Once again, you REALLY need to look up the concept of FASCISM........you obviously don't understand it, and have fallen into the lefty habit of applying it to anyone that disagrees with them.
Something like the right calling the NDP COMMUNISTS, only less accurate.
I'll call the original Reform Party fascist if I like. In spite of its seemingly insipid leader the early reform party had the following characteristics:
1. Intolerance directed toward minorities - especially gays and ethnic groups of non-European origin
2. Economic policies that would have eliminated most of Canada's social infrastructure including health care
3. Opposition to bilingualism and multiculturalism
4. Opposition to efforts intended to guarantee women true equality
5. Support for large corporations in the form of less government regulation and lower taxes
6. The privatization of many government services including including the deliberate creation of a two-tier health system
7. Elimination of Aboriginal treaty rights
8. An influx into the early party of many members who whose remarks showed again and again that they were intolerant of non-white ethnic groups as well as homosexuals
9. Manning's own conservative Christian evangelical values which resembled those of many US ultra-conservatives
Now these might not seem like neo-fascist characteristics to you, but they are probably about as close as they come in a major party in Canada.
I will admit that many of these early characteristics of the Reform Party were eliminated by the late 1990s. However, your comment in the original referred to the early Party as did my original post.
I will also admit that 29 years ago your own political views might be different from those you now hold. I found in teaching in the 1980s that many of my students supported the Reform Party primarily due to its name, assuming that the party was to the left of the political centre, and was actually interested in real political reform and not a return of Canada to the social and economic policies of the 1950s. It was a good example of the power of marketing in politics.