Surprise Attack! Revolution carried through by small conscious minorities

Surprise Attack! Revolution carried through by small conscious minorities
Kabul in the Republican Revolution of 1973

Friday, September 30, 2011

Niagara This Week's questions for St. Catharines candidates in the 2011 Federal Election

Niagara This Week asked all St. Catharines candidates to answer two question in 150 words or less each


http://www.niagarathisweek.com/news/article/1136705--questions-for-st-catharines-riding-candidates-1

What election issue have you been hearing about in your riding that you plan to act on?


http://www.niagarathisweek.com/news/article/1136738--questions-for-st-catharines-riding-candidates-2

From a provincial standpoint, what do you think can be done to jumpstart Niagara’s struggling economy?


Here are my answers to both questions:

#1 (the election issue I've been hearing about and what I will do about it)

Health care: we’re dying needlessly from hospital infection outbreaks because staffing cuts don’t give enough time to clean; emergency rooms are moved over half-an-hour away in favor of a P3 (public-private partnership i.e. for profit) hospital that costs more in ambulances; and bed cuts are so bad that when a 21-year old St. Catharines man got sick abroad earlier this year he was blocked from getting treatment here because there wasn’t even one bed available.  He later died.  The solution: restore the beds, staffing, and services that were cut in favor of corporate tax-cuts which created only record profits and not jobs.  What little money was left is being siphoned off into private profits for outsourcing.  I am the only candidate who says we must hold elected officials accountable for these preventable deaths because the nurses and unions have been warning us this would happen. Voting communist says this loudest.

#2 (how to jump start Niagara's economy provincially)

Ontario has one of the lowest corporate tax rates in the industrialized world but companies sit on record profits instead of investing or creating jobs.  We must reverse these cuts so corporations pay their fair share. Use the money for public investment in re-building industry and the energy and public transportation infrastructure.  Corporations don’t invest when the economy is depressed, only the government will do this.  This is how our industry was built earlier and we can do it again.  Instead, the big business parties shift the tax burden from those who can pay to working people who cannot, and cut our public services too, which hasn’t worked.  Stop the job hemorrhage.  If companies want to close a plant, hold a public tribunal and if the plant is profitable (many closed plants here were!) we’ll run them as a crown corporation instead of layoffs and pulling machines out of Canada. 

PC, Communist leaders to visit Niagara (Niagara This Week)

https://www.niagarathisweek.com/news-story/3259706-pc-communist-leaders-to-visit-niagara/ 

With less than a week until the provincial election, two more party leaders will visit Niagara this weekend.

Progressive Conservative leader Tim Hudak, the incumbent MPP for Niagara West-Glanbrook, has scheduled several stops throughout the region on Saturday, visiting St. Catharines, Niagara Falls, Welland, Port Colborne and Fort Erie. The leader of the Communist Party of Canada (Ontario), Liz Rowley, will also be coming to the area, making a stop in St. Catharines.

Hudak will be visiting area candidates for several photo opportunities at spots including Market Square in St. Catharines, Ripley's Believe It or Not in Niagara Falls, the Port Colborne Hospital and more.

Rowley will be visiting the St. Catharines Public Library, 54 Church St. in St. Catharines, at 2 p.m. on Saturday, where she will be speaking in support of St. Catharines Communist candidate Saleh Waziruddin. Rowley is travelling the province to the various ridings to support the nine Communist candidates representing the party this election.

Green Party leader Mike Schreiner and NDP leader Andrea Horwath visited the region last weekend. Liberal leader Dalton McGuinty has not yet came to Niagara during the campaign.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Questions for St. Catharines riding candidates (Niagara This Week)

Saleh Waziruddin, Communist 

Health care: we're dying needlessly from hospital infection outbreaks because staffing cuts don't give enough time to clean; emergency rooms are moved over half-an-hour away in favor of a P3 (public-private partnership i.e. for profit) hospital that costs more in ambulances; and bed cuts are so bad that when a 21-year old St. Catharines man got sick abroad earlier this year he was blocked from getting treatment here because there wasn't even one bed available. He later died. The solution: restore the beds, staffing, and services that were cut in favor of corporate tax-cuts which created only record profits and not jobs. What little money was left is being siphoned off into private profits for outsourcing. I am the only candidate who says we must hold elected officials accountable for these preventable deaths because the nurses and unions have been warning us this would happen. Voting communist says this loudest.

