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Here's the juggernaut Ches Crosbie will have to fight like hell to overcome

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Replying to and 47 others 
Methinks old Johnny "Never Been Good" Crosbie and a lot of fat, dumb and happy cops, lawyers, politicians and journalists in Newfoundland know why I am gonna have fun with this election N'esy Pas?


https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/04/heres-juggernaut-ches-crosbie-will-have.html






https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/weekend-briefing-incumbency-1.5103144




Here's the juggernaut Ches Crosbie will have to fight like hell to overcome




35 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
 



David R. Amos
Methinks I should resend an old email then call NL Alliance's Graydon Pelley to see if he remembers me N'esy Pas?


David R. Amos
Reply to @David R. Amos: Here is little Deja Vu for folks to enjoy

2005 01 T 0010

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR

TRAIL DIVISION

BETWEEN: WILLIAM MATTHEWS
PLAINTIFF

AND: BYRON PRIOR
DEFENDANT

AND BETWEEN: BYRON PRIOR
DEFENDANT/PLAINTIFF BY COUNTERCLAIM

AND: WILLIAM MATTHEWS
PLAINTIFF/FIRST DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM

AND: T. ALEX HICKMAN
SECOND DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM

AND: THOMAS MARSHALL
THIRD DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM

AND: DANNY WILLIAMS
FOURTH DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM

AND: EDWARD M. ROBERTS
FIFTH DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM

AND: JOHN CROSBIE
SIXTH DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM

AND: PATTERSON PALMER
SEVENTH DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM

ORDER

Before the Honourable Chief Justice Green.  


David R. Amos
Reply to @David R. Amos: Filed January 21, 2005

UPON HEARING Stephen J. May, of Counsel for the Plaintiff, AND UPON
READING the Application and Affidavit filed herein, IT IS HEREBY
ORDERED, until further order of the court, Byron Prior is prohibited
from publishing, causing to have published, distributing or causing
to have distributed the Statement of Defence and Counterclaim pending
the determination of the Applicant's Application to strike the
Statement of Defence and Counterclaim in its entirety, and that the
Court's file in this proceeding is not to be made available for review
by anyone other than the parties or their legal counsel pending the
determination of the Applicant's Application to strike the Statement
of Defence and Counterclaim in its entirety, and that the requirements
relating to the obligations of the Defendants to the Counterclaim to
file Defences are be waived pending the determination of the
Applicant's Application to strike the Statement of Defence and
Counterclaim in its entirety. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED THAT the
content of the Statement of Defence and Counterclaim shall not be
published or broadcast in any manner whatsoever until further order of
the court.

AND IT IS HEREBY FURTHER ORDERED that the Application to strike the
Statement of Defence and Counterclaim is scheduled to be heard on
January 26, 2005.

AND IT IS HEREBY FURTHER ORDERED that costs of this Application be
in the cause.

DATED at St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador this 21st day of
January, 2005.

Signed by J. Derek Green, Chief Justice













Gerald Niven
I got a tell ya about my political nightmare…There I was, I found myself unable to move a muscle, while I looked on as Liberals Roger Grimes, Billy Rowe, Eddie Roberts, Rossy Barbour, and Joey Smallwood were sitting around a Holiday Inn room having a séance. Old Joey was leading the séance, and a ghostly image of Chess Crosbie was emerging from a genie bottle, but then… all of a sudden, Dwit Ball appeared and pushed Joey over because Ball was in a tussle head-lock with PC Jim Morgan, better known as Jigger Jim…Then, Liberal Steve Neary of Bell Island fame started in singing Dick Nolan’s hit tune ‘Aunt Martha’s Sheep’… but, the next thing I know, John White from the TV show All Around the Circle fame was fist fisticuffs with Dick Nolan, and yelling at Dwit to let go Jigger Jim… The next thing I know Brian Tobin’s image also started coming out of the genie’s lamp, but like a ravenous wolf, old dip stick, Chess Crosbie, bit off Tobin’s head… Then, old Dwit screamed out, The Writ, the Writ… and, everybody scrambled, while an envelope of insense smoke immersed everybody in the room, and all I could hear was the fading screaming voice of Dwit yelling, “The Dwit, The Dwit”…sounding like that little midget guy from that old 1970’s TV show Fantasy Island yelling, de Plane, Boss… de Plane… Man what a hag… what a nightmare… Maybe, NL is a Fantasy Island…Anyway, fantasy or no fantasy, I’m all messed up…knowing more of who not to vote for, than who to vote for… me-old-stick-in-the-mud 


Mark Mac 
Reply to @Gerald Niven: what’d you eat before bed dude? magic mushrooms?

Patrick David
Reply to @Mark Mac: I wonder what material Gerald's hat is made from ?

Robert G. Holmes
Reply to @Gerald Niven: It's an age thing Gerald. I had similar nightmare, awoke in a sweat, and near died laughing reading your post. You didn't miss much, other than the bog hole GHB fell into while fishing with Craiggy, boys and girls.

David R. Amos 
Reply to @Gerald Niven: Methinks many a true word is said in jest N'esy Pas?

