Posts Tagged election
2011 Calgary-Centre-North all candidate forum at Wild Rose United Church
Posted by gordonmcdowell in Calgary, Politics on 2011-04-28
A potted plant no more, Conservative Michelle Rempel joined (Green) Heather Macintosh, (Marxist-Leninist), Peggy Askin, (Liberal) Stephen Randall & (NDP) Paul Vargis for a very lively debate.
I don’t live in Calgary-Centre-North, but @harpsinyyc and @Oryxzen suggested this was an important event. Based on the audience intensity, it seemed pretty important.
Green Heather MacIntosh |
Liberal Stephen Randall |
NDP Paul Vargis |
Conservative Michelle Rempel |
Marxist-Leninist Peggy Askin |
|
This video is released under Creative Commons share-alike 3.0 license. If you remix it, link to my original. If you post a remix to YouTube, be sure to also use an annotation hyperlink.
I don’t want anyone complaining that the applause levels don’t reflect reality. I’m having trouble with my video editing software SONY VEGAS, which crashes when I perform a copy/paste operation, so I’m stuck with a single audio track for this video. The single audio track is board audio, so the candidates certainly sound good. But the sound person wasn’t worried about accurately passing the crowd’s cheering and booing to the speakers, since everyone in the room could hear that quite clearly anyway.
Hey, you ask, SONY… Isn’t that the same company that just lost all their Playstation customer info to a hacker? And sent out CDs infected with Trojans back in 2005? They kill puppies don’t they?
I can’t speak to the puppy question, all I know is their video editing software as-of version 10.0c won’t let me copy/paste reliably. Copy/paste! (Final Cut X is coming out in July for $300. Good to hear.)
Anyway…
15 Minute Highlight Reel
If you don’t have 92 minutes to spend watching the entire debate, there’s a Calgary-Centre-North Forum 15 minute highlight reel you should check out. It may not cover everything, but what it does cover is pretty interesting.
VoteCalgary (housing construction) Mayoral Forum
Posted by gordonmcdowell in Calgary, Politics on 2010-10-10
VoteCalgary (funded by Calgary’s housing construction industry) presented our mayoral candidates with questions which allowed candidates to pitch “consumer choice” and “freedom” against sustainable growth, should they so choose.
Comparing candidates performance at VoteCalgary forum, then contrasting against their performance against CivicCamp forum (where “sustainable” is all the rage) could have reflected poorly on any candidate to played too strongly to their respective audience. But candidates pretty much held their ground no matter who they were speaking to. (Darn! No explosive juxtapositions between debates!)
This forum (which allowed rebuttals and rebuttal-rebuttals) was refreshingly short… aside from an introductory question, and a closing question, the only non-bookend question was “How will you support inward, upward and outward city growth?”
Host |
Craig |
Joe |
Bob |
Barb |
Jon |
Ric |
Naheed |
Wayne |
|
introduction | 00:40 | 02:28 | 04:04 | 05:20 | 06:54 | 08:28 | 10:04 | 11:37 | |
city growth | 15:58 | 14:53 | 13:48 | ||||||
17:28 | 16:30 | ||||||||
21:31 | 20:27 | 19:24 | 18:52 | 18:30 | |||||
23:38 | 22:44 | 21:46 | 24:45 | ||||||
26:17 | 25:20 | ||||||||
28:00 | 27:21 | ||||||||
differentiate | 29:02 | 29:56 | 31:00 | 32:04 | 33:12 | 34:15 | 35:18 | 36:21 |
This video is released under Creative Commons share-alike 3.0 license.
CivicCamp Mayoral Forum
Posted by gordonmcdowell in Calgary, Politics on 2010-10-06
Our mayoral candidates faced off in University of Calgary’s MacEwan Hall for what must have been a grueling 2 hour plus debate. CivicCamp‘s inclusion of Oscar Fech and Gary Johnston brought the total participants up to 10 (out of the 15 running), in what is currently looking to be a 3-way race.
“What’s going on here? Can you believe it!?” -Oscar Fech
Did you know many candidates are polling at zero? As an infamous FOX NEWS host would say, “Now is no time to give up!”
The CivicCamp forum followed ArtsVote’s limited responses token system (this time it was poker chips), which kept things at a brisk pace, as did the entertaining lightning round.
This video is released under Creative Commons share-alike 3.0 license.
And I’d like to apologize to any color blind folk looking at my table. I’ve run out of ideas how to visually compress this information.
ArtsVote Calgary – Mayoral Forum
Posted by gordonmcdowell in Calgary, Politics on 2010-09-30
An optimal candidate debate probably has some similarity to an optimal team size, too many members result in confusion, and ultimately… despair.
“The organizers had to make arrangements to get the candidates quite early. There are a few candidates running for mayor who are not onstage, but are here this afternoon. Afterwards, stick around and you can put your questions to them.” – Jim Brown
It would appear ArtsVote, by soliciting participation early and having a deadline, has solved this problem. Good on them, because the result was a better forum.
