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Daily Archives: June 24, 2020
Conservative election spending outpaced Liberals by a little and the NDP by a lot – CBC.ca
Posted: June 24, 2020 at 6:11 am
The Conservatives spent nearly to the limit in the 2019 federal election more than the Liberals did and almosttriplethe amount shelled out by the New Democrats.
Campaign returns filed by most parties and posted to Elections Canada's website show the Conservatives spent $28.9 million during the fallelection campaign, nearly hitting the $29.1 million limit. This was narrowly more than the $26.1 million theLiberals spent.
Both parties spent significantly more than the New Democrats. The NDP's election expenses totalled $10.3 million barely a third of what the party was allowed to spend during the campaign.
The Green and People's parties requested and were granted filing extensions by Elections Canada. The filings for the Bloc Qubcois had not been posted as of Monday evening.
The numbers show that the Conservatives and Liberals were fighting on alevel playing field as far as money is concerned. This parityextended to the pre-election period, when the Conservatives spent $1.8 million and the Liberals spent$1.7 millionon partisan advertising. The NDP spent only $66,000 on partisan advertising over the pre-election period. (The legislatedlimit on that spendingwas just over $2 million.)
The Conservatives shelled out most of their pre-election spending on television ads $1.2 million of their pre-election advertising went on TV. The Liberals spent just $344,000 on pre-election TV advertising, optinginstead to spent nearly half of their pre-election dollars on online ads.
During the campaign period itself, the Conservatives spent $15.9 million on advertising. About $9.3 million of that went to TV spots,$4.6 million was spent online and $1.7 million went to radio ads.
In all three categories, the Conservatives outspent the Liberals.The Liberals spent $14 million on ads during the campaign, including $5.2 million for TV ads and $3.8 million for online ads. The Liberals spent another$3.8 millionon ads categorized as "other" in the election filings.
Nearly all of the $3.9 million the NDPspent on ads went online and on television. In both total dollars and as a share of their total election expenses, the New Democrats spent far less on advertising than either the Liberals or the Conservatives. The two bigger parties spent just over half of their money on ads. Ad spending represented just 38 per cent of the total for the NDP.
One reasonfor this may be that the New Democrats appear to have run a top-heavy campaign. The party spent about $2.9 million on the national office, professional services and salaries and benefits about 28 per cent of all the expenses it booked during the campaign.
While the Conservatives and Liberals both spent more on these line items ($4.8 million and $3.7 million, respectively), the percentage of theircampaign budgets going to theseexpenseswasabout half the share of the NDP budget that went tostaffing.
The NDP's overall financial disadvantagewas felt in other areas. The Conservatives and Liberals each spent more than twice as much as the NDP did on polling and research. While the NDP spent $2.1 million on Jagmeet Singh's campaign tour, the Conservatives spent $4.9 million sending Andrew Scheer across the country and the Liberals spent $6.7 million on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's tour.
The money the NDP spent on the campaign is not money they would have had in the bank, either. Throughout 2019, the New Democrats raised just $8 million, compared to $21 million for the Liberals and $31 million for the Conservatives.
It's difficult to compare the spending in the 2019 election to what was spent in the 2015 campaign, since the 2015 campaignwas nearly twice as long. On a per-day basis, however, both the Conservatives and Liberals spent more in 2019 than they did in 2015. The NDP, which entered the last campaign as the Official Opposition, spent significantly lesson every expense category except non-leader travel and "other expenses."
The Conservatives spent less on a per-day basis in 2019 on voter contact services and on their national office, while they spent more on everything else. The biggest jump in Conservative spendingwas for advertising outside ofradio and TV suggesting a bigger shift of ad dollarsto theonline market in 2019 than in 2015.
The Liberals spent more on a per-day basis on everything except radio and TV ads their spending on those two itemsactually dropped between the two campaigns. The Liberals'biggest increases in spending were for the leader's tour and for non-traditional advertising.
In raw dollars, however, the 2015 campaign was far more expensive. Both the Liberals and Conservatives spent over $40 million in that campaign, while the NDP spent nearly $30 million.
Nevertheless, the Conservatives still spent $2.9 million more in 2019 on non-radio or TV advertising than they did in 2015, despite the campaign being half as long. They also spent more on professional services and travel that was unrelated to the leader's tour. The only thing theLiberals spent more on in 2019 than in 2015 was election surveys (an increase of $34,000).
Elections Canada also hasposted the campaign returns for hundreds of local campaignswhose expenses are tracked separately from those booked by the national campaigns. The filings are incomplete, so it isn't possible to do a full accounting of what was spent by each party across the country just yet.
But the filings do give us a glimpse of a few key local contests.
After leaving the Liberal Party over the SNC-Lavalin affair, Jody Wilson-Raybould and Jane Philpott each ran as independent candidates in their ridings.
Wilson-Raybould was not hurting for money in her successful bid for re-election. The filings show she received $222,000 in contributions during the campaign double the spending limit in her Vancouver Granville riding. She spent $97,203 in election-related expenses.
Her Liberal opponent's return has yet to be filed, but the Conservatives' Zach Segal spent $98,740 on his third-place showing in the riding.
Philpott, running in the Ontario riding of MarkhamStouffvile, was not as fortunate as Wilson-Raybould. While she had a fully-stocked warchest after receiving $148,000 in contributions during the campaign, and spent $101,000 onher re-election bid, she fell over 11,000 votes short of the Liberals' Helena Jaczek, who spent $102,000.
In ReginaWascana, where the Conservatives unseated long-time Liberal MP Ralph Goodale by 7,000 votes, the party spent just $75,000 against Goodale's $92,000.
People's Party Leader Maxime Bernier outspent the Conservatives' Richard Lehoux in his riding of Beauce by a margin of $92,000 to $89,000, but finished 6,000 votes behind.
Money helps in politicsbut it can't buy you love or votes.
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Conservative election spending outpaced Liberals by a little and the NDP by a lot - CBC.ca
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Liberal government nearing revived trade spat with U.S. as tensions mount over dairy, aluminum – National Post
Posted: at 6:11 am
The U.S. has now threatened to file a formal complaint with Canada over the allocations, saying it gives market access directly to American competitors, rather than opening up the Canadian market to foreign firms, as USMCA sought to do.
It almost seems like the Trudeau government is sleepwalking into this
Dairy is something were going to be very closely monitoring with Canada, Lighthizer said in the hearing last week. If theres any shading of the benefits to American farmers, were going to bring a case against them, he told the committee. He said he would be very closely monitoring Canadian dairy allocations to protect American producers.
Lighthizer also told the committee that a surge in aluminum supply, mostly from Canada, ran counter to previous anti-dumping arrangements, and was something that were looking at and talking to both Mexico and Canada about. A report by Bloomberg News on Monday, citing anonymous sources, suggested the Trump administration was mulling the re-imposition of tariffs on aluminum, and could make an announcement by Friday.
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Liberal group launches ad hitting McSally over book promotion | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: at 6:11 am
A liberal group has launched a digital ad campaign targeting Sen. Martha McSallyMartha Elizabeth McSallyMcSally introduces bill to incentivize Americans to take a vacation Liberal group launches ad hitting McSally over book promotion Trump signs 'foolproof' border wall during Arizona tour MORE (R-Ariz.) as President TrumpDonald John TrumpBowman holds double-digit lead over Engel in NY primary McGrath leads Booker in Kentucky with results due next week NY Republican Chris Jacobs wins special election to replace Chris Collins MORE visits Phoenix on Tuesday for a "Students for Trump" convention.
American Bridge, a Democratic-aligned PAC, will attack McSally with an ad criticizing the Arizona senator for promoting her book during numerous media appearances in recent weeks while the coronavirus crisis raged across the U.S.
"Martha McSally: She only cares about herself," text in the ad reads. "Is Martha McSally focused on helping Arizonaor selling books?"
McSally's campaign did not immediately return a request for comment from The Hill.
An American Bridgespokesman told The Hill that the ad would target "thousands" of independent and nonpartisan voters while the president was in town to headline a convention of Trump-supporting students at a Phoenix megachurch.
Martha McSally is a selfish politician who is more concerned about hawking books than doing her job as a Senator, said American Bridgespokesman Zach Hudson in an emailed statement.
