivity tends to plummet during the summer, and when the space around me is dishevelled and disorganized. Case in point:

My room.

As my mother can now attest, having seen the wonders of my tiny residence in Ottawa through the magic of Skype, my living space is a pig sty. It's hard to feel inspired when I'd rather burn my room to the ground and start over, than clean it up.

So, I'm going to get cleaning tonight. After cleaning, hopefully I'll be able to write something far more substantial than a cleaning plan.

I'm also going to have a sit down at some point with the roommates to discuss the common living space in our residence. While my room is a pigsty, I keep everything I commonly share with my roommates quite clean. I clean up my dishes, I don't leave my crap lying around. This is not a common theme amongst some of my flatmates and it needs to stop. How I'll approach them, I'm not quite sure, but it'll happen. First, though, I need to clean my personal space. I really should set a good example before I approach others.

Until later,

Cait

Friday, June 17, 2011

Getting Back Into the Swing of Things!

Long time no see, dear readers!!

I must, first, profusely apologize for not updating this blog in over a month. I went on a little hibernation called "moving-to-a-new-city-starting-a-new-job-and-not-having-any-inspiration." So, An Albertan in Toronto is now, at least for a few months, An Albertan in Ottawa. I am working in our nation's capital this summer as a policy intern for the Government of Canada and loving every minute of it. I love this city, I love my job, I love the people I work with, and I just love it here!

I think my lack of writing also has something to do with my level of contentment. In Toronto, I'm just basically there to do my degree and get out. Toronto is a great city, don't get me wrong. I just probably prefer visiting it rather than actually living there. In Ottawa, while I am just here to do my internship and get out, I can definitely see myself moving here, whether it be right after I graduate, or a few years down the road. I have friends who say it takes at least a year/year and a half to get acquainted with a city and to actually make somewhere feel like home. I know some people would also argue that the difference I'm experiencing is one of work-life v. school/student life. I also know some would say that I spent winter in Toronto, which is dark and grey and slushy. Yes, those are valid points, but let me refute them.

First, it didn't take a year for me to get acquainted with Ottawa and to make it feel like home. I felt more at home in Ottawa in my first week here than I did in my eight months in Toronto.

Second, while work-life and student-life are two very different things, I love both of those types of living. I LOVE school. I would go to school for the rest of my life if I could afford it. I also love working, especially in jobs like I've had with the two governments I've worked for.

Third, I love winter, so the fact that my time in Toronto was spent during Canada's longest season is not applicable to me... Although, to be fair, Toronto's winter sucks on the scale of winter-awesomeness. I enjoy snow. Clean white snow that stays snow and doesn't melt into a ridiculous slushy-type substance packed with salt. I also enjoy sand and not salt on the roads because salt ruins my boots and leave white crap everywhere once it dries. I also enjoy long, cold winters, not short, warm winters. I like perpetual -20 to -30. I like my winters to last from October to April (or May, or June ;) I didn't wear my winter jacket once in Toronto after February.

So, Ottawa is definitely winning the competition for my heart.

But, even with all this, I have been neglecting this blog and I will do so no longer. I'm making the commitment to go back to blogging at least once a week on various topics in my life, or in the news. We'll be short on sports talk this summer as I really only care about the NHL, but the draft is coming up so look for a post on that, and then there's free agency! I won't be talking about any issues that pertain to my job as I imagine there may be some issues of confidentiality/conflict of interest/public service etiquette, but I'll talk about other stuff.

So, until next week,

Cait

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

The Day After

Hello All,

So the election is over. And what an election it was. A Conservative majority. An New Democratic opposition. A decimated Bloc Quebecois. And a crushed Liberal Party. I'm in a little bit of a shock, to be honest.
I expected a Conservative government, I did. I just thought it would be a minority. I expected the NDP to do better than it ever has before. I just thought they'd, at most, beat the Liberals by one or two seats or lose to the Liberals by the same margin. I did not expect the Bloc to be killed and given only a fraction of a fraction of the seats, let a long see Gilles Duceppe lost his own riding. Nor did I expect the Liberals to com so solidly in 3rd place or that Michael Ignatieff, leader and Chef du Parti, would not be elected to Parliament. It's telling that the leader was not elected and even more telling that former leader Stephane Dion was able to retain his seat.