And, seriously, they put thought into how to force candidates to use their time wisely, and only speak when they have a critical point to make.
I enjoyed this Calgary mayoral forum immensely, and I hope you do too. Thanks to Chelsea Pratchett for help covering the event, and to ArtsVote for allowing me to do this in an official capacity.
Host |
Wayne |
Ric |
Naheed |
Jon |
Joe |
Craig |
Bob |
Barb |
introduction | 01:33 | 03:29 | 05:04 | 06:44 | 08:25 | 10:00 | 11:37 | 13:17 |
forced closures | 19:22 | 21:02 | 17:18 | |||||
affordable space | 24:29 | 22:26 | ||||||
accessibility | 29:00 | 30:56 | 32:29 | |||||
CATA budget | 34:10 | 35:49 | 36:55 | |||||
arts festivals | 43:10 | 39:08 | 41:27 | |||||
funding solution | 50:14 | 46:39 | 48:35 | |||||
retain artists | 54:20 | 55:48 | 52:32 | |||||
funding pitch | 60:15 | 61:57 | 58:13 | |||||
buh bye | 67:00 | 66:38 | 66:13 | 65:24 | Gone! | 64:43 | 64:15 | 63:35 |
This video is released under Creative Commons share-alike 3.0 license.
TEDx Talks pertaining to Calgary’s 2010 Election
Posted by gordonmcdowell in Calgary, Politics on 2010-06-06
TEDx, is the license used for independently organized TED Talks. Already in 2010, Calgary has experienced TEDxYYC followed by TEDxCalgary. I shot & edited the videos found on their respected YouTube playlists, so when I recently saw footage of Naheed Nenshi being interviewed by CBC, I kept wondering to myself… where have I seen that guy?
I’d edited his TEDxCalgary talk of course.
This got me thinking about the range of TEDx Talks given in Calgary. Some were extremely pertinent to civic issues, so here’s a brief summary for Calgarians.
Naheed Nenshi – Calgary 3.0
Journalist & mayoral candidate Naheed Nenshi (with the help of dataminer Natalie O’Toole) reviews Calgary’s growth patterns, and proposes that we are approaching decision time: What kind of City does Calgary want to become? Los Angeles and Curitiba (Brazil) are offered as potential futures, depending on choices Calgarians make today.
Grant Neufeld – Communicating for Change
Community activist & computer programmer Grant Neufeld shares his learning experiences on how to effect change. Since this blog entry is specifically for matters pertaining to Calgary’s 2010 election I’m skipping ahead in his video (you can of course rewind) to his discussion of http://CalgaryDemocracy.ca, his tool to assist Calgarians with Calgary’s 2010 municipal election by consolidating candidate information.
“Isn’t that something local papers like Calgary Herald and Calgary Sun do?” you may ask. All I know is that during the last civic election, I waited until election day to do research before voting. It was hard to find detailed consolidated information online (to the point I was not satisfied with my own knowledge about the candidates as I voted). Maybe bigger news organizations will provide easier to find, more detailed information for 2010… But I would suggest bookmarking http://CalgaryDemocracy.ca just in case. It is exactly what I was looking for in 2007, and never found.
Jennifer Martin – Innovative Spaces
Fostering innovation in youth isn’t normally thought of as a civic issue (with education being managed provincially). But Jennifer Martin argues that innovation can be encouraged by providing civic spaces for experimentation (her example being Telus Word of Science).
What Telus World of Science does for kids and teenagers, Calgary Protospace provides for young & young-at-heart-but-in-reality-old adults: A space for experimentation and shared learning. These spaces aren’t something I’d specifically expect a mayoral candidate to support in their campaign, but I would expect candidates to share ideas on how they would “foster innovation” in Calgary.
Chris Turner – Great Leap Sideways
Climate change is not an issue I normally associate with municipal elections… carbon taxes, cap-&-trade and fuel economy standards for automobiles are legislated federally & provincially, not municipally. And while a typical Calgarian’s carbon footprint exceeds the Canadian average by 30%, our municipal government is actively pursuing energy efficiency in its operations.
“They’re on it.” In fact (around the world) municipalities are taking action on climate change more aggressively than any other level of government.
However the significant per-captia carbon footprint of Calgary citizens is something which can be addressed by properly managing urban development. Here, author and journalist Chris Turner shares efficiency success stories which Calgary is free to emulate. “It can’t be done” is trumped by “it’s been done”. Calgary’s next mayor won’t be taxing carbon, but he/she still has many opportunities to help Calgarians lower their CO2 footprint.
Again, I’m skipping ahead in Chris’s video (past the argument that climate change is a problem) to his examples of success in improving energy efficiency.
That’s all the TEDx wisdom I can impart regarding Calgary’s 2010 municipal election. Beyond that?
#yycvote is the hash tag for Calgary elections, and it can be easily applied as a twitter search filter.