Gerald Niven 
Reply to @Mark Mac: Well Marc, I lapped into some of that NL farmed salmon with a few Blackhorse out in the shed the other night... I don't know if what I ate could have had any of that infectious salmon anemia, what Gerry Byrne calls ISA Salmon, from Gaultois, Hermitage Bay way... Could a been that, alright... I didn't bother to look at it closely for any sea lice or parasites... I mean Gerry Byrne in a news publication said it was fit to eat, and if you can't believe a politician, than who can you believe. right?... Anyway, just to be on the safe side, before I eats anymore, I'm going to write Gerry's office and ask, if he eats any of it..




Nfld. & Labrador·Weekend Briefing

Here's the juggernaut Ches Crosbie will have to fight like hell to overcome

Every single member of the Liberal caucus is running again

Ches Crosbie rallied supporters Wednesday night as he launched his campaign. (CBC)
 

While never so foolish as to predict the outcome of the election, I feel comfortable stating this: Tory Leader Ches Crosbie has one massive problem to solve if he wants to turn Newfoundland and Labrador blue next month.

It's not a problem of his own making.

It's also not a problem that will be easy to fix.


It's the problem of incumbency — and not his, but rather the party he wants to unseat.

Let me explain.

Of the slate of 40 candidates that the governing Liberals will have going into the election, 27 are sitting members of the House of Assembly.

Twenty-seven.

Put another way: every single member of the Liberal caucus is running again. The works. Only one of them (Betty Parsley, in Harbour Main) faced a nomination challenge along the way.

No guarantee of success, but quite the weapon


Before we look at the Liberals' advantage, let's not forget that the Tories are going into the campaign with some key strengths.

Chief among them is the momentum that comes from winning all three byelections held since the last general election. The Tories kept seats held by Paul Davis and Steve Kent, and — significantly — Crosbie himself picked off the St. John's seat that former Liberal finance minister Cathy Bennett had held.


Ches Crosbie greets his father, PC legend John Crosbie, after winning September's byelection in Windsor Lake. (CBC)

In other words, the Tories can turn seats.

The issue: they have to turn 13 of them (and win all that they hold) to form a majority government.

Even people who are not fans of Dwight Ball will acknowledge that the Liberals are going into this election from a position of strength. Incumbency is a potent force in politics. It hardly guarantees success, but it does give momentum and weight to a party … and it can sap the resources of parties aiming to overturn the status quo.

Embedded video

The 2019 NL election is underway. The Liberals, PCs, NDP and NL Alliance all fighting for votes. http://cbc.ca/1.5101575 

And we already have a front runner for greatest gif of the campaign


In this case, the fact that no Liberal MHAs are stepping away from the political fight tells us something about the mood inside the party. Namely, there's a confidence in the air. They expect to win.

The risk of being arrogant


Now, that runs the risk of cockiness and arrogance — something the PCs, the NDP and the upstart NL Alliance can use to their advantage.

It's natural for a party that's just finishing its first term back in government to have a solid cadre of returning candidates.


Liberal Leader Dwight Ball officially launched his campaign in St. John's on Wednesday night. (CBC)

But it's even more remarkable that there hasn't been turnover. With most elections, you'll hear from some MHAs — the ones who've been around the block — to declare that it's time to retire, or perhaps lean on that old euphemism of spending more time with family. (Sometimes that's true, by the way, but it's often a cloak for "I don't want to run and lose.")

Indeed, two of the veteran MHAs who did step down before the election was called were both Tories. Keith Hutchings, the former fisheries minister, has represented the PC stronghold of Ferryland since a 2007 byelection. Tracey Perry is retiring after representing Fortune Bay-Cape La Hune since the 2007 election.

Everyone in politics knows incumbency in politics can be a mighty factor. Satisfaction with Liberal performance has not been consistently strong in public opinion polling over the last four years, but by the same token, there are few signs of an anti-incumbent feeling in the air.

Liberals were faster out of the gate


In our office, we've been sharing notes about candidates in a spreadsheet. Even before the Liberals filled all their slots on Wednesday, they were way ahead of the competing parties. The PCs had notable gaps in their slate, including several districts held by cabinet ministers.

The NDP has had far more empty slots than filled ones. This speaks to the uphill struggle the party has, coming after a tumultuous start to the year with leader Gerry Rogers unexpectedly stepping down, Alison Coffin taking over the reins, and some clear signs of infighting with St. John's Deputy Mayor Sheilagh O'Leary squeezed out in Lorraine Michael's old district of St. John's East-Quidi Vidi.


The four party leaders are, from left, Ball, Crosbie, New Democrat Alison Coffin and NL Alliance's Graydon Pelley. (CBC)
 
 
When it became clear that Ball was heading to the electorate, the NDP had a handful — four, to be exact — candidates nominated and in place. (Coffin herself was not yet officially nominated at that point.)

Then there's the NL Alliance, which cleared hurdles to become a fully fledged political party in time for the vote. Leader Graydon Pelley, who ran against Ball for the PCs in Humber-Gros Morne in 2015, is running this time in the St. John's district of Mount Scio.

