Final Regina Mayoral Debate

This morning I attended the final mayoral debate in the Regina municipal elections.
Published on October 18, 2012

This morning I attended the final mayoral debate in the Regina municipal elections.

Hosted by the Regina and District Chamber of Commerce, the debate was a breakfast event and 8 of the 9 mayoral candidates were in attendance.

Answers were only 30 seconds long, which rather limited the detailed policy discussion, but with so many candidates there wasn’t much alternative.

If you weren’t following along live, I encourage you to go back through our Twitter feed and also the #yqrvotes hashtag and check out what went on.

If you’re in Regina, don’t forget to vote on October 24th!

Note: The Frontier Centre is strictly non-partisan and does not endorse any candidates for any political position. Our coverage of the Regina Mayoral Debate is done to enhance public policy discourse among Regina residents, and the wider community.

Featured News

MORE NEWS

What Does Canada Day Mean Today?

What Does Canada Day Mean Today?

It’s Canada Day. A day that used to be a celebration of cherished values like kindness and compassion, acceptance and tolerance, quiet strength and dignity, and a work hard/play hard ethic. Today, I am celebrating the very fine Canadian men and women I have met since...

Malign Neglect: What Calgary’s Water-Main Break Reveals about the Failure of City Government

Malign Neglect: What Calgary’s Water-Main Break Reveals about the Failure of City Government

The rupture of Calgary’s biggest water main revealed more than the problems of aging infrastructure. It showed a civic bureaucracy unable to provide basic services or fix things when they break, and a mayor eager to blame others and scold citizens for their selfishness in wanting city services in return for their tax dollars. Above all, it laid bare the increasing tendency of governments to neglect their core responsibilities in favour of social policy fetishes, and to sidestep accountability when things go wrong. Clear, competent, mission-focused public servants are a vanishing breed, writes George Koch, and governing a city is now mainly about keeping city workers, senior officials and elected politicians happy.

Keep or Can the New Canada Water Agency?

Keep or Can the New Canada Water Agency?

In May, the federal government announced it was creating a new organization called the Canada Water Agency.   It will have a 5-year budget of $85 million, staff of 215, half of which will be located at a new headquarters in Winnipeg. This is part of a broader effort...