With N.L. on the financial brink, Crosbie targets Ottawa with promise to 'fight for fairness' - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 30, 2024, 03:36 AM | Calgary | -15.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

With N.L. on the financial brink, Crosbie targets Ottawa with promise to 'fight for fairness'

With Newfoundland and Labrador facing economic disaster, the PC leader suggested Friday that a new deal with Ottawa is the best hope for recovery and that he's the leader best equipped to negotiate with the federal government.

With few homegrown options, PC leader suggests N.L's best hope is a lifeline from the federal government

PC Leader Ches Crosbie, speaking during a news conferences in Clarenville Friday, revealed a list of demands from Ottawa that he says will help Newfoundland and Labrador through its current fiscal and demographic crises. (PC Party of N.L.)

With Newfoundland and Labrador on the brink of financial disaster, tough-talking PC Leader Ches Crosbie signalled Friday that a new deal with Ottawa on issueslike equalization payments, and the threat to electricity rates posed by Muskrat Falls,is the best hope for a recovery.

And Crosbie suggested he's the man best equipped to negotiate with the federal government, and even threatened legal action to get what he wants.

Calling Newfoundland and Labrador an "afterthought in Confederation," Crosbie said a political landscape that features Liberal governments in St. John's and Ottawa is not working.

He said the current formula for federal transfer payments to the province "discriminates" againstNewfoundland and Labrador because it claws back revenue from natural resource industries such as oil and gas.

While neighbouring provinces such as Nova Scotia and New Brunswick will each receive more than $2 billion in equalization payments this fiscal year, Newfoundland and Labrador will be shut out.

With changes, Crosbie said the province could receive $300 million in transfers annually.

"There are tough negotiations in front of Newfoundland and Labrador to secure a stable future for ourprovince. Who would you choose to negotiate on your behalf? Adoctor or a hard-nosedlawyer with a longtrack record of proven results?" Crosbie asked.

Not looking for a handout

Speaking during a news conference in Clarenville, with his speech streamed live on the party's Facebook page, Crosbie saidfive years of "handshakes and back-scratching" between Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, former premier Dwight Ball and current Liberal Leader Andrew Fureyhave not helped the province's dire fiscal and demographic situation.

He pledged to approach Ottawa from a position of "determination and equal partners," as opposed to a weak province looking for a handout.

And if negotiations over a boardroom table do not produce results, Crosbie said, he's ready to take legal action.

"If we have to go that route, then that's what we'll do," he said later during an interview with CBC News.

"I'm not saying we have to litigate that to the bitter end. But while we're talking we need to display that we can actually throw our weight around in legal terms as well."

How about homegrown solutions?

When asked if he believes federal help is the only solution, Crosbiesaid, "We do have to do our part," but did not offer specifics.

"If we're to become prosperous again and become a have province again and know that sense of pride again, then we're going to need help from Ottawa," he said.

Because government revenues from natural resource industries such as oil and gas are factored into the formula, Newfoundland and Labrador has been shut out of the federal equalization system, while neighbouring provinces such as Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have received billions annually. (CBC)

Like Crosbie, Fureyhas acknowledged that federal assistance is needed. But unlike Crosbie, Furey has played up his close connections in Ottawa, including his relationship with the prime minister.

Fureyhas promised to maintain a "robust and healthy" relationship with Ottawa, while being firm in any negotiations.

Meanwhile,Crosbie listed a series of demands that he will take to Ottawa, and promised a tough approach. His demands include:

  • A new fiscal arrangement with Ottawa that reflects the province's vast geography and dispersed population,and the cost of providing services.
  • A revised equalization formula that does not penalize the province for revenues from natural resources such as oil and gas.
  • Adeal to ensure affordable electricity rates, with thefederal government buyingan equity stake in the Muskrat Falls hydroelectric project, which is billions over budget and years behind schedule.
  • Joint management of the fishery, modelled after the Atlantic Accord, which ensures joint management of the offshore oil and gas industry.

His No. 1 priority? The threat of skyrocketing electricity rates when Muskrat Falls reaches full commercial power later this year.

For months, the federal and provincial governments have been trying to reach a deal to to mitigate power rates in the Muskrat era.

Top down view of a hydro dam in Labrador on a nice sunny day.
Crosbie says if the PCs are elected on Feb. 13 he will demand the federal government buy an ownership stake in the Muskrat Falls hydro project to reduce the burden on electricity users. (Nalcor Energy)

Crosbie said a key plank in that plan must include Ottawa purchasing an ownership stake in the project in order to ease the burden on electricity users.

The federal government is already a partner in the province, having guaranteed two loans totalling nearly $8 billion.

"They must now support the project through a direct equity stake in the project. The funding in such an equity stake would be directly applied to the project and provide immediate rate relief," said Crosbie.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador