Then pay it off at the end of each month....duh.
Getting back to JLM's point about the seat count, there is a real possibility of a 100 seats.
I have been working on this very hard, as I will be part of a radio panel on election night.
If you look at popular vote vs translation to seats, you begin to see the pattern of where
those seats will come from. Quebec will deliver I think anywhere from 25 to 30 seats.
Ontario, will see the NDP pick up some of those Liberal seats as they fight the Tories and
New Democrats come up the middle. The Green vote is spread very thin across the
country for their 7% but NDP strength is developing in all five regions. Look for considerable
gains in suburban Ontario and in the core of cities. The Conservatives have their base true
but like BC they will be under pressure from the NDP this time and that leaves some of those
seats vulnerable to Liberals coming up the middle as the two front runners split and this is
where the Tories are having trouble. Watch where they plug the leadership into those riding's
on the weekend.
On the Prairie, Manitoba will give the NDP some help, I predict Saskatchewan will be good for
two or three, and Alberta may deliver one more. BC is a battlefield for sure, as the NDP and the
Conservatives fight it out not for first and second place but for actual seats. A surge like this
is a signal that some of the vote split will favor the NDP this time, instead of the Conservatives.
One other thing should be pointed out here, the Liberals as of Sunday are showing signs of
imploding. A fall from 25 or 26% in about three or four days shows the soft vote is leaving the
Liberals. They are at 22%. If that happens the Liberal left is going NDP. What will the soft
right do? I predict it will go to the New Democrats, the Greens or just stay home. This is too
bitter a campaign for the Liberals to actually translate votes into Conservative support.
On the Eastern Seaboard, the NDP will make gains, but it depends on what the Liberal vote
does, whether the Liberals hang onto what they have. here Conservatives could actually pick
up a few in the vote split.
The real questions are for after the election. If the Liberals implode, where do the Paul Martin's
and the right wing of the party go? My view, to the Conservatives. If the Liberals collapse
and have fewer than 70 seats their come back will be difficult. Many of their leading figures will
be gone, their leadership broken and their money supply will dwindle. This is a serious crossroad
for the party. Here is what happens when you install a leader that does not have the grassroots
of the party fully engaged. I will say that Mr Harper and Jack Layton both enjoy the support of their
party members and to one extent or another, the general public. Ignatieff, on the other hand has
no allegiance from the public or his own party. The only thing Iggy had was the arrogance to
believe the masses didn't matter they would just follow because he was leading them with
intellect. Politics is about opinion, intellect and passion which of course brings in blind ignorance.
So that is where we are. Yes I still think Harper will have more seats, the NDP will be second,
and the Liberals third, but there won't be a coalition of any kind until Iggy is gone at least.
Now we all have something to argue about on this thread.
If God really cared, he would have struck Harper with a bolt of lightening long ago.... God has nothing to do with it.
Big deal.... it should be done, though as he said, not at this time, as there are more important issues to deal with.
Still better then having that corrupt scum-bag Harper getting a Majority...... speaking of which, I noticed many of the Con supporters have stopped their prancing around about how this time will be a Con Majority.
Told ya.
Keep up the good fight Colpy.
Media control?I don't mind more sex scandals, but yes, the media control and financial scandals have to go.
Is that supposed to mean I should know you're what? Talking out your ass again?
What a way to discuss the issues of the day. Calling the PM a scumbag, and the other
two idiots. Colpy face it the cleanest in 27 years doesn't mean much when we have the
cabinet ministers lying to parliament, and assistants under investigation, and a host of
other misdeeds. slightly better doesn't count, and besides I am tired of all the financial,
sex and lie scandals. Its time to give Jack a chance and besides we can wait with baited
breathe to see if his scandal will be a better one. Maybe we should have the scandal of
the year award. If the surge continues into Friday, we could be talking about Tsunami Jack
The problem with Jack is that he is not dealing with reality. Billions upon billions of new spending, without much specific on how to pay.....except boost the corporate tax to 10.5% and do a cap and trade on carbon emissions....
Is that like.. $30 Billion on fighter jets?
Jets that appear to rising above the estimated price that we were promised?
Or is that like $1 Billion for an boondoggled G20?
Harper pisses away billions and you are afraid of Jack? Canada wasn't in the hole until Harper and if the Liberals hadn't left us a surplus, we would be in the same boat as the Yanks. Your unwavering support for that clown has me worried.
My biggest worry with this kind of change up is some parallel to the U.S. - where we replace a completely ass-backwards government with one that is simply stagnant.
Well, you know........calling Harper a "scumbag" is really quite amusing, as he has run the most corruption-free government in at least 27 years.........
in fact if you don't count the 6 month wonders, the most corruption free government since 1968.
We'll see what happens.
There is still hope for a Harper majority........otherwise, we get the coalition (official or non) with the Bloc driving the bus, so it really makes no difference whether it is the Liberal idiot or the NDP idiot in the PM's chair.
The difference is that if the NDP get a majority, then they don't have to worry about the other parties making the system stagnant like in the US..... if there's a minority and one of the other parties is willing to work with the NDP to get things done, then it won't be stagnant like the US.
The thing is, our system of government isn't like the US's system..... so to compare the two is a bit foolish.
And considering the only reason why the US government is stagnant is because the Republicans are sore losers and refuse to co-operate with any plans the Democrats come up with, kicking and screaming every step of the way...... that there explains clearly why nothing is getting done.