#2

Saleh Waziruddin, Communist 

Ontario has one of the lowest corporate tax rates in the industrialized world but companies sit on record profits instead of investing or creating jobs. We must reverse these cuts so corporations pay their fair share. Use the money for public investment in re-building industry and the energy and public transportation infrastructure. Corporations don't invest when the economy is depressed, only the government will do this. This is how our industry was built earlier and we can do it again. Instead, the big business parties shift the tax burden from those who can pay to working people who cannot, and cut our public services too, which hasn't worked. Stop the job hemorrhage. If companies want to close a plant, hold a public tribunal and if the plant is profitable (many closed plants here were!) we'll run them as a crown corporation instead of layoffs and pulling machines out of Canada.

Monday, September 26, 2011

St. Kitts candidates talk health care (Niagara This Week)

Niagara This Week; Thorold, Ont. [Thorold, Ont]. 26 Sep 2011: 1.  

Copyright (c) 2011 Metroland Media Group Ltd. All Rights Reserved.


Friday, September 23, 2011

Candidates square off at chamber debate (Niagara This Week, protesting exclusion by Chamber of Commerce)

https://www.niagarathisweek.com/news-story/3260188-candidates-square-off-at-chamber-debate/ 

Candidates square off at chamber debate
Candidates square off at chamber debate
Candidates square off at chamber debate
NEWS

Candidates square off at chamber debate

Niagara This Week - St. Catharines
Friday, September 23, 2011

The candidates for the four major parties running to represent St. Catharines at Queen’s Park squared off at a chamber debate last week, but not before a couple of uninvited candidates shook things up with a mini-protest.

The St. Catharines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce sponsored the debate, held before a small crowd at the Quality Inn Parkway Convention Centre. However, before any candidates could deliver their opening remarks or answer questions, two of the three candidates who were not invited disrupted the proceedings.

Independent Jon Radick stood up and decried the decision by the chamber, noting that other chambers in the region welcome all candidates.

“I thought we lived in a democracy,” he said.

He was joined by Communist Party candidate Saleh Waziruddin, and both took to the stage, refusing to leave until hotel security was summoned.

Explaining the chamber’s policy was Kithio Mwanza, policy coordinator for the St. Catharines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce, who explained that the board had decided only to welcome candidates or parties which received at least two per cent of the votes in the previous election.
Shouts of protest could be heard from the audience, though things quieted down quickly once the candidates left.

In her opening comments, NDP candidate Irene Lowell noted the local NDP office sent a letter to the chamber to decry the decision.
When she moved on to discussing her party’s policy, Lowell said it’s people-driven, with a focus on putting people back to work.

“We would like to have every person in Ontario work,” she said. “It’s not too much to ask.”

Progressive Conservative candidate Sandie Bellows told the audience about her past as a survivor of a violent attack by a convicted preditor. She said her party’s plan to require such criminals to wear GPS anklets would have helped her.

“Dalton McGuinty refuses to take action to protect our vulnerable citizens,” she said.

Liberal incumbent Jim Bradley, a veteran of provincial elections, noted his party has tackled tough issues and made the necessary decisions for the future — even if they weren’t popular. He then listed a number of infrastructure projects in St. Catharines for which his government has been a partner at the table.

“The list goes on, with the list of accomplishments in St. Catharines,” he said.

Green party candidate Jennifer Mooradian, meanwhile, tried to shrug off the popular conception of her party as being the granola-eating, marijuana-legalizing type. She said it has a broad platform that appeals to everyone.

“It wants to better the life of everyone living in Ontario,” she said.
The candidates were asked a variety of questions, with each directed first at one candidate and the others given a chance for rebuttal. Bradley was asked if he supported a new spectator facility and if provincial dollars should be made available, to which he replied the decision would need to be made locally.

“I will always work with my community when they put forward a proposal,” he said.

Bellows was asked if she supported a mid-peninsula highway, which gave her an opportunity to differentiate herself from the other candidates.

“If a business cannot efficiently ship their product from point A to point B, then how will they be able to keep their doors open, let along expand and hire?” she said.

