Showing posts with label carleton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carleton. Show all posts

Monday, August 10, 2009

Very interesting nomination news out of Ottawa Centre


I have had more than a couple Conservative friends of mine tell me that Bruce Kyereh-Addo, who was wrongfully disqualifed by a CUSA Electoral Board stacked with supporters of the pro-CFS slate after he rightfully was elected CUSA President with 1744-1569 votes over Erik Halliwell is pursuing the federal Conservative nomination for the riding of Ottawa Centre.
I was proud to support Bruce when he ran for CUSA President, and while I will be supporting the Liberal candidate in Ottawa Centre, I am glad to see that Bruce is continuing to seek an active role in public life. When Bruce ran, he had both Liberals and Conservatives in his corner, and I can only hope that his team-building skills results in an Ottawa Centre campaign that is more focused on the real issues than crass partisanship.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Trade out of Poverty


This is a policy I am putting forward at the Eastern Regional Young Liberal Policy Parliament:


Reclaiming classical liberalism: Having the Liberal Party of Canada support a “Trade out of Poverty” Agenda

WHEREAS, a significant factor of the Great Depression was the imposition of tariffs by nations against each other, stiflingly global trade and the global economy,

WHEREAS, the World Trade Organization predicts a 9% fall in world trade this year, the largest drop since the World War 2,

WHEREAS, exporting nations such as Canada, and developing nations will be the hardest hit by such a downturn in global trade,

WHEREAS, basic values of both classical liberalism and modern liberal internationalism are freedom of trade and freedom of global economic growth,

WHERAS, the Liberal Party must be a party which recognizes the positive role that globalization and the free market economy can have in alleviating global poverty,

WHEREAS, the “Trade out of Poverty” campaign, first launched in the UK, has drawn support from all sides of the House of Commons,

BE IT RESOLVED THAT, in a time of global economic trade downturn, this policy recommends the Liberal Party of Canada adopt a “Trade out of Poverty” Agenda.

Policy Background

-Have a Liberal government play a global leadership role in further opening its market up to international trade, particularly from the developing world, to help develop the trading economies of the developing world, lifting them out of poverty, and helping the Canadian economy grow and help reverse downward economic trends.

-Simplify trade rules to let developing countries share in world trade. “Rule of Origin” rules often cloud so-called free trade agreements. (Rules of Origin specify that the exports must genuinely have been made to a significant extent in the country it is intended to help – to prevent more developed countries evading tariffs by routing their exports through a low income country.) Existing Rules of Origin are so complex that many exporters find it more costly to prove compliance than pay the full tariffs. These rules also make it difficult for poor countries to participate in the complex supply chains - with components and processes carried out in a series of countries - which increasingly characterize international trade. At present fruit grown in one country, processed in a neighboring state and bottled in a third may fall foul of existing Rules of Origin even though it would comply if all operations were carried out in any one of these countries. So it is vital that future Rules of Origin recognize the cumulative value added in different Low Income Countries.

-Have a Liberal government lower Canada’s domestic and export subsides, as these discourage trade during an economic downturn even more, particularly with the developing world. Developing countries are particularly vulnerable to dumping of subsidised exports by rich countries. For example, EU farm subsidies amount to $2 1/2 per cow per day (more than the daily income of the majority of people in Low Income Countries) which enables the EU to export dried milk artificially cheaply and makes it hard for poor countries to export meat products to the EU. A Liberal government must resist the calls for protectionism and be a leader, both home and abroad, in promoting a trade.

-Helping Reduce Tariffs between developing countries
Due to a low tax base, developing nations often impost high tariffs and trade with each other. This policy is self-destructive and a Liberal government must play a role in getting developing nations to liberalize their markets to each other. Donors must help developing countries to reduce barriers against their neighbours through financial support until new revenue sources come on stream. In order for developing nations to qualify for Canadian support and aid, they must not only lower tariffs with the developed world, they must demonstrate a commitment to increasing trade with fellow developing nations.

-Help develop trade infrastructure
In order to make lasting benefits from more open trade, Low Income Countries need the physical capacity to get goods to market – roads, rail and ports. Under this policy, Canadian aid dollars would be focused on helping developing nations establish greater trade infrastructure.

___________________________________________________________________

I believe this Policy is something right up the Liberal alley, because it addition to advancing our economic cred as pro-market, pro-trade, pragmatic centrists, the values and ideals behind the policy is the use of market mechanisms to promote a social justice agenda (something neither the Conservatives nor NDP have any interest in, as they dislike social justice and market mechanisms respectively). With Canada's trade reliant economy and role on the world stage diminishing under Harper, a Trade out of Poverty agenda under a Liberal government will help Canada recover from the recession, help developing nations participate in the global economy, and give Canada a leadership role in promoting free trade and combating protectionism globally.

For more information, here is the website of the British campaign this policy seeks to emulate: http://www.tradeoutofpoverty.org/

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Saturday, February 14, 2009

CUSA Elections

Carleton has voted, as can be seen here: http://www.cusaonline.com/elections/results_el.html

Despite a lot of talk that the "establishment/CFS" slate could be beaten this year, the Demand Better slate (which I was supporting) only managed to get one exec member elected, Nick Bergamini, who was basically the whistle blower in the whole Shineramagate. Unfortunately, Brittany Smyth, the incumbent President who mishandled the Shineramagate incident, was elected as a Public Affairs rep.