It'll be interesting to see how much organizational strength that Pelley, a former PC president, takes from the Crosbie camp … not to mention the other parties.

Crosbie, of all the opposition leaders, will be the one that most voters will watch. That's natural; the Tories, after all, were in power four years ago.

But amid everything the Tory campaign has to deal with — recruiting candidates, raising money, rounding up volunteers — a killer headache for the blue team is the red side's massive advantage of incumbency.

For all your weekend reading needs


It's a long weekend. Enjoy a moment to catch your breath … and some to read.

Here are some recent stories we've published that you might enjoy:

The francophone community radio station Rafale FM hasn't produced local programming in Labrador City since 2015, but the station has still been collecting ad revenue.


Luke Quinton and his family have relocated from Austin, Texas, to St. John's. (Luke Quinton)

You can go home again … even if you lived in one of the coolest cities in the States. (Luke Quinton's POV was one of our most-read and most-shared articles this week.)

A couple from Holyrood thought they were incredibly lucky at a resort casino, until they realized they had fallen prey to a popular scam aimed at tourists.

Seagulls are skeets.

Insurance costs mean another kind of road rage for many consumers; check out Lindsay Bird's feature on why fixing it is so hard.

This week's budget has no new taxes or fees, but it does have things that can affect your household's bottom line.

Doctors are seeing unnecessary appointments because income support clients need medical appointments in order to meet the qualifications for Metrobus passes.

A leaked letter shows conflicts in the women's movement months before Jenny Wright resigned as executive director of the St. John's Status of Women Council.

CBD, or cannabidiol, is widely sought for pain relief … but not by many doctors, who are still waiting for clinical evidence.

Quote of the week


Finance Minister Tom Obsorne broke down details of this year's budget Tuesday; none of the details have yet been debated or approved. (Fred Hutton/CBC)

"I would have preferred to have seen this chop away at our deficit next year, and the year after, and to help us with surpluses every year. In fact, I argued with financial officials in the department, but this is the system we use, it's accrual accounting. It is what it is."

— Finance Minister Tom Osborne, telling reporters on Budget Day he really, really didn't want to have a $1.9-billion surplus on the books because of the refreshed Atlantic Accord. Almost all of the money will show up over the coming decades.

And now, a moment of calm

 

When things get hectic, find some calm. The above photo of Newtown, from frequent contributor Penney Turner, will do the trick.


You can find it and more beautiful things in our latest audience photo gallery.

Now they want trouble, my friend


The Mighty Morphin' Northern Rangers are a bit like the other crew from '90s TV .. but with beer boxes.

It's the latest comedy video served up by the Not Quite gang. (See more of their stuff, and more, over at this playlist on our YouTube channel.)

Tis it for this week. Enjoy your weekend.

Incidentally, it looks like the politicians are going to be laying a bit low over the Easter weekend, and will be in full roar on Tuesday.


Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador 


About the Author

 


John Gushue
CBC News
John Gushue is the digital senior producer with CBC News in St. John's.



https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/liberals-aiming-to-catch-parties-off-guard-1.5105652


Liberals aiming to 'catch parties off guard' with election call, says MUN professor

Election call has left other parties 'scrambling,' says Kelly Blidook


Kelly Blidook is a professor of political science at Memorial University. (Eddy Kennedy/CBC)


With election signs sprouting from front lawns and branded busses on the roads, the 2019 provincial election is off to the races — but why is the election happening now?

Dwight Ball has said he didn't want to interfere with the federal election scheduled for late October, but Memorial University political science professor Kelly Blidook says there was also some political strategy involved in the decision.

By calling the election right before the Easter long weekend — and just a day after tabling a budget — Blidook says the Liberals are hoping to surprise their opponents, and it's left the other parties "scrambling."




The Liberals took advantage of the rush of people heading to work Thursday to launch their election campaign in St. John's. (Ariana Kelland/CBC)

"I think they are looking at parties that are not fully ready, the other parties simply don't have all their candidates in place," he said.

"Because they are the governing party, it's easier for them to get candidates in place and lined up. They're trying to catch parties off guard if they can, they're taking what advantages they can."

One of those advantages for the Liberals is Elections NL's Thursday afternoon deadline for candidate nominations, a timeline that Blidook says will make it difficult for Ches Crosbie's Progressive Conservative party to run candidates across the province.

"You just want to be campaigning at this point, you don't want to be recruiting, and you don't want to be recruiting on the Easter weekend," he said.

"It would be detrimental, certainly, to not have the full 40 [candidates]."

After nominating six more candidates on Friday, the PCs now have 28 in place.


Ches Crosbie, accompanied by his team, at CBC Thursday for an interview with the St. John's Morning Show. (Kenny Sharpe/CBC)

And while it's within the governing party's rights to divert from the fixed election date, Blidook says it's understandable that some voters could be cynical about a Liberal decision that works to their own advantage.

"This is a party that could've passed a budget, that could've given us exactly what they said they were doing, could've governed," he said.

"They've done the governing part up to the point where they feel it's advantageous and then called an election. I don't know if I'd say it's somehow unethical, but I think it does invite a cynicism."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador
With files from Carolyn Stokes


CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices







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