"Arizonas coronavirus cases are rising, thousands of her constituents have lost their jobs, and the country is struggling with systemic racism and police violence, but McSallys one and only response is to plug her book," he added. "Martha McSally only cares about herself, which is why Arizona voters are ready to reject her for the second time in two years."
Herseat is seen as one of the key potential pickups for Democrats this year. McSally faces a strong challenge against her reelection bid in the form of Mark Kelly, a retired astronaut who is currently polling nearly 10 points above the first-term senator, according to a RealClearPolitics average of polls.
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Liberal group launches ad hitting McSally over book promotion | TheHill - The Hill
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Report: Greens, Liberals and Plaid will benefit if Labour tacks right on crime and immigration – Left Foot Forward
Posted: at 6:11 am
How does Labour surpass its 2017 vote share?
A report into Labours 2019 election defeat has warned that Labour will lose young, liberal, left-wing voters if it tries to win back Red Wall seats by getting tough on crime or immigration.
The Labour Together report said that Labour did particularly badly in 2019 with lower-paid people, older people and people outside big cities. This led to the loss of many seats in the so-called Red Wall in Englands North and Midlands.
The report says the party could try and win these voters and seats back by combining left-wing economic policies with a strong emphasis on controls on immigration and less social liberalism.
The reports authors said this strategy could yield a higher vote share than in 2019, but would likely lead to losing a significant number of socially liberal voters to the Greens, the Lib Dems and/or the Nationalists, leaving Labour well below its 2017 vote share, with lots of younger voters abstaining too.
A similar strategy outlined by the report would combine a move to the centre on economic issues with mild social liberalism tempered by a tough-on-crime posture.
But the report says this strategy is likely to lose some left-wing and younger voters to the Greens, Liberal Democrats and/or nationalists. It would also lead to a result better than 2019 but worse than 2017.
Voters are increasingly ready to switch between Labour, the Liberal Democrats, Greens and Plaid Cymru, the report said.
The report presented data from the British Election Study which shows that Green and particularly Liberal Democrat voters are more economically right-wing than Labours 2019 voters but voters for all three parties are similarly socially liberal.
Instead of either of these strategies, the report recommends a third one for Keir Starmers Labour although it accepts it is difficult to pull off.
This strategy is: A strategy that builds greater public support for a big change economic agenda, that is seen as credible and morally essential, rooted in peoples real lives and communities.
This economic agenda would need to sit alongside a robust story of community and national pride, while bridging social and cultural divisions.
The message of change would aim to enthuse and mobilise existing support and younger voters while at the same time being grounded in community, place and family, to speak to former leave-minded Labour voters.
The bridging approach across divides would need to neutralise cultural and social tensions. Such a strategy could achieve more than 40% vote share, but would require an exceptional leadership team able to navigate building and winning trust of this very diverse voter coalition.
Joe Lo is a co-editor of Left Foot Forward
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COVID Bed Auctions: Searching for the Liberal in ‘Neoliberal – The Citizen
Posted: at 6:11 am
As our country deals with a flagrantly increasing rate of Covid infections, bringing to sharp relief the dire state of our long under-resourced and discarded public healthcare system, particular outrage has arisen over the excessive admission rates being charged by private hospitals of Covid patients across the country.
Reports abound of patients being charged rates ranging between 17,000 and 45,000 rupees per day, with equally high add-ons for high-end medicines and specialised equipment. Since a Covid patients treatment and convalescence can take one to four weeks, patients at private hospitals have been handed bills totalling several lakh rupees.
These rates are exorbitant by any measure, and beyond the reach of the large majority of Indians, who as per the Centres national income measures earn on average Rs.11,254 per person per month.
A whopping 57% of salaried employees earn less than Rs.10,000 a month, and only 1.6% of workers earn a monthly wage over Rs.50,000, as per a report by the Azim Premji University.
In our current lockdown-fostered economic predicament, where so many workers have been laid off, not paid or forced to take pay cuts, the financial capacity of the average Indian is bound to have further shrunk. This dwindling financial capacity has become ever more crucial as essential services are commercialised at the cost of public provision.
Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal has publicly scolded private hospitals by warning them against black-marketing hospital beds. The Tamil Nadu government has capped daily charges for Covid patients in private hospitals in the state at Rs.15,000, as has the Maharashtra government, at Rs. 9,000. Meanwhile, the Karnataka government is planning to introduce similar price caps for its private hospitals.