Beyond that, however, the story of the election is developing to be the appointment of the "Because It Matters" candidate Erik Halliwell as President, after the controversial disqualification of Bruce Kyereh-Addo (the Demand Better candidate) and Cam Macintosh, an independent candidate. Furthermore, lets take a look at the results of the exec positions in which the student vote in theory actually counted:

VP Finance

Joel Schuurman (Demand Better)
Votes: 1561
Meera Chander (Because It Matters)
Votes: 1727

Patrick Troy
Votes:427

Spoiled: 56
Rejected: 146

VP Internal


Cameron McKenzie (Because It Matters)
Votes: 1946

Shaun Cawley (Demand Better)
Votes: 1727

Spoiled: 78
Rejected: 171

VP Student Issues


Ashton Starr
Votes: 386

Carlos Chacon (Because It Matters)
Votes: 1635
Nicholas Bergamini (Demand Better)
Votes: 1729

Spoiled: 49
Rejected: 127

VP Student Services

Jessica Vasquez (Demand Better)
Votes: 1960

Shewit Kalaty (Because It Matters)
Votes: 1730

Spoiled: 81
Rejected: 163

VP Student Life


Alexandre Sirois (Because It Matters)
Votes: 2155

Omhenimhen Iyamu
Votes: 622

Yulian Ihnatyuk
Votes: 753

Spoiled: 72
Rejected: 249

As you can see, with the exception of the Student Life position, (the Demand Better candidate had to withdraw) the difference between the Demand Better and Because It Matters candidates was smaller then the number of ballots deemed to be spoiled and rejected. It remains to be seen how any appeals of the disqualified candidates will go, but after a lot of initial hope, it looks like broadly speaking, the establishment won again.

EDIT: Lots of rumours floating around that Bruce actually recieved more votes for President then Erik, around 1700.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

CUSA flip-flops

http://www.cusaonline.com/Downloads/shinerama_release.pdf

So all it took was becoming a national joke eh? A good step, but the relevant councillours should still make a public apology for putting forth a blatantly false and discriminatory motion.

CUSA makes Carleton an international laughing stock

I've heard reports of the CF story getting airtime in Germany and on CNN internationally, and if you do a google news search, you'll find an Australian reference. Good job CUSA!

EDIT:
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2008/11/25/ot-081125-shinerama.html UK

http://www.inquisitr.com/9716/canadian-students-pull-support-for-cystic-fibrosis-charity-saying-cf-is-a-white-disease/ Australia

http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSBNG6759520081126 Reuters, international

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

CUSA lives up to its reputation again

As CFS Local number 1, CUSA is prone to being ridiculous, usually making at least one totally boneheaded move a year, and CUSA has not disappointed: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2006/12/06/carleton.html

This is what happens when you have an under 20% voter turnout rate.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

RIP Arthur Kroeger

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/05/10/kroeger-obit.html

As a student of the College which is named after him, I want to give my condolences to Kroeger's friends and family. Kroeger was the embodiment of the spirit of the professional, non-partisan civil service, serving both Liberal and Conservative governments. I only met Arthur once, at the start of my first year, but I found him to be kind, wise, and a gentleman.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Justin Trudeau at Carleton

Just giving a little bit more PR to what should be a great event at Carleton on Wednesday:

Title: A Conversation with Justin Trudeau
Location: Mike's Place, University Centre, Carleton University, 1233 Colonel By Drive
Price: 4 OC Transpo Bus tickets
Contact: danielle.mcgee@gmail.com
Time: 6-8 PM
Date: Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Notes: Justin Trudeau is coming to Ottawa-Centre! The Ottawa-Centre Federal Liberal Association and the Ottawa-Centre Federal Young Liberal Association invite you to join JUSTIN TRUDEAU and PENNY COLLENETTE at Carleton University for an evening of drinks and conversation. Possible Topics: Youth Involvement and the Environment

** Why are we asking for bus tickets?
Very recently 9 Ottawa families lost their homes in a fire. Along with losing their homes and their belongings, one family lost their youngest child and have 6 remaining children to care for. Penny Collenette and her team held a drive this past Sunday and we saw amazing support from everyone in the community.

We found out that these families are also in need of help with their transportation costs. So we are asking everyone to bring with them Octranspo bus tickets which we will be giving to the Carlington Community Centre to give to the families.
A bit of History about Mike's Place:

Mike's Place was named in 1973 in honour of Lester B Pearson. Pearson, whose nickname was "Mike", was Chancellor of Carleton University until his death in 1972. His connection with Carleton followed a distinguished career in the public service and politics. He served as Prime Minister of Canada from 1963 to 1968 and is remembered for the introduction of Canada's Maple Leaf flag, among many other achievements. He was also the winner of the 1957 Nobel Peace Prize for the creation of the UN peacekeeping force to ease the Suez Crisis in 1956. An official photo portrait hangs in the pub to this day.

Hopefully we can have a good turnout, all Ottawa area Young Liberals should come!