The other three outlined their opposiiton, with Bradley noting businesses relying on traffic in St. Catharines would lose out with what would in effect be a bypass.

Mooradian, meanwhile, cited studies showing it wouldn’t lead to less congestion, at least not in the long term.

“More roads always equals more cars,” she said.

Lowell was asked her thoughts on a minimum wage commission which would take input from labour, employers and government. She took the opportunity to say the NDP would raise the wage to $11 per hour.
“We do not want anyone to live in poverty,” she said. “No one.”

Health care came up a few times during the debate, with all three taking aim at its current state under the Liberals. Bellows said her party would shut down the Local Health Integration Networks (LHINs), pouring the money saved into front-line care.

Lowell, meanwhile, brought up the C. difficile crisis and the lack of trust placed in the local hospital system.

“We deserve to walk into a hospital without being afraid we’re going to die,” she said.

For her part, Mooradian said there are certain basic services which should be available in all hospitals, referring to the closure of emergency rooms in Port Colborne and Fort Erie.

Bradley defended his government’s record, noting the NHS budget has been boosted by 56 per cent. He said health care already eats up 46 per cent of the entire budget, and will only be sustainable in the future if more elderly people can be supported in staying in their homes.

Voters go to the polls Oct. 6.


Thursday, September 22, 2011

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Candidates tackle health care at debate (2011 Ontario Provincial Election St. Catharines riding)

Candidates tackle health care at debate

C. diff and long-term care discussed

BOB TYMCZYSZYN Standard Staff
Conservative candidate for St. Catharines riding Sandie Bellows holds a microphone as the other candidates — Irene Lowell (NDP), Jim Bradley (Liberal), Jonathan Radick (Canadians’ Choice Party), Saleh Waziruddin (Communist), and Jennifer Mooradian...

If there’s one thing most of the provincial election candidates in St. Catharines can agree on, it’s the need to learn from the Clostridium difficile outbreak to ensure it can never happen again.


Six of the riding’s candidates discussed health issues, including the deadly outbreak, and long-term care Tuesday during a debate organized by the Retired Teachers of Ontario District 14 and the Niagara Health Coalition.


More than 75 people turned out for the event, but there was little interaction between the audience and candidates, as questions from the floor had to be submitted in writing. There was also no confrontation among the candidates, who were strictly held to two-minute answer periods.


Moderator Marg Newby read a question from the audience asking candidates if they would demand accountability for the C. diff outbreak that has claimed 34 lives in the region, specifically in relation to hospital cleaning.



Liberal incumbent Jim Bradley said the outbreak is complex and issues including cleaning and the use of antibiotics need to be investigated to determine what can be done to prevent future occurrences.

“The cleaning of our hospitals and other institutions is an important component that I think needs to be improved upon,” he said.


Green party candidate Jennifer Mooradian said as long as money is the bottom-line in health care, problems similar to the outbreak will persist.


She said when a private company is contracted to do tasks like cleaning, its focus is making money.


“Quality health care should be put first, not money,” she said, garnering the first burst of applause of the night.


Instead of assigning blame, Progressive Conservative candidate Sandie Bellows said officials must learn from the outbreak and provide front-line staff with more resources and education. She repeatedly noted throughout the night that her party plans to do away with Local Health Integration Networks and re-direct $ 6 billion into other areas of health care.


Communist Party candidate Saleh Waziruddin said someone needs to be held accountable for the outbreak. He said the Ontario Council of Hospital Unions warned in May that cutbacks were making it impossible for hospitals to be properly cleaned and that staff simply weren’t being given the time needed to do the job.


“ People were predicting it (super-bug outbreak), but the politicians weren’t listening,” he said.

In response to questions about chronic and long-term care, candidates discussed the need to increase the number of beds and health-care options.


“ We are a senior citizens’ region,” said New Democratic Party candidate Irene Lowell, noting she would conduct a comprehensive review of home care and work towards making it better.


“I will fight to save our hospital here, I will fight for funding,” she said, noting hospitals are underfunded and experiencing 100% occupancy.


Bradley said with the aging population, long-term care beds and home-care strategies are a priority.