What do you do when the horse you backed and invested so much in breaks its leg in the final stretch of the race and comes in 3rd to the dirty jockey and his horse who used drugs and lies to cheat his way to the top? You shoot the horse, train another stallion, and move on. But you have to train it right.

With a majority government in power, the Liberals have at least 4 years to find a great candidate and make him or her into a prize winner. It'll be a tough road. It'll be a long road, but if you're able to find some new talent to hone, mold, and energize, you could see a lot of change.

But you'll have to be in the dark for a while. Like two, maybe three elections a while. Change doesn't come overnight and the Liberals don't have a lot of good names to put forward. I personally like Gerard Kennedy, but he lost his seat last night to the orange flood. I also really like Ken Dryden, but I've just been informed, to great dismay and shock, that he lost his seat as well. The Liberals need someone not tainted by this election.

A few names I have in mind, in no particular order:
- Kirsty Duncan (MP Etobicoke-North, ON)
- Bob Rae (MP Toronto-Centre, ON)
- Justin Trudeau (MP Papineau, PQ)
- Dominic LeBlanc (MP Beauséjour, NB)
- Scott Brison (MP Kings-Hants, NS
- Grant Mitchell (Senator, AB)

I'm sure there are a few names I've forgotten, but those are some of my favourites.

This is just a few. Realistically, I think it'll probably be Bob Rae, but personally, I think it needs to be someone who will be around in politics for another 15-20 years. The Liberals have to stop eating their wounded or else the party will continue to get weaker and weaker. So fine someone who can survive another election loss, keep them around and make 'em a real contender.

On a positive note, this election saw the separatists decimated. Hooray for no longer trying to pull this country apart! And the Green Party of Canada elected it first ever Member of Parliament - Elizabeth May (MP, Saanich-Gulf Islands, BC). Good for her!

On a "let's move on" note, now that the election is done I can refocus on hockey. Vancouver is currently playing Nashville right now. Tied going into first overtime. The series is tied at one game a piece.

Go Canucks!

Cheers,
Cait

Sunday, May 1, 2011

It's May 2nd: VOTE!

**If you enjoy this post, please VOTE and consider sharing it via email, Facebook, Twitter, or whatever social media or traditional media you favour. Get your friends, family, aquaintances, roommates, coworkers, the people in your life to VOTE!**

 Hello All,

So while I may have been neglecting this blog, I have not been neglecting my interest in this election. I had grand plans for this last election post. I was going to tell you why you should vote. I was going to tell you how you could vote. I was also going to tell you who I am voting for. I'm going to do all of these things, but not in the majestic way I had imagined.

It is currently 10:18pm in Ottawa, ON where I am now living for the summer. My internship for my program starts tomorrow so I can't really spend three hours writing what I really want to write. So I'm going to give it to you plan and simple.



1) Why you should vote.
       a.) You have a right to vote.
       b.) You have the privilege to vote without being threatened,
       persecuted, or killed for doing so.
       c.) Millions upon millions upon millions of people have fought and
       died for the right to vote and to take part in the democratic process.
       Many of these people died long ago, but even today in places like
       Egypt, we are seeing people die for something you get to do
       tomorrow for free and without violence.
       d.) This is your life and your country for five more years. How do you
       want to spend that time?
       e.) Politicians (mainly the Conservatives, but not just them) have
       shown disdain for democracy and the rules we govern ourselves by.
       Vote to express how much living in a free and democratic society
       means to you.
       f.) It's your civic duty.
       g.) As a Canadian, you should feel proud to cast a ballot for your
       representative. It's the polite way of telling those who hold power
       how much we dislike or like how they wield it.
       h.) If you don't vote, then how do you legitimately complain about
       how the government is taxing you too much, is not providing
       adequate services, is ruining the environment, is ignoring farmers/
       students/seniors/teachers/doctors/nurses/municipalities/etc, etc.

