Journal Pioneer

Vote of confidence

With provincial election looming, Newfoundla­nd premier asks voters to trust him

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With a provincial election set for October, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s premier is asking voters to stick with his Liberal government.

Premier Dwight Ball, in an annual state-of-the-province speech, urged voters Thursday to ignore the “noise and fiction” he said was expected from his political opponents.

Despite the “unpreceden­ted fiscal challenges” facing the province, Ball said his government has gone above and beyond in tackling the bleak fiscal outlook that existed when his party was elected to govern in 2015.

“It’s not about what you inherit, it’s really about how you respond,” Ball told Rotary Club members in St. John’s.

Ball said a recent Conference Board of Canada report predicting the province will lead the country in economic growth in 2019 speaks to his government’s accomplish­ments.

The premier also painted his government as trustworth­y, compared with the provincial Conservati­ves, who sanctioned the controvers­ial Muskrat Falls hydroelect­ric megaprojec­t - currently the subject of a public inquiry into cost and schedule overruns.

The final report from the inquiry is expected in late December, after voters cast their ballots.

Ball didn’t say how he plans to deal with electricit­y rates, which are expected to double when Muskrat Falls starts providing full

power in 2021.

However, he said the province’s Public Utilities Board and his government are researchin­g “options” to deal with the challenge. And he asked voters to trust him to handle discussion­s if the province asks for Ottawa’s help.

“If we exhaust all the options available to us, there’s no doubt that we will need the federal government involved, so I’d ask you

this question: who would you want to be talking to your federal government today?” Ball asked the crowd.

Ball also touted his government’s success in developing the mining, offshore oil and aquacultur­e sectors - though some resource extraction projects have yet to be sanctioned, like the proposed Bay du Nord deepwater drilling project announced last

summer. Stephen Tomblin, a former Memorial University political science professor, said the leaders running in this year’s election are facing an electorate that’s frustrated and fearful of the consequenc­es if the economy doesn’t improve.

While the premier has promised big changes, Tomblin suggested that many of Ball’s big-ticket initiative­s represent more-ofthe-same

for Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s politics.

“To a great extent, we’re maintainin­g the status quo in terms of doubling the offshore developmen­ts and increasing, continued reliance on natural resources,” he said.

Tomblin said the ongoing Muskrat Falls inquiry has also played a role in the public’s desire for change.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Premier Dwight Ball meets with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in his office on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in 2018.
CP PHOTO Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Premier Dwight Ball meets with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in his office on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in 2018.

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