He said the Liberals recently announced a plan giving frail seniors access to doctors in their own homes and noted the government recognizes the importance of assisted-living facilities.


“ Long-term care beds are going to be essential in the future and we’re prepared to build them,” he said.

Canadians’ Choice Party candidate Jonathan Radick said he’s heard that people living in longterm care facilities have to sit in soiled diapers because there isn’t enough staff.


He said there needs to be a mandatory ratio of nursing staff to patients in long-term care facilities to ensure people are properly cared for.


St. Catharines residents Rowan Shirkie and Bob Hillier attended the debate to try and get a handle on where the candidates stand on health-care issues.


“ They are enormously complex and intimidating,” Shirkie said. “I don’t expect to hear any definite answers, but I’m listening for overall direction.”


Hillier was disappointed he didn’t hear more debate among the candidates, noting the way it was set up didn’t offer any opportunity for exchange between the politicians.


He said he attended Tuesday’s forum because it was open to all local candidates and he wanted to hear from asmany as possible.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Coverage of the Chamber of Commerce exclusion of Communist and other candidates from debate for 2011 St. Catharines Federal Election

 


The St. Catharines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce has persisted in its practice of excluding candidates arbitrarily.  In 2007 they excluded the Communist Party for not being "mainline", and after protests they included us in 2008.  However in 2011 they excluded us in the federal election as per a policy following the Elections Act's vote rebate threshold 2% of votes, which is a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms as decided in Figueroa vs Canada, and the Chamber's use of this rule is arbitrary as there is another Election Act rule reimbursing election expenses with a 10% threshold which excludes 92 of the Liberal candidates in the last federal election.  Moreover, the Niagara Falls and Welland Chambers of Commerce have invited all candidates including independents, and the St. Catharines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce co-hosted a debate in the same 2011 federal election in Welland inviting all candidates including the independent.  See the press release for details of the protest of this arbitrary and autocratic violation of the Communist candidate's Charter rights.

Please a follow-up post for a letter-writing campaign to persuade the Chamber's board to change its policy in line with the rest of the riding and with democracy.

“Fringe candidates removed from election debate”

Front page (front-and-centre) story in the Standard focusing on the joining-the-included-candidates-on-stage phase of the protest.

“ELECTION NOTEBOOK: Excluded St. Catharines candidates disrupt start of meeting”

Bullet News Niagara's more complete coverage of the protest.

includes a reader's comments:

Mike Cloutier This is so wrong. The Chamber of Commerce decides which candidates can participate in the debate based on an arbitrary 2 per cent of the vote in the last election. Why not 1 per cent? Or how about 50 per cent? Or how about only the one who won last time? Just disgusting and a real kick in the teeth of democracy.

http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3302944
Hudak won't show for key local election debate

Niagara Falls Review mentions the protest at the end of this article to give context to another Chamber cancelling its debate as Tory leader Tim Hudak has refused to show up at any debates in his riding.

http://stcaths.ca/2011/09/low-key-st-catharines-candidates-debate-follows-dramatic-opener/
Low-Key St Catharines Candidates Debate Follows Dramatic Opener"

This blog post has action shots from the protest.  The blogger states at the end that private organizations are not obliged to be democratic, however the Chamber has a social responsibility to the community to respect the rights of the voters to be well-informed and the Charter rights of the candidates as its debate is the main debate in the riding.

http://www.niagarathisweek.com/news/elections/article/1109504--candidates-square-off-at-chamber-debate

"Candidates square off at chamber debate

Pre-start interruption by uninvited candidates"


Niagara This Week's coverage was on page 3, with photos from the debate including the protest.

http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3302944
"Hudak won't show for key local election debate

Should party leaders be expected to show up for their local debates?"


Niagara Falls Review covers a debate cancellation in Hudak's riding, and at the end also references the St. Catharines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce debate protest.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Coverage of the TVCogeco All Candidates Debate for St. Catharines in the 2011 Federal Election

TVCogeco hosted an all candidates debate on Tuesday, September 13, at the Laura Secord high school in St. Catharines with questions posed by a student panel.  The debate was broadcast Wednesday, September 14 at 7 pm; Thursday, September 15 at 9 pm; and Saturday, September 17 at 7 pm.

