If the gLiberals and the NDP form a coalition, who'll be PM?
Dion has announced his intention to resign already.
Dion has announced his intention to resign already.
Harper:roll:If the gLiberals and the NDP form a coalition, who'll be PM?
Dion has announced his intention to resign already.
TRY JUSTIN TRUDEAU!
rgs
scth
Good day to all please forgive my anger..........
The Finance minister tells Canadian workers not to think about strike, and went farther to say to the Canadian worker if you have a job don’t make noise for 2 years your right to strike has been revoked, while some of these workers have voted for the vindictive Cons, and here are a bunch of f ucking thugs doing the opposite. They have a job and the ****ers are making unnecessary noise…… F UCKING hypocritesssssssssssssssssssssssssss.
If Liberals and NDP do end up forming a coalition government, my hope would be that they bring back Paul Martin as the PM. Rightly or wrongly (in my opinion, wrongly), many people don’t have any confidence in Dion as the PM.
I think Paul Martin would be just right of the job, assuming he wants to take it.
TRY JUSTIN TRUDEAU!
rgs
scth
:roll::roll::roll:Scratch,
Your fixating.
We all understand your sold on the guy.
But it just ain't to be.
It ain't.
Not now.
Its been covered before.
Pick an Iggy, a Bob, a behind the scenes Jean or Paul, a Steven, a Jack or even an Elizbeth.
But for god's sake free the Justin.
Trex
How does that exactly work, they lie and still win?
So what if the libs and ndp form a coalition? They will still need the bloc, and that will never work.
My understanding is that Bloc won’t be part of the coalition, but will support the Lib-NDP government on an issue by issue bases. Bloc will certainly support the stimulus package; all the opposition parties seem to want that.
Then Bloc will support the government as and if it sees fit, basically Bloc is a party of the left and is expected to agree with the government on many issues. Besides, any bill except an economic bill is not a confidence vote, so even if the government is defeated, that won’t trigger an election.
If the coalition is formed, the first big test will be the budget. No doubt the coalition will pass some sort of stimulus package. Then can it form a common ground with the Bloc on the budget? If it can, it will stay in power for at least one year, until the 2010 budget.
It will also depend upon who leads the coalition. Somebody like Paul Martin, who has the national stature and a proven record of fixing the economic mess left by Mulroney, will probably last longer than somebody else.
My understanding is that Bloc won’t be part of the coalition, but will support the Lib-NDP government on an issue by issue bases. Bloc will certainly support the stimulus package; all the opposition parties seem to want that.
Then Bloc will support the government as and if it sees fit, basically Bloc is a party of the left and is expected to agree with the government on many issues. Besides, any bill except an economic bill is not a confidence vote, so even if the government is defeated, that won’t trigger an election.
If the coalition is formed, the first big test will be the budget. No doubt the coalition will pass some sort of stimulus package. Then can it form a common ground with the Bloc on the budget? If it can, it will stay in power for at least one year, until the 2010 budget.
It will also depend upon who leads the coalition. Somebody like Paul Martin, who has the national stature and a proven record of fixing the economic mess left by Mulroney, will probably last longer than somebody else.
My understanding is that Bloc won’t be part of the coalition, but will support the Lib-NDP government on an issue by issue bases. Bloc will certainly support the stimulus package; all the opposition parties seem to want that.
Then Bloc will support the government as and if it sees fit, basically Bloc is a party of the left and is expected to agree with the government on many issues. Besides, any bill except an economic bill is not a confidence vote, so even if the government is defeated, that won’t trigger an election.
If the coalition is formed, the first big test will be the budget. No doubt the coalition will pass some sort of stimulus package. Then can it form a common ground with the Bloc on the budget? If it can, it will stay in power for at least one year, until the 2010 budget.
It will also depend upon who leads the coalition. Somebody like Paul Martin, who has the national stature and a proven record of fixing the economic mess left by Mulroney, will probably last longer than somebody else.
Good day to you Colpy, what your Cons did in the house yesterday is nothing butPaul Martin?
Perhaps not a bad choice.....except that the deal is being negotiated by Jean the Don......he eliminated large corporate donations and torpedoed his own party just to screw Martin.......I don't think that will happen.
This whole idea of a coalition with the BQ as a "silent partner" stinks...bad. It simply serves to legitimize the Federal separatist party (now there's an oxymoron) and throw all the parties into convulsions trying to give the separatists more and more and more, thus destroying the growing sense of the BQ's insignificance and GREATLY strengthening them in Quebec.
Absolutely irresponsible.
Reprehensible.
Outrageous.
Good day to you Colpy, what your Cons did in the house yesterday is nothing but
Absolutely irresponsible.
Reprehensible.
and Outrageous......
The Cons blinked and that is what happens to a bully when he faces fears opposition, he gets confused and starts to walk away like a wet dog. It looks good on them.
57% of the Canadian electrets think that Harper is nothing but a cheat and a f thug.:angryfire::angryfire::angryfire:
My understanding is that Bloc won’t be part of the coalition, but will support the Lib-NDP government on an issue by issue bases. Bloc will certainly support the stimulus package; all the opposition parties seem to want that.
Then Bloc will support the government as and if it sees fit, basically Bloc is a party of the left and is expected to agree with the government on many issues. Besides, any bill except an economic bill is not a confidence vote, so even if the government is defeated, that won’t trigger an election.
If the coalition is formed, the first big test will be the budget. No doubt the coalition will pass some sort of stimulus package. Then can it form a common ground with the Bloc on the budget? If it can, it will stay in power for at least one year, until the 2010 budget.
It will also depend upon who leads the coalition. Somebody like Paul Martin, who has the national stature and a proven record of fixing the economic mess left by Mulroney, will probably last longer than somebody else.