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Tradition of flooding the news with funding announcements continues

Those in the know have seen this before, and one says it doesnѻýt always work.
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Pre election funding announcements are an age old tradition. (Flickr - BankofCanada)

Somewhere in the ballpark of $50 million has poured into the Central Okanagan this month from the provincial government.

Funding of various projects being announced just weeks before the writ is dropped on a new provincial election isnѻýt a surprise.

ѻýItѻýs a well worn practice in Canadian politics, in all provincial and federal elections, going back to confederation,ѻý said Hamish Telford, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of the Fraser Valley.

Budgets, both federal and provincial, seem to even be shaped around it.

Telford said that one of the criticisms of the federal budget that was released Wednesday was that it would do very little in the short term, but the taps would turn on right before the 2019 election.

The last provincial budget was also a lot less cautious than it could have been, likely reflective of the upcoming election.

ѻýJust before we go to the polls, weѻýre running the biggest surplus in years and are able to put money into things they have resisted steadfastly for four years,ѻý said Telford.

ѻýThis was deliberately planned. If (the finance minister) had his druthers he would have put it into debt reduction, but others in the party likely put pressure on him.ѻý

Itѻýs a strategy that pays off at times, said Telford, but it also can backfire.

ѻýPeople feel they are being bribed with their own money,ѻý he said.

He also pointed out that the voter should view these announcements with a jaundiced eye.

ѻýOne of the newer practices is to repeat announcements,ѻý he said. ѻýThey hold a photo op and a press conference and announce they will spend x-many dollars and itѻýs already been announced in the past.ѻý

Despite these practices highlighting less than forthright tendencies of governments, Telford said he thinks itѻýs unlikely the province is heading into a ѻýchange election.ѻý

ѻýVery often you get that sense that the electorate is fed up with the government and believe itѻýs time for a change,ѻý he said.

That feeling was palpable in the lead up to the 2013 election. The BC Liberals were 20 points behind and mired in scandal, said Telford. Then as the campaign got underway in earnest the leader of the BC NDP, Adrian Dix floundered, Premier Christy Clark shone and she won the election.

Right now, however, the BC Liberals seem popular and the Greens and NDP are both doing fine.

That the two left leaning parties are in that position may be the most telling of whatѻýs to come.

ѻýThe NDP has only won when the centre right has been divided into two parties,ѻý he said.

ѻýRight now the Liberals are united. Where we are seeing fracturing is on the centre left with the Greens and NDP ѻý If the Greens start to tank, itѻýs a sign that the electorate is taking the NDP seriously.ѻý





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