Coverage of the debate:

“Candidates pound health system in debate”
They have a funny quote from our candidate, Saleh Waziruddin, but it’s out of context.  The context is: the Conservative had said because of the infections at the hospital from insufficiently cleaned rooms that she would go in herself and scrub the floors, and then the Green said as a midwife she has scrubbed the floors herself, and then…well you’ll just have to read the article!

“Green Party makes inroads with young crowd at first all-candidates meeting in St. Catharines”
The students declared the Green party candidate the winner but put the Communist candidate on par with her because we both “impressed with their knowledge of the issues, their ideas, their non-attacking approach, and for tackling questions head-on”

The debate was tweeted live by Jeff Bolichowski of the St. Catharines Standard:

The first broadcast on Tuesday was tweeted by Doug Hagar of Black Cat Productions:
http://twitter.com/blackcatpro

http://speakyourmind.thestar.com/experts/get-talking/leaders-and-answers/
"Leaders and Answers"
The Toronto Star's "Speak Your Mind" series of blogs covers the 2011 Ontario election riding by riding.  Here the St. Catharines blogger William Morrison covers the TVCogeco debate where he analyzes each candidate for both content delivery.  He gives me credit for good interaction with the crowd and charisma, although I am criticized for promoting the Communist Party too much in the content.  If anything I would say the Communist Party doesn't get promoted enough!  Note also that although he says the Green party candidate does not belong in an election debate, the coverage above reports that the student panel awarded her as the winner.

http://www.brockpress.com/news/external-news/provincial-election-debate-for-st-catharines-riding-1.2600081
"Provincial Election debate for St. Catharines riding" 
Brock Press article by Stephanie Macoomb, I am the only candidate not quoted.  Also the photo is actually from the St. Catharines-Thorold Chamber of Commerce debate.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Candidates hit the streets for weekend of campaigning (2011 Ontario Provincial Election St. Catharines riding)

Candidates hit the streets for weekend of campaigning

She may be new to politics, but Sandie Bellows has already figured out a couple of things about pounding the pavement on the campaign trail.


Staying fresh on your feet on the door-knocking rounds requires multiple footwear changes, the St. Catharines Progressive Conservative candidate has learned.


Bellows was relying on a pair of open-toed wedges Saturday afternoon as she and a team of volunteers canvassed the area where she grew up in the city’s north end.


But she also had a pair of running shoes along with her and a set of shoes with a lowrise wedged heel.

“I rotate all of them,” she said, while knocking on doors in the area of Richelieu Dr. and Niagara St.

“We’re putting a lot of miles on this body. It’s not killing me, though.”


The writ dropped Wednesday for the Oct. 6 provincial election, making this past weekend the first official one of the campaign.


But local candidates said they’ve been actively gearing up for the election for the past several weeks.

“The reception has been fantastic,” Bellows said.


“People like that you stop and talk to them. Even if they don’t like your platform, they’re just happy you’re there to listen.”


While bad blood has already boiled over for candidates running in other parts of the province, St. Catharines candidates reached by The Standard said the mood is much more genial locally.


“St . Catharines has had a tradition over the years of avoiding that ( bad blood),” St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley said in a phone interview Saturday, after hitting the streets of Port Dalhousie with his campaign team.


“I think it ’s important to have a good debate on the issues, not on personalities.”


Bradley, a veteran of at least 10 campaigns since first being elected in 1977, noted he’s been friends for many years with Bellows and her family.


“We’re friends at the start of the campaign and we’ll be friends at the end of the campaign,” he said.

Neither Bradley or Bellows were planning to do any door knocking on Sunday, opting instead to get out to meet prospective voters at various community events.


“ The intensity will pick up as the election gets closer,” Bradley said.


“ The public is partially engaged right now, but very understandably they have a lot of other things on their minds.”


Communist Party candidate Saleh Waziruddin didn’t get out on the campaign trail over the weekend, but said his message of cutting corporate tax cuts and directing more dollars to health-care has been well received at the door.


“Corporate tax cuts are the root cause of limited resources for hospitals,” he maintained.


The riding’ s other candidates — Irene Lowell of the New Democratic Party, Jennifer Mooradian of the Green party and Dave Unrau of the Freedom Party — could not be reached over the weekend.