The Gujarat High Court too has directed the state government there to regulate the fees charged by private hospitals for treating Covid patients. And a Supreme Court bench headed by Chief Justice Sharad Bobde is currently hearing a petition on the matter of fixing Covid treatment fees in private hospitals.
These are not the first accusations of profiteering in the provision of essential products or services by commercial medical providers in the midst of this pandemic.
Last month, there was controversy over the rapid antibody test kits procured at Rs.245 but sold to the Indian Council of Medical Research by importers and distributors at Rs.600. Ironically, these tests proved to be too inconsistent for use anyway, with the ICMR, which functions under the Union health ministry, directing states to stop using them.
The cost of the regular RT-PCR Covid test, for which most private labs are charging their customers at the ICMR-set upper limit of Rs.4,500, has also come under scrutiny, because the actual cost of testing is reportedly much lower. In April the Gujarat government was itself accused of profiteering by selling N95 masks at a 31% markup.
In early March, as the Covid scare was entering the frame of our national imagination, prices of surgical masks and N95 masks too were jacked up by 300-400% by sellers, and liquid hand sanitisers were being sold on e-commerce platforms by some retailers at ridiculously inflated prices.
Of course, the Union Ministry of Consumer Affairs, via a notification dated March 21, regulated the prices of both masks and hand sanitisers to far more reasonable rates, up to June 30 with the price caps likely to be extended further.
At this point one might wonder: who are these nasty, soulless, unscrupulous commercial vultures, trying to make money during a pandemic off sick and desperately fearful people?
Are these profiteers only some people with a corrupt mindset, as per Lok Sabha MP and de-facto Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi? Or are these instances of price gouging just the trending symptoms of a deeper malaise?
The belief called capitalism
The prevailing system of organising economic relations in our country is called capitalism, an economic ideology in which everyone is essentially dependent on a market for their survival.
Crudely put, there are two main groups in this system: the owners (of capital, such as enterprises or degrees) who sell in the market to get their money, and the workers (or labourers) who sell their labour for money to survive.
In this system, workers sell their labour power to the owners, the capitalists, who in turn sell the products of that labour.
The premise of this system is that the capitalists must sell their products at a profit, that is, at a price higher than what it cost them to have the product made, in order to keep the enterprise running, and capital alive. Profit-making is the underlying premise of capitalism.
One of the reasons this system has kept going for so long is that it requires individual players or participants to function in set, predictable ways, and incentivises them to carry on their roles without any explicit coordination.
This incentive as every capitalist understands regardless of political leanings or social affiliations is that the only way to survive in a competitive market is to make the most money at the lowest cost, so that profits are maximised. This is done through interrelated economic, ideological, social, and political means.
Economically, the capitalist must hire workers, get them to work so they make him more wealth than they cost, and sell their products in a market. To get the requisite work out of his workers, the capitalist exercises power over them, both inside and outside the workplace.
Inside the workplace, it is through wages and the job insecurity that stems from hire-and-fire practices. Nearly 81% of all Indian workers are hired in the informalised sector, as per an ILO report from 2018, with no written contract, paid leave or any other benefits, all of which leaves them at the mercy of their employer. The ongoing humanitarian crisis of migrant workers is rooted in the helplessness of workers in informalised conditions.
Outside the workplace, the capitalists control is exercised through political and ideological means.
Capitalists manage politics in most nation-states either by sponsoring legislators or parties in inordinately expensive election campaigns, or by winning elections to become legislators themselves.
Look at the current Lok Sabha: 475 of the 542 elected members, about 88% of the total strength of the House, are crorepatis, or individuals with declared assets over ten million rupees. The House of the People has become the House of Capital.
These agents of capital then make laws and policy to help their capitalist ilk. Among several instances, these include tax subsidies such as Special Economic Zones, waivers or whittling down of corporate taxes that benefit only a very small number of large companies, and labour reforms that obliterate internationally recognised labour rights by which the state is bound.
While theoretically everyone has an equal say in the election process, it is materially true that competing in elections, and winning them, requires significant material resources. The 2019 Lok Sabha election is estimated to have cost political parties Rs.50,000 crores, or $7 billion, a full $0.5 billion higher than the cost of the 2016 US elections.
