babble is rabble.ca's discussion board but it's much more than that: it's an online community for folks who just won't shut up. It's a place to tell each other — and the world — what's up with our work and campaigns.
Who's running, who should be for the ONDP in 2011 - part II
The Hamilton Spectator ran a story on the front page about the nominated candidates in the Spec's readership area. The three major parties each have a full slate in this area -- not a surprize, given that the two opposition party leaders are from this area. In case the link gets delinked, the link within the story to the pdf of the pictures and three-line profiles of candidates can be found here.
I'll be very curious to see who the NDP runs in Scarborough-Rouge River which went NDP by such a wide margin federally. Seems to me that the idea candidate would be Neethan Shan. He ran in Scarborough-Guildwood for the ONDP in 2007 and did very well and then ran for city council in Scarborough-Rouge River last Nov. and lost - but he was endorsed by all the right people (even the Toronto Star) and he is a Tamil in a riding where that was the key to Rathika's federal win...
lo and behold, i did a search and it seems that Shan is running for the nomination in Rouge River on June 23!
What surprises me is that "The riding association canvassed "extensively" in the riding to find a candidate... In the end, only Coley put herself forward for nomination"
Really? this was once the riding of Ruth Greer (sp)... we had a good candidate federally (michael Erickson i believe) no star name, but no local candidate? (i'm big on candidates should live in their ridings which i'm glad to see Dionne will/would move)
FYI: Michael Erickson didn't actually live in Etobicoke-Lakeshore either. Its true that this area was once somewhat of an NDP stronghold but that was before redistribution moved the riding boundaries much further north to take in a lot of very inhospitable territory. I could probably only become NDP-winnable if the Liberals collapsed and the NDP was able to get the non-Tory vote coalsce behind it there - we are probably still one election away from that at the provincial level.
Thanks for clearing that up, not a huge fan of that cause i'd rather a candidate who isn't a "star" but knows the community, lives and breaths it then a planted one.
It looks like Etobicoke North is in the same boat; used to be strong for the NDP, hurt by redistribution and would require a liberal crash.
It looks like Etobicoke North is in the same boat; used to be strong for the NDP, hurt by redistribution and would require a liberal crash.
No, hurt by demographics and the wholesale co-option of the ethnoburban vote by the Liberals. Which means, however, that in the "Rathika" era, it could well be on-radar again...
It could probably only become NDP-winnable if the Liberals collapsed and the NDP was able to get the non-Tory vote coalsce behind it there - we are probably still one election away from that at the provincial level.
The Hamilton Spectator ran a story on the front page about the nominated candidates in the Spec's readership area. The three major parties each have a full slate in this area -- not a surprize, given that the two opposition party leaders are from this area. In case the link gets delinked, the link within the story to the pdf of the pictures and three-line profiles of candidates can be found here.
Candidate in Etobicoke Lakeshore... Dionne Coley (who ran for TDSB in october in Scarborough i think)
http://www.insidetoronto.com/news/elections/article/1028496--new-democrats-nominate-candidate-to-take-on-broten
What surprises me is that "The riding association canvassed "extensively" in the riding to find a candidate... In the end, only Coley put herself forward for nomination"
Really? this was once the riding of Ruth Greer (sp)... we had a good candidate federally (michael Erickson i believe) no star name, but no local candidate? (i'm big on candidates should live in their ridings which i'm glad to see Dionne will/would move)
FYI: Michael Erickson didn't actually live in Etobicoke-Lakeshore either. Its true that this area was once somewhat of an NDP stronghold but that was before redistribution moved the riding boundaries much further north to take in a lot of very inhospitable territory. I could probably only become NDP-winnable if the Liberals collapsed and the NDP was able to get the non-Tory vote coalsce behind it there - we are probably still one election away from that at the provincial level.
Thanks for clearing that up, not a huge fan of that cause i'd rather a candidate who isn't a "star" but knows the community, lives and breaths it then a planted one.
It looks like Etobicoke North is in the same boat; used to be strong for the NDP, hurt by redistribution and would require a liberal crash.
No, hurt by demographics and the wholesale co-option of the ethnoburban vote by the Liberals. Which means, however, that in the "Rathika" era, it could well be on-radar again...
dp
David Miller in 2015 (federally)?
David Miller has no ties to Etobicoke - if he ran federally I'd rather see him run in Toronto Centre.
Closed for length.