Thursday, 13 August 2020

Interim NDP leader, 23, confesses to 'a little bit of panic' over possible fall election

Methinks Mackenzie Thomason could use a friend perhaps he should review my documents and call me back sometime N'esy Pas?







https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-interim-ndp-leader-ready-election-1.5682661



Interim NDP leader, 23, confesses to 'a little bit of panic' over possible fall election

Party plans to hold leadership race in April, but a trip to polls might happen first


Jacques Poitras · CBC News · Posted: Aug 12, 2020 6:00 AM AT



Mackenzie Thomason is the interim leader of the New Brunswick New Democratic Party and said he's prepared to lead the party if a fall election is called. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Mackenzie Thomason wasn't even supposed to be leader of the provincial NDP this summer, never mind the person to lead the party into a provincial election.

But here he is, confessing to "a little bit of panic" as he faces the prospect of fronting the campaign.

"It wasn't something I ever thought of when I first signed up for the job," he said during an interview, sporting a trademark orange bowtie.


The 23-year-old Fredericton hotel employee planned to serve as interim NDP leader for just four months last year, performing essential functions like signing documents filed to Elections New Brunswick.

Then fate intervened. Twice.

The party planned to hold its leadership vote last August, but only one candidate submitted paperwork to run and she was disqualified.

So the vote was put off until June of 2020- when COVID-19 scuttled that date.

3 people to run for leadership

Now it's set for next April, and three people have already filed their papers to be vetted by a party committee.

Except Premier Blaine Higgs has said he could call an early election by next week if he can't get an agreement among all party leaders in the legislature — which could force Thomason onto the campaign trail despite his "interim" status.


"We would go about it like any other election," Thomason said. "We'd get candidates, we'd make a platform and we'd go from there. As far as what the public would see, it would look like any other election for any other party.

"It's just you'll have an interim leader running the election instead of a permanent leader."

Not included in opposition request


The NDP's lack of any elected MLAs means Thomason was on the outside looking in this week when Higgs asked the Liberal, Green and People's Alliance leaders to enter into an unprecedented four-party agreement to govern collaboratively until 2022.

If those talks fail and Higgs calls an election, Thomason will be in the unusual position of being the face of a party he would not be leading for much longer.

He said it won't be handicap.

"New Brunswickers are going to be more interested in what we have to say, not so much where or not I am interim or permanent," he said. "It's not the Mackenzie Thomason party, it's the NDP."



The unusual situation is another indicator of the NDP's marginalized position in New Brunswick politics. It hasn't elected an MLA since 2003, the last time then-leader Elizabeth Weir won her seat.




The New Brunswick NDP will hold its leadership convention in April 2021 and three people have filed papers to be vetted to run.

The party has found itself eclipsed on the left of the political spectrum by the Greens, which won almost 12 per cent of the popular vote, and three ridings, in the last provincial election.

The NDP managed only five per cent of the vote and was shut out of the legislature for the fourth straight time.

Political scientist J.P. Lewis of the University of New Brunswick in Saint John said the Greens and the Alliance have given voters other non-mainstream options, and the NDP's national name recognition may be all that's keeping the provincial party from disappearing.

"That's really the only thing that I think is holding them back from being on the cusp of an incredibly problematic future," he said.

"Without having a national political brand, this [election] could be especially existential."



Young voters party


But Saint John activist Courtney Pyrke said the party is the best vehicle for young voters concerned about issues such as universal basic income, transit and LGBTQ+ health.

"A lot of these progressive issue and ideas and things I care about are quite line with what the NDP care about as well."
Pyrke is looking at running for the party in Saint John Harbour and prefers the NDP over the Greens because of its stance on those issues and because of its roots in the riding, once held by Weir when she was leader.

Pyrke is also originally from Hamilton, Ontario, an NDP stronghold, and supported the party there.

The party has struggled in recent years to file its financing reports with Elections New Brunswick as required by law, though its paperwork is now up to date.

Debt-free

In fact, the party is debt-free and last year raised more than $37,000 in donations, more than the People's Alliance.