It wasnt always the case that elections were so expensive.
Since material resources are distributed unequally in our society, the ability to participate in elections and win is also skewed. Parliaments become filled with representatives enormously wealthier than their constituents, and political parties awash in campaign donations. The election winners use their public office to return the donors favour, giving these capitalists disproportionate power to promote their interests at the cost of the working majority.
Ideologically, capitalists have shaped the social ethos in such a manner that the inequities in, and the marketisation of society perpetrated by contemporary capitalism are seen as the eternal, natural order of things.
According to capitalist ideology, people get the income they deserve, and if they dont like it, they cannot change it.
Compare a 2018 World Bank report revealing that 75% of the current average income of a millennial Indian is based on inherited parental, social and political privilege.
Why do private hospitals get away with profiteering?
Now that we better understand how capitalism works, let us revisit the private hospitals. In the pre-Covid era, the bread and butter of these hospitals were elective surgeries, OPDs and international patients, all of which have declined substantially post Covid.
In the last ten days of March the commercial medical-care sector is estimated to have suffered a loss of 50-70% in revenue, a quantum of loss thought to have continued into the present, as private hospitals are pressed to dedicate a higher proportion of their beds to Covid patients.
However, owner-profits are paramount to the survival of any capitalist endeavour. One cannot expect the fundamental tenet of capitalism to change merely because of a pandemic. Short-term profit-making reorients itself to the upheaval the pandemic has caused.
As a matter of fact, academics and scholars who have faith in capitalism resolutely defend price-gouging and profiteering. In this scenario, for governments or courts to sporadically regulate the prices of certain goods or services is a band-aid that redresses some symptoms, but not the actual ailment.
The sooner we realise that the black activities we mistakenly attribute only to some people with a corrupt mindset are actually the article of faith in our system of economic organisation, the sooner we will learn to ask:
Why has something as essential as health and medical care been left to the vagaries of the market in the first place?
Then we can begin the work of instituting meaningful reform in this system that does not benefit most of us, especially in times of crisis.
In simpler words: dont hate the player, hate the game.
Vineet Bhalla is a Delhi-based lawyer
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COVID Bed Auctions: Searching for the Liberal in 'Neoliberal - The Citizen
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Liberalman and more watch these 5 clips going viral that expose liberal hypocrisy – OpIndia
Posted: at 6:11 am
Liberalman is the superhero we neither need nor deserve in real life. The fictional one, however, is something India absolutely needs to show the mirror to the hypocrisy of those who identify themselves as liberals but are actually far from then. The Daily Switch, a political, media and culture website, on its social media account shared the antics of liberals and Liberalman, the new superhero in town.
In one of the viral videos, two animated characters are looking helplessly at their burning building where their 4-year-old is trapped. Liberalman, with his superpowers, flies in and the parents are hopeful that the superhero will save their child. However, Liberalmans rescue operations come with terms and conditions. He only helps the most repressed people. When the parents inform that their daughter is only 4 years old, Liberalman agrees as she would have surely been a victim of sexism. Liberalman, however, helps via options like candlelight march and the dafli of doom. Clearly, Liberalman has his priorities sorted.
A liberal initially agrees with a commoner that Sonu Sood did great work helping migrants reach their hometowns. However, when Sonu Sood in a video says that he is a fan of PM Modi, Liberal person now believes that Sonu Sood was irresponsible as sending back migrants might have spread coronavirus to villages. He also wants azaadi from murderer Sonu Sood.
Struggling and washed up standup comics and actors have a new ray of hope. Liberals in India have a solution to restart their career. The Placard and woke message combination. It may not make them funny, but at least itll make them famous!
This is just so relatable. Unless you agree with them you are from the IT cell. Or from the RSS. A true liberal will never agree with anything right is happening in India under PM Modi.
Not to undermine the efforts of everyone who have put forward everything they have to help India fight the pandemic, we all now the one equivalent to the JNU student above who is armed with a dafli of doom while fighting those who are fighting the pandemic.
For more, you could follow The Daily Switch here.
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Its time for social liberals to stand up against the tide of cultural conservatism – Telegraph.co.uk
Posted: at 6:11 am
We live in the strangest of times. While the Department of Justice seeks to introduce new laws to protect our national heritage, Britain in 2020 is more tolerant and socially liberal than it has ever been.
