I hear you, but I think you nailed it in the first sentence:
That’s where you nail it.
…& this part just keeps Jagmeet in the pension seat…so I could be wrong but the liberals could be sacrificing virgins to the green volcano and Jagmeet will make lots of noise (or not) and then back them regardless of what they’re doing.
The Non-Coalition Coalition that’s not a Coalition….it’ll squash the NDP seat count. The NDP will sit in the backseat with both Greens & whatever Maxine Bernier’s offshoot is called.
This next election, whenever it happens (in 2025 unless Justin decides otherwise) will be about how well the Bloc does in Quebec against the Liberals on one front with the Conservatives surprisingly getting a few seats there maybe, and just about the Conservatives vs Liberals for the rest of Canada.
Justin will dust off the old “Don’t split the vote with the NDP or else the evil will dominate” preaching. The Conservatives will point at the last decade of Liberal Reign with a “What the actual fuck Canada?” Campaign, & the other parties, including the NDP will just be like mosquitoes buzzing around. That’s it.
It will sound like this for that 60 days: “Guns
are evil! Don’t look at Canada, but look south! Where do you stand on the settled argument about abortion that nobody will touch anyway? Do you actually have an opinion but you’re gonna not act on anyway? You’re evil and a threat! A vote for the NDP is a vote for the conservatives. Something something LGBTQ-Etc…Conservatives scary.”
Jagmeet in that campaign will hold what relevance? He has already fished with the “
When I’m PM…” statement in Parliament times three to see what the reaction would be not in parliament, but in Canada as a whole, and it’s about the same.
“When I’m prime minister, I will keep my promises,” Singh exclaimed shortly after Trudeau concluded speaking, triggering a disruption of laughter, catcalls and guffaws that lasted nearly a full minute.
While Singh looked visibly affronted by the response, he was given a chance to repeat himself — which was met with a supportive standing ovation by his caucus-mates. He got derailed a second time, but on his third attempt — after another call for order from Rota — Singh was able to finish his question…
by flipping it into a set up for Justin Trudeau, to make a point with a prepared sound-bite response…that was even actually responding to what Jagmeet said as opposed to the usual soundbites that have nothing to do with the question asked.
Singh was “challenging” the prime minister’s assertions that the deadlock between the federal government and the provinces was the fault of the premiers, who want more money from Ottawa to ease the backlogs.
Good job Jagmeet, now go sit down until the Liberals call on you again.
At the start of every day, federal NDP leader Jagmeet Singh has another complaint about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government and at the end of every day he props it up for another day. It’s a classic example of crying wolf and given Singh’s current deal with the Liberals, Canadians are...
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