2) Where you can vote:
       This will differ depending on where you live. Best bet, go to the Elections Canada website. They have all the information there. When in doubt, CALL THEM! (1-800-463-6868) Every citizen has a right to vote and Elections Canada is there to ensure that that right is fulfilled. Your only option to vote now is to go to your polling station and cast a ballot. Make sure you bring valid government issued ID with your address on it. If you don't have that, there are two other options:
       a.) bring two original pieces of authorized identification (full list
       of what can be used is found here)
       b.) Take someone from your polling station who is eligible to vote
       and can prove it with ID or option a.) and get them to swear an
       oath that you live in your riding.

Like I said, though: If you have ANY questions or are confused about anything related to the process of voting, CALL ELECTIONS CANADA!!! One small phone call could make all the difference.

3) Who I am voting for:
       And now we get to the juicy bit. For those of you who know me, you've known all along that I am a member of the Liberal Party of Canada and had planned to vote Liberal. This has not always been the case. I voted for New Democrat Linda Duncan in Edmonton-Strathcona in the previous election and help elect the only non-Conservative member of Parliament from Alberta. That was a strategic decision. I knew a vote for Duncan would be a vote against the Conservatives and vote that could make a difference. I was right.
       I considered voting strategically this election as well when I thought I'd be voting in Trinity-Spadina in Toronto, ON this time around. In that riding, a vote for NDP Olivia Chow would have ensured a non-Conservative seat (though as I understand it now, the Conservative in that riding is not really a contender).
       I am, however, voting in Ottawa-Vanier tomorrow and I will be voting Liberal. Not because it's strategic, but because I believe the Liberal Party of Canada has the best plan for the country. Let's forget about the policy for a moment and allow me to be hyper-partisan for a few sentences.

       Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party of Canada are leading this country, MY country, down a very dangerous road filled with social and economic conservatism, fear and hatred of criticism, disdain for democracy and this democratic nation's citizens, and selfish, underhanded motives. The Conservative Party has made a lot of hay out of Michael Ignatieff's work experience abroad. They question whether he's "Here for Canada." My argument is this: Stephen Harper, having spent all of his time in Canada is NOT "Here for Canada," he is here for himself and his ideology. Granted, most politicians are, but in Harper's case, it's about power and it's about his agenda and not necessarily even his party's. He keeps a tight lid on his cabinet and refuses to listen to criticisms that come from allies. He sees the media as a nuisance to his end goal (whatever it may be) instead of a legitimate tool to ensure the legitimacy and accountability of government. All in all, a country run by Stephen Harper, even in a minority setting, let along a majority, is an extremely terrifying scenario.

       On the flip side of why I'm not voting Conservative, is why I am voting Liberal. I like their policy on education and how every student should be given money, regardless of their family economic background. I like the pragmatic approach to tax policy and while I think corporate taxes could still be higher without threatening a lot of our competitiveness, the plan to maintain rather than cut corporate taxes is a step in the right direction. The party's environmental policy is fair to Alberta's oil sands while still trying to decrease the environmental damage of producing the resource. It also provides individual citizens an opportunity to effectively make small changes which, when added together, could make the biggest difference in fighting climate change. I could go on and on about what I think the Liberal's are doing right (I could also expand on where I think they could improve, but of all the parties, I believe the Liberals have the shortest fault list).
       On Michael Ignatieff specifically, I am a firm believer that he would do wonders for this country. I think he's a realist that has the well-being of Canadians firmly implanted in his vision for this country. I think he has the intelligence to deal with tough decisions that will face us in the years to come (Health Care and Climate Change being only two of the many). I also believe that he can restore our international reputation as a well-travelled man who understands global politics. I've had the honour of hearing him speak as an academic and as a politician. I've read several of his pieces and seen his documentary on Quebec. I've been able to see Ignatieff from several different angles, and I believe that he could be the best thing this country never knew it could have. 

       So, to end, this blog fully endorses Michael Ignatieff and the Liberal Party of Canada.

Who will you endorse? And who will you vote for? I don't care who it is. I honestly don't. I know some people would rather certain people stay home so that their opponents don't get elected. I think that's bulls**t (pardon my cursing). Yeah, I'd prefer if the people going to vote tomorrow were voting for anyone other than the Conservatives, but living in a democracy means that I will live with the decisions that the majority of the citizens make. Because I voted, I then get to spend the next few years between elections trying to hold the government to account and then finally trying to sway others to change their minds in the next election.

So, VOTE, will you? Please!

Cheers,
Cait