Thursday, October 29, 2015

ELECCIONES PRESIDENCIALES EN ARGENTINA: Massa marca distancia con el kirchnerismo: "No quiero que gane Scioli"


El candidato presidencial que terminó en tercer lugar en la primera vuelta hizo un nuevo guiño a Macri.

Alejandro Osorio S. 29 de octubre del 2015 / 11:04 Hrs
El camino no está fácil para el candidato oficialista a la presidencia de Argetina, Daniel Scioli. A los problemas internos y las acusaciones cruzadas que reinan en el kirchnerismo después de la primera vuelta de las presidenciales argentinas, ahora se sumó la declaración de Sergio Massa, quien logró la tercera fuerza política con 22%.
En la mañana del miércoles, el líder del Frente Renovador aseguró que “la gente quiere un cambio” tras los resultados de los comicios del domingo, donde el opositor Mauricio Macri forzó una histórica segunda vuelta. Pero en la noche, en una entrevista a Canal 13 de Argentina, Massa fue más tajante al sentenciar que “no quiero que gane Scioli”.

Según dan cuenta los diarios transandinos, el candidato que logró un 22% el domingo afirmó que no hay “nada” que lo acerque al kirchnerismo.
Distinto fue cuando le consultaron por su relación con Macri: "Tenemos cosas que nos diferencian y cosas en las que podemos coincidir, pero yo soy un espacio distinto”, cita Clarín.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

CANADA'S FEDERAL ELECTIONS 2015: Don’t count Stephen Harper out yet

 

Under the right conditions, a minority Conservative government could emerge from Monday's election -- and survive.

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper may be playing defence, using the last days of this campaign to shore up support in established Conservative ridings. But all he needs to win a plurality in the next Parliament is a good defence, one that assures him of more seats than any other single party, writes Thomas Walkom.
MARK BLINCH / REUTERS
Conservative Leader Stephen Harper may be playing defence, using the last days of this campaign to shore up support in established Conservative ridings. But all he needs to win a plurality in the next Parliament is a good defence, one that assures him of more seats than any other single party, writes Thomas Walkom.     
Stephen Harper is far from finished.
True, the polls aren’t going his way. True also that CTV is citing anonymous Conservative insiders who say the prime minister has gone into one of his dark funks.
But there was no sign of Surly Steve Tuesday, as an energetic Harper hammered home his low-tax message in the Toronto suburb of Etobicoke.
His props, such as a faux cash register that rang every time Harper mentioned what he called Liberal tax hikes, were cheesy.
But in politics, cheese often works.
The prime minister may be playing defence, using the last days of this campaign to shore up support in established Conservative ridings.
But all he needs to win a plurality in the next Parliament is a good defence, one that assures him of more seats than any other single party.
While he might prefer another iron-clad majority, he has led minority governments twice before — and made them work.
In those years, he skillfully exploited the divisions between the opposition Liberals, New Democrats and Bloc Québécois to advance his agenda.
Another Harper-led minority government would find survival harder. Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, NDP Leader Tom Mulcair and Green Leader Elizabeth May have all said they won’t prop up a Conservative minority.
Analysts have speculated that Harper will either step down as Conservative leader or be forced out if his party wins only a plurality of seats in Monday’s election.
But politics is a funny business. Those who have power are reluctant to give it up. Those who want power can be remarkably flexible.
It’s near impossible to predict what the various political parties might do until the detailed elections results are in.
But suppose, for instance, that a rejuvenated Bloc Québécois wins enough seats to hold the balance of power between the Conservatives on one side and the combined Liberal-NDP-Green parties on the other.
This is not far-fetched. Polls suggest that Gilles Duceppe’s Bloc is gaining in Quebec at the expense of the NDP.
After the 2008 election, the Bloc allied with the Liberals and New Democrats in an unsuccessful effort to form a coalition that would oust Harper.
After this election, could the somewhat social-democratic Bloc plausibly support a hard-right Conservative minority government designed to keep Harper in power?
Perhaps it could. Like Harper (but unlike Trudeau and Mulcair), Duceppe has taken a hard line against Muslim women who wear the niqab. Like the Conservatives (but unlike the Liberals and NDP), the Bloc fully supports Canada’s participation in the air war against Islamic State militants.
More to the point, and unlike the situation in 2008, the Bloc and NDP are fierce competitors in Quebec. In a hung parliament, Duceppe might find it politically more useful to side with Harper rather than support any coalition or grouping that included Mulcair.
So that’s one scenario that could allow a Harper minority government to survive.
Another is the tried and true practice of dangling goodies, such as cabinet posts, in front of individual opposition MPs.
That tactic was used successfully by Saskatchewan NDP premier Roy Romanow who, after the 1999 provincial election had reduced his party to minority status, enticed three of four elected Liberals into what he called a coalition government. Two were rewarded with cabinet posts; the third was named Speaker.
As sitting prime minister, Harper has considerable manouevring room should the election fail to deliver a parliamentary majority to any single party.
By law he need not recall Parliament until June. By constitutional convention, he is the one whom Governor-General David Johnston must consult first before asking anyone to form a government.
If, after Monday’s election, the Conservatives are just a few seats short of a majority, Johnston would be within his rights to give Harper time to come up with a solution. If no solution is reached and Harper, after being defeated in the Commons, demands a snap election to determine who should run the country, tradition would suggest that Johnston accept his advice.
All of which is to say that unless voters drive a metaphorical stake into Harper’s heart by denying him even minority government status, the prime minister may well be able to carry on.