Yet culturally, we are re-entering the dark ages. Our history is being erased before our very eyes, while nations, corporations, universities and comedians alike scramble to apologise for past crimes they havent committed. How is it we have become so accepting, yet so closed-minded at the same time?
The proposal to replace the statue of Cecil Rhodes with that of Alain LeRoy Locke, an Afro American student who studied at Oxford from 1907 - and one of the many who benefitted from a Rhodes Scholarship is such an example. Will the many hundreds of recipients of this scholarship now hand back their tainted degrees?
But its not all about statues.
Our increased tolerance and liberalism towards minority groups in this country can no longer be in doubt. Even the most pessimistic observers would have to concede that great strides have been made in the past two decades alone. London and Birmingham are now the most cosmopolitan and racially integrated cities in Europe, if not the world.
An Ipsos Mori poll showed that in 2006, 82% of people disagreed with the notion that you have to be white to be truly British. In the last 14 years since, that figure has risen to 93%.
And within the past decade, attitudes towards immigration have also changed dramatically. One Ipsos Mori poll found that in 2011, 64% of Brits believed immigration to have had a negative impact. By 2019, that had fallen to just 26%.
At the turn of the millennium, civil partnerships, let alone same sex marriages, were still years away. According to NatCen, almost half of Britons believed homosexual relations to be wrong in 2000. But by the end of the 2010s, only 15% thought the same way.
Until recently, depression and other mental health issues were taboo subjects, shunted out of sight by the public. No longer.
Yet in spite of all this, we have lurched backwards on a cultural level.
Consider the sight of self-proclaimed anti-fascists defacing the statue of Winston Churchill, the man who led the fight to defeat the most vile fascist in history.
This new form of authoritarianism now extends to almost every level of our culture.
Some comedy shows are disappearing from TV altogether, as is the case with Little Britain, Come Fly With Me, and the famous dont mention the war episode of Fawlty Towers, due to the perceived offensive nature of some of their jokes. The fact that these skits often lampooned bigotry and racism is seemingly lost on todays pop culture commissars.
Attitudes towards sex and the way women (but not men) dress are also becoming increasingly puritan.
The absurd controversy over the now infamous beach body ready adverts in 2015, which depicted a toned woman in a bikini advertising a slimming product, was just a forerunner to the policing of womens bodies we see today.
What makes these cultural restrictions so pernicious is that they are not being enforced by the government, but rather by society as a whole.
There are few laws against offensive jokes, for example, provided theyre not libellous or overtly discriminatory. However, todays stifling culture of self-censorship means that many jokes or viewpoints which do not fall foul of the law are nonetheless off-limits, lest those who express them want to be hounded into a grovelling apology.
It doesnt even matter that the majority of people are opposed to this sort of neo-Mary Whitehouseism. Fear of being socially ostracised is enough to ensure many will nonetheless be compliant.
The implications of such an environment are bleak.
Many classic cultural works, some from not that long ago, simply would not have been able to get off the ground today.
The British creative industries, once a beacon of brilliance across the world, face an uncertain future. Many artists and producers will take the safe road, sterilising their works and purging them of anything that could possibly cause offence to anyone.
The hounding of the actor Lawrence Fox by Equity and other self-appointed arbiters of woke is but one such example.
Issues in the arts involving race, religion or sexuality are becoming sanitised to avoid provoking a firestorm of controversy. Or worse yet, they may just be ignored altogether.
But perhaps the most damaging thing about all this is that it puts the hard-won gains for social liberalism at risk.
By strangling speech and expression under a corset of political correctness, tensions between majority and minority groups will only get worse.
A false juxtaposition between social liberalism and free speech is already emerging, and many will pick the latter, especially if they themselves have little experience of discrimination.
Its time for social liberals to stand up against this tide of cultural conservatism. We must speak out for free expression, while aggressively defending the values of tolerance and compassion.
Michael Fabricant is Conservative MP for Lichfield and served on the House of Commons' Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee
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Its time for social liberals to stand up against the tide of cultural conservatism - Telegraph.co.uk
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Manitoba Liberal floats idea of rapid response teams for second wave of pandemic in care homes – CTV News Winnipeg
Posted: at 6:11 am
WINNIPEG -- A Manitoba Liberal MLA is looking at the possibilities of a rapid response team to help personal care homes in the province respond if an outbreak of COVID-19 were to occur among residents.
