Pat Binns to run federally?

I’ve heard that Price Edward Island premier Pat Binns will be holding a press conference tomorrow to announce his future political plans.

Back in 1996, Binns said that he’d only be in office for 10 years. Binns caucus has been persuading him to stay on and seek a fourth and final term.

Binns’ chief of staff Peter McQuaid, however, has hinted that Binns will be stepping down. McQuaid said that if Binns is to retire, that this is the best time to do it.

So, will Pat Binns run for the Conservative Party federally instead? He’d have a good shot at securing a seat for the Tories in the province as he’s been a popular premier. Currently, the Liberals have all four seats in PEI.

The riding of Cardigan is currently open for Binns to secure its nomination.

Will he announce his intentions to do so tomorrow?

UPDATE (11/19): Looks like Pat Binns’ will stay on as PEI’s premier for a fourth and final term (he said today that he will not seek a fifth). Binns is quite a popular premier and he’ll continue to serve his constitents well.

Length of Canadian elections

Was forwarded some interesting data on Canadian elections today and I thought that I should post it here in case anyone out there in the ether is searching for questions like “How long are elections in Canada?” or “What is the length of the writ period for Canadian elections?”.

According to the Elections Canada Act, an election must be no shorter than 36 days. In more technical terms, the writ must not be issued or dated less than 36 days before polling day. This changed from 47 to 36 days in 1997.

Length of Federal Election Campaigns (1867 to date)

Between Parliaments Date
Dissolved
Election Date Length in Days of Election Campaigns

1st – 2nd

1872.07.08

1872.07.20 – 1872.10.12

2nd – 3rd

1874.01.02

1874.01.22

20

3rd – 4th

1878.08.17

1878.09.17

31

4th – 5th

1882.05.18

1882.06.20

33

5th – 6th

1887.01.15

1887.02.22

38

6th – 7th

1891.02.03

1891.03.05

30

7th – 8th

1896.04.24

1896.06.23

60

8th – 9th

1900.10.09

1900.11.07

29

9th – 10th

1904.09.29

1904.11.03

35

10th – 11th

1908.09.17

1908.10.26

39

11th – 12th

1911.07.29

1911.09.21

54

12th – 13th

1917.10.06

1917.12.17

72

13th – 14th

1921.10.04

1921.12.06

63

14th – 15th

1925.09.05

1925.10.29

54

15th – 16th

1926.07.02

1926.09.14

74

16th – 17th

1930.05.30

1930.07.28

59

17th – 18th

1935.08.14

1935.10.14

61

18th – 19th

1940.01.25

1940.03.26

61

19th – 20th

1945.04.16

1945.06.11

56

20th – 21st

1949.04.30

1949.06.27

58

21st – 22nd

1953.06.13

1953.08.10

58

22nd – 23rd

1957.04.12

1957.06.10

59

23rd – 24th

1958.02.01

1958.03.31

58

24th – 25th

1962.04.19

1962.06.18

60

25th – 26th

1963.02.06

1963.04.08

61

26th – 27th

1965.09.08

1965.11.08

61

27th – 28th

1968.04.23

1968.06.25

63

28th – 29th

1972.09.01

1972.10.30

59

29th – 30th

1974.05.09

1974.07.08

60

30th – 31st

1979.03.26

1979.05.22

57

31st – 32nd

1979.12.14

1980.02.18

66

32nd – 33rd

1984.07.09

1984.09.04

57

33rd – 34th

1988.10.01

1988.11.21

51

34th – 35th

1993.09.08

1993.10.25

47

35th – 36th

1997.04.27

1997.06.02

36

36th – 37th

2000.10.22

2000.11.27

36

37th – 38th

2004.05.23

2004.06.28

36

Liberals are spinning polling companies which in turn spin Canadians

Remember the Strategic Counsel poll which came out a few days after the Gomery Report which indicated that the Liberals dropped below the Tories?

But, then remember that poll that came out three days later that showed that the Liberals had recovered? The Strategic Counsel even laughably reasoned in its analysis “The sudden possibility of a Conservative victory once more gave a significant number of voters – especially in Ontario – pause, and an occasion to reassess their support.” Note that while the poll was released but three days after the release of their Tory leading poll, the Liberal rebound poll was conducted the day after the release of this first poll on Friday – the weakest day for news consumption and processing by the public. The Strategic Counsel is absurd if it thinks that the news of Gomery has little staying power with the public but that the shock of learning of a Conservative lead in the polls has an immediate and massively significant effect of reversing the trend. Perhaps they don’t think this way and perhaps there’s more to this than meets the eye.

Remember the questionable methodology of previous Strategic Counsel polls in which the pollster manipulated question order in order to prompt the respondant with Liberal positive questions before asking voter intent?

Remember how the poll in which the Tories led, did not have any prompting questions?

Now, consider for a moment that polls are engineered and that the post-Gomery poll that showed the punishment of the Liberals, followed by the poll that showed that the Liberals had recovered were commissioned by Liberals to show that Gomery in fact “wasn’t a big deal” in public perception and that “Canadians want the Liberals to continue to govern” or that the electorate wants to “let the business of the House continue”.

Now take that momentary consideration and file it under “fact“.

Fact: The Liberal government has commissioned the services of the Strategic Counsel many times (examples: PWGSC, Justice, Public opinion research services, Revenue, OSFI etc)

There’s nothing wrong with honest work done by a private company for a government contract, but consider that the current power brokers in Ottawa give the Strategic Counsel a lot of business.

Fact: Peter Donolo, Jean Chretien’s director of communications took part in strategy sessions with Paul Martin team during the last election.

Fact: That same Peter Donolo (the one that provided “strategic counsel” to Paul Martin during an election) is… executive vice-president of… The Strategic Counsel!

Fact: Donolo was on a Canadian Journalism Foundation panel to discuss “Spin and the Public Interest”. Here’s an excerpt from the event’s press release:

Does spin support the public interest? Compromise it? Both? What influence does spin have on Canadian journalists and journalism at home and abroad (where the challenges are amplified)? How energetic and persistent are they in their efforts to assess spin critically and deal with it accordingly? How well equipped are they to do that job? Are Canadian media hiring and retaining the people and making the investments that are necessary to get at the truth independently and bring it their readers, listeners and viewers? Is it a media owner’s obligation to serve the public interest?

So, ask yourself, are polls meants to take the pulse of the electorate or are they meant to set its heartbeat?