Thomason said he believes the abstention of the three Green MLAs on the recent vote on a mandatory vaccination bill, which was defeated in the legislature 22-20, will help him make the case for the NDP.

He said he would have voted for the bill and accused the Greens of fence-sitting.
"You need to show New Brunswicks that you have a position, you have an opinion and you're not afraid to make that opinion known," he said.

Pyrke also said the abstentions on the vaccination vote was another reason to opt for the NDP over the Greens.

Thomason plans to run for the NDP in Fredericton North but hopes that happens sometime next year, after he has relinquished his position to a permanent leader.







93 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.




David Amos 
Methinks the old postal union dude who is warming the seat in Saint John Harbour right now should explain to the young NDP activist why I ran in that riding in 2006 while intervening in the NEB hearing much to the chagrin of the Irving Clan and their many cohorts N'esy Pas?


Lou Bell 
Reply to @David Amos: I bet you sure got a lot accomplished on that one ! Tell us all about it ! In these times of COVID we all need a good laugh !









David Amos 
Methinks Cardy and everybody else knows why the temporary NDP leader ain't got a prayer running against the Green leader N'esy Pas?  











David Amos
Methinks Mackenzie Thomason could use a friend perhaps he should review my documents and call me back sometime N'esy Pas?


Bob Slawson
Reply to @David Amos: Whoever told you that methinks and n'esy pas were clever was having you on.


David Amos 
Reply to @Bob Slawson: The devil makes me do it to upset snobby Anglos On the other hand methinks my Acadian friends enjoy the joke N'esy Pas?



























Edward Vella
New Brunswick has to be the most old-fashioned provinces in the country. Not a progressive soul among them.


David Amos  
Reply to @Edward Vella: So you say






















Lou Bell
NDP has less members than there are ridings . I'd panic too !


Al Borland 
Reply to @Lou Bell: The Liberal party have become the NDP in every way possible, they're irrelevant. I'd like anyone to tell me in what way is the Liberal Party of 2020 any different from the NDP of 10 years ago? They simply aren't. It shows how i n s a n e our society is becoming that what were once fringe views are being supported by at least 1/4 of the population.


Lou Bell
Reply to @Al Borland: That is that the NDP are irrelevant, sadly the Liberals don't seem to be.


David Amos 
Reply to @Lou Bell: Methinks you have found a kindred soul N'esy Pas?























Ronald Parker
Good luck young fella.


David Amos  
Reply to @Ronald Parker: Methinks I should welcome him back to the circus N'esy Pas?



























Gerry Ferguson
He is right when he points out the 3 green MLAs messed up big time by not even voting on the vaccination bill. That's why they are ELECTED, to show up and vote for their constituents.


Terry Tibbs 
Reply to @Gerry Ferguson:
I do not know what is with you guys?
They "abstained". Do you not know what that means? Do you need a map of some kind as to what they were saying?



Robert Langdon 
Reply to @Terry Tibbs: Maybe so; however, they were elected to represent the people in their riding. Did they actually talk to the people they're supposed to represent before abstaining?


Terry Tibbs 
Reply to @Robert Langdon:
They were representing the folks in their respective ridings. By "abstaining" they stated they agreed with the principle, just not the faulty implementation of the matter. What good is a piece of legislation that would not stand up in a court of law other than to cost the taxpayers money trying to hopelessly defend it?



David Amos 
Reply to @Terry Tibbs: Well put


Terry Tibbs 
Reply to @David Amos:
It was honourably done too. They all could have simply missed a day, absenting themselves from the scene of Mr Cardy's foolishness, and no one would have been the wiser.
  
David Amos 
Reply to @Terry Tibbs: True That was a lot more ethical than Trudeau The Younger going on vacation in order to duck questions today eh?


Terry Tibbs 
Reply to @David Amos:
Well, his buddies, the bloc, are raining on his never ending parade, wanting him and his spin doctors to resign............. you too might be tempted to run away and hide.



David Amos 
Reply to @Terry Tibbs: Nay not I 
 

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