Canada's Federal Election 2015: Liberals widen gap over Tories, EKOS poll shows



            Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau shares a laugh with the mascot Onkel Hans during an Oktoberfest celebration in Kitchener on Tuesday.

 

A new poll suggests the Liberal party has widened the gap between them and the Conservatives

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau shares a laugh with the mascot Onkel Hans during an Oktoberfest celebration in Kitchener on Tuesday.
Paul Chiasson / THE CANADIAN PRESS
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau shares a laugh with the mascot Onkel Hans during an Oktoberfest celebration in Kitchener on Tuesday.
   
A new poll suggests the Liberal party has widened the gap between them and the Conservatives in the final week of the campaign,.
The EKOS research survey shows the Liberals have increased their lead at 36 per cent, while the Conservatives are down 2.2 percentage points at 31 per cent over Thanksgiving weekend. The NDP has rebounded slightly back up to 21 per cent.
Frank Graves, president of EKOS Research, said the results are quite telling: “If it is repeated tomorrow, with today’s polling, it would be quite unlikely that Harper would win enough seats to survive.”
Making leaps in Quebec and Ontario, the Liberal is enjoying strong support in Ontario and is in a statistical tie with the New Democrats in Quebec. Conservative strength wanes in Quebec, where they were solidly in third place when the poll was taken.

Related video

Justin Trudeau celebrates Oktoberfest
Justin Trudeau celebrates Oktoberfest
Recent polls suggest the New Democrats are fading in Ontario, but remain a force in British Columbia and Quebec.
“They are quite seat-efficient in terms of their support and they may be able to come back in coming days” Graves said. “I think the electorate are still capable of surprising but I am guessing by Thursday we will have a good fix on what is going to happen.”
According to the survey, the Conservative vote is still largely populated among seniors, while the Liberals are receiving a concentrated advantage among age groups under 65.
 
All the data have been statistically weighted by age, gender, region, and educational attainment to ensure the sample’s composition reflects that of the actual population of Canada according to Census data.
Poll tracker:

This study is based on a blended sample of random, interactive response using a phone keypad and telephone interviews of 1,115 adult Canadians. The margin of error associated with the total sample is plus or minus 2.9 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

All the data have been statistically weighted by age, gender, region, and educational attainment to ensure the sample’s composition reflects that of the actual population of Canada according to Census data.
Poll tracker:

U.S PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES CAMPAIGNS: Bernie vs. Hillary: Who connects better with voters?

Story highlights

  • Sally Kohn: CNN debate to reveal subtle differences on issues and maybe bigger ones on personality
  • It's Bernie Sanders' debate to lose on Tuesday, Kohn says
  • Kohn: But Hillary Clinton can also win if she plays it right
Sally Kohn is an activist, columnist and television commentator. Follow her on Twitter: @sallykohn. The opinions expressed in this commentary are hers.
(CNN)Without remotely the same level of name recognition, campaign infrastructure or media spotlight, Sen. Bernie Sanders has already posed a significant challenge to Hillary Clinton's campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. Just imagine what Tuesday's nationally televised debate, hosted by CNN, could do.
Sally Kohn
The underdog Sanders leads Clinton in the early primary state of New Hampshire and is within striking distance in Iowa, although he continues to trail the former secretary of state by double digits among Democrats nationally.
    Arguably, Sanders' popularity among Democratic voters is fueled as much by who Sanders isn't as who he is: His populist positions and regular-guy disposition stand out in contrast with the chronically calculating and centrist Clinton.
    And this debate is his to lose: Just by showing up on the same stage as the presumptive front-runner and showing a wider audience that he can substantively and stylistically challenge Clinton, Sanders gains.
    Can Hillary Clinton win over New Hampshire?

      JUST WATCHED

      Can Hillary Clinton win over New Hampshire?

    MUST WATCH

    Can Hillary Clinton win over New Hampshire? 02:30
    But what about Clinton? She wants to avoid a protracted fight for the Democratic nomination, not to mention the sort of upset she suffered at the hands of Barack Obama in 2008. So it's in her best interest to brush aside Sanders as soon as possible. The first Democratic primary debate is her earliest and best opportunity to do so. How?
    Look for Clinton to employ three strategies.
    First, she'll likely try to lump her positions in with those of Sanders (and the other Democratic contenders) and say that all of the Democratic candidates mainly share the same vision and the party's best interest is served by picking the one with the best shot at being elected.
    Electability is Clinton's strongest argument, especially as more and more Democrats become legitimately freaked out by the cast of characters vying for the Republican nomination. It's in Clinton's interest to de-emphasize the ideological differences on the Democratic side and imply more agreement than not -- which is, for the most part, true.
    Sanders will try to poke holes in that script, especially with respect to Clinton's economic agenda, which has been rhetorically populist but conventionally centrist in policy terms.
    Beyond increasing the minimum wage and supporting job training programs, how will Clinton address the structural inequities that modern capitalism is producing? How will she square her warrior-for-the-middle-class chatter with her history of coziness with Wall Street and big business? And where does she stand on the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal?
    Sanders and many populist Democrats have opposed the agreement as a giveaway to big business that will hurt American workers. While Clinton tacitly backed the deal while secretary of state, she's now free to express her own opinion separate from the stance of the Obama administration.
    Will she ally herself with populist opposition to the trade deal? And even if she does, will people believe her stance is anything more than crass opportunism to win voters fleeing her for Sanders?
    Clinton's second strategy will likely be try to highlight ways in which she is more progressive than her Democratic opponents, especially Sanders. The recent mass shooting in Oregon, just days before the debate, yet again brings to the surface the concerns of Democratic voters -- and voters in general -- who are fed up with Congress' failure to pass common-sense gun laws despite overwhelming need and widespread public support.
    Here, Clinton can draw a clear contrast with Sanders, who has opposed some gun control measures and is out of step with the majority of Democratic primary voters on this issue. While she may have difficulty demonstrating her sincerity on economic populism, here the contrast with the senator from Vermont is strong -- his weak record on guns is a hard position to defend, especially now.
    Bernie Sanders reaching out to black voters

      JUST WATCHED

      Bernie Sanders reaching out to black voters

    MUST WATCH

    Bernie Sanders reaching out to black voters 02:08
    Similarly, Clinton can try to distinguish herself as more progressive in addressing racial bias and structural racism. Despite Sanders' self-professed position as the most progressive candidate, in speaking about racial justice, police violence and the Black Lives Matter movement, he has been woefully inadequate at best.
    Clinton hasn't been much better, with her discussions on race often tainted by an unsettling defensiveness. But she's still clearly more comfortable talking about race than Sanders and has given more thought to how racial injustice poisons America's institutions and culture. Talking about this more in the debate will be good for America -- and good for her candidacy.
    Third, look for Clinton to try to connect authentically with viewers at home and show her human side. Many voters may get lost in the substantive back and forth over what Clinton supports versus what Sanders supports and their various policy-based accusations against each other. But elections are also about gut instincts over which candidate shares your values and vision. And those gut instincts are especially triggered when voters see the candidates side by side.
    While part of the appeal of Sanders, like part of the appeal of Donald Trump, is ideological -- white racial anxiety and xenophobia in the case of Trump, skepticism about the current economic order in the case of Sanders -- what both share is the refreshing impression of being straight shooters. Trump doesn't hesitate to insult every Mexican. Sanders isn't afraid to call himself a socialist. Both personalities fly in the face of the conventional overly calculated politics that the Clinton brand helped invent.
    For her part, Clinton can say all the right things, but if she spouts populist rhetoric while sounding like an out-of-touch patrician, it won't work. That's not to say Clinton should emphasize showing more of her heart and humor, as campaign aides have promised in a retooling. Rather she should just be her damn self and show that to the voters. We don't want a particular personality so much as we want a real person. Hopefully, if nothing else, Trump has taught candidates that.
    The first Democratic debate will be pivotal since voters will form first, and perhaps lasting, impressions of how the candidates match up. It is Sanders' debate to lose. But, if she plays it right, it could also be Clinton's debate to win.
    •