On Tuesday, Jon Gerrard, Manitoba Liberal Party health critic and MLA for River Heights, hosted a Facebook Live forum on how personal care homes can prepare for a second wave of COVID-19.
Gerrard was joined by personal care home advocates Dot Sloik and Beverley Dueck to discuss changes they would like to see in the quality of care for Manitoba residents of personal care homes.
Among these ideas, Gerrard called for a rapid response team to help staff at care homes deal with potential outbreaks of the virus.
"They need to be able to come in, they need to be able to help the care home and get on top of the situation, make sure that the protocols are being followed, that people are being isolated and looked after well," Gerrard said.
"Its a crisis when you got a personal care home with somebody with an infection in it, and having a team which has been trained so they are ready to look after such an infection is a pretty important step."
Sloik said her father was in a personal care home from 2014 to 2018, and during that time, there were incidents of influenza.
"It caused more challenges than the staff was prepared to deal with and it's usually not enough staff to begin with," she said. "I can't even begin to imagine how overstressed the staff would be in a COVID incident coming into the care facility and the biosecurity is really difficult."
Both Dueck and Sloik said more staff are needed to improve the quality of life and care for residents.
The panel all called for the public release of the results of unannounced Personal Care Home Standard Reviews.
About 40 documents released through the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and obtained by CTV News shows the results of some of these reviews which reported incidents of uncleanliness in facilities.
READ MORE: Personal care home reviews need to be made public in Manitoba: health critics
"That is important not only to maintain high standards, but also when people are choosing a personal care home they can make a decision based on what people are finding during inspections," Gerrard said. "I think that will again put some pressure on people to do better in personal care homes."
A written statement from Manitoba Health, Seniors, and Active Living Minister Cameron Friesen said approximately 80 per cent of all deaths in Canada related to COVID-19 have been linked to personal care homes.
He said the province has been working to prevent the spread of any outbreaks, citing visitor restrictions, enhanced environmental cleaning and disinfecting practices, daily staff screening, adherence to provincial personal protective equipment requirements, and the implementation of a single-site PCH staffing model.
He added the province is committed to posting the outcomes of standards and unannounced reviews in personal care homes "with the intent of providing meaningful information to Manitobans, so they can make informed decisions.
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Iceland Reopening With Its Economic Freedom Largely Intact – Daily Signal
Posted: at 6:09 am
Iceland, a small Nordic country, has successfully flattened the COVID-19 curve and is ready to move ahead. Life in the country seems to be almost back to normal. Curfews and social-distancing mandates have been lifted, and gyms, swimming pools, and restaurants are reopened. The country opened its airports to tourism on June 15.
There had been no official lockdown as there was in other countries. However, the small and open economy did take swift action that resulted in a speedy decline in new virus infections and helped to avoid a strict lockdown of the economy while containing the pandemic.
As a result, Iceland has been able to retain much of its policy space for preserving economic freedom. As noted by the latest Fitch Ratings assessment, broad political consensus among political parties on macroeconomic and fiscal policy has underpinned the rebuilding of fiscal and external buffers over the last decade, providing Iceland with fiscal and monetary space to respond to the current shock.
>>> Whats the best way for America to reopen and return to business? The National Coronavirus Recovery Commission, a project of The Heritage Foundation, assembled Americas top thinkers to figure that out. So far, it has made more than 260 recommendations. Learn more here.
Indeed, bringing down government spending through a range of deficit-cutting efforts, the country had been able to create momentum for economic recovery, which had been bolstered by a dependable commitment to regulatory efficiency and open-market policies.
According to The Heritage Foundations 2020 Index of Economic Freedom, Iceland is one of the worlds 15 freest economies, with high degrees of flexibility, openness, and efficiency firmly established.
The Icelandic economy has been climbing the ranks of the mostly free in the index for the past decade. Prior to the current pandemic, its rising growth domestic product had been expanding at a healthy rate, recovering much of its loss from the collapse of its banking sector in 2008 that sparked a currency crisis and a substantial contraction of the economy.
The troubled banking sector has now been recapitalized. Capital controls have been lifted since 2017, and the Scandinavian island economy has returned to global bond markets and charted a remarkable post-banking crisis comeback.
Icelands unique achievements have not emerged from a vacuum. The small country possesses a number of particular societal features that influence its economic policies and attitudeshonesty, openness, efficiency, and trust, among many others.
The combination of those specific attributes is certainly one of the factors behind how this small Nordic free-market democracy has been successful in the past and continues to be resilient today.
For the United States, as The Heritage Foundations National Coronavirus Recovery Commission recommends, empowering economic freedom and partnerships in free markets, along with maintaining key partnerships, must be an integral element of rebooting our economic livelihoods and accelerating the global economic recovery.
Iceland is well-positioned to be just such a partner.
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Iceland Reopening With Its Economic Freedom Largely Intact - Daily Signal
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Tips and Murmurs: is the Collaery case about to open up? – Crikey
Posted: at 6:09 am
A decision on the lockdown of Bernard Collaery's trial may be imminent, and The Australian does what it does best when someone powerful is accused of sexual harassment...
Is a decision looming over whether Bernard Collaerys trial will be held in open court? Plus The Australian continues to run interference for Dyson Heydon, and Quillette will defend your right to free speech to the death (unless it offends them). Plus other tips and murmurs from theCrikeybunker.
Welcome to the police state It seems that soon, we will know how much will be made public about one of Australias great hidden crimes. Since late May the pre-trial hearing for lawyer Bernard Collaery (who advised intelligence whistleblower Witness K) has been running behind doors not so much closed as bolted shut.
Several high profile figures including former foreign minister Gareth Evans, retired admiral Chris Barrie and former Timor-Leste leader Xanana Gusmao have provided arguments that the trial should be in open court.
We hear that the judges decision on whether Attorney-General Christian Porters certificate asserting that certain evidence will prejudice national security if heard in public will be delivered at 2:15 pm this Friday, June 26.
News Corp watch Since the Dyson Heydon scandal broke, The Australian has been doing what any quality paper would do muddying the waters in defence of a powerful man credibly accused of sexual harassment by several women over the course of several years.
First questioning whether the former judge had received procedural fairness, today the paper reports that the inquirys findings were reached without hearing one word from Heydon. But theres some equivocation going on there as yesterdays piece noted, Heydon was permitted to inspect written allegations and was allowed to provide a response that was considered by the investigator before a decision was reached.
Indeed, according to one of the reporters who spent years chasing this story Jacqueline Maley, Heydon simply declined to be interviewed or provide a statement.
That was then, this is now Nine has given another platform for Liberal backbenchers to attack superannuation, this time demanding a freeze on compulsory contributions as part of a broader agenda to halt the growth of industry (or union-backed) super funds. But opposition isnt universal many feel that the current 9.5% contribution is actually insufficient:
The contribution rate is not yet high enough to provide fully-funded retirement incomes [it] is lagging behind the 15% required over a working lifetime to get the majority of Australians to a privately funded retirement.
Who said that? Why, one Andrew Bragg in a 2015 op-ed written when he worked for the Financial Services Council.
As for the argument that super should be used to fund housing, now-Senator Bragg had this to say: superannuation is not for housing, estate planning or a honey pot for governments with short term fiscal problems. Hes very much changed his tune since, but we wonder if that will be mentioned next time Nine amplifies a Liberal Party attack on super?
Freedom Fighters You can set your watch to it. Yesterday columnist Sean Kelly briefly observed that Quillette has been happy to publish authors known for promoting theories of white supremacy. (He hasnt been the only one to make such an observation.)
Quillette founder Claire Lehmann, doing her bit for free speech and broadening the Overton Window, responded with a loaded reference to Australias complainant- friendly defamation laws.
This is going to be fun she tweeted, presumably referring to the ability of people with money to shut down debate in Australia using the court system. And while wed never dare quibble with the leader of the sigh intellectual dark web, were not sure what her being born in Australia has to do with defamation law.
Elsewhere, did whoever penned this Oz editorial (the war on humour is not a joke) have a word with Chris Kenny?
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Tips and Murmurs: is the Collaery case about to open up? - Crikey
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