Can you say Prime Minister Mulcair.
And how good would he be for anyone living west of the Ottawa River?
Can you say Prime Minister Mulcair.
And how good would he be for anyone living west of the Ottawa River?
How would his policies benefit every territory east of some arbitrary midpoint?
Maybe just maybe about 30 conservative MP's have reached that golden state of full pension , the wet dream of all politicians .Timing of Peter MacKay's departure politically damaging
"It seems a lot of people are abandoning Stephen Harper's ship these days," Mulcair quipped during a speech in Toronto after the news broke.
More than 30 Conservative MPs are not running in the next election — a big number, even if it is, as the government says, a natural turnover.
And the timing is certainly bad. As Clement told The House, all ministers were instructed to tell Prime Minister Stephen Harper months ago if they planned not to run in the fall election. Planning is paramount in any campaign, especially one expected to be so closely contested.
http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/politics/timing-of-peter-mackay-s-departure-politically-damaging-1.3093969
Maybe just maybe about 30 conservative MP's have reached that golden state of full pension , the wet dream of all politicians .
Is that what Justine says?Coalition seems like a significant possibility.
Justin Trudeau rules out coalition with NDP after saying he may be open to it - The Globe and MailCoalition seems like a significant possibility.
Well Frank Graves the liberal pollster , would you expect him to say anything different ?Pierre Poilievre, the federal employment minister and chief spokesman for the Conservative party in the House of Commons, has “a very significant likeability issue in his riding,” according to pollster Frank Graves, whose company recently polled Poilievre’s suburban Ottawa constituency of Nepean-Carleton.
“My guess is that people are looking at him and saying the more I see of him, the less I like him,” said Graves.
This -- like many other portents -- suggests that the Conservatives' electoral prospects this fall are worse than the top line numbers indicate.
The voters who know Poilievre best don’t like him that much. He is the most prominent public face of his government.
Ever since Finance Minister Joe Oliver went off script in a TV interview -- musing about Harper’s granddaughter -- Poilievre has been fielding questions about Oliver’s budget, generally by warning about the opposition’s risky tax-raising schemes.
Poilievre is ready to cross check anyone at anytime. He has previously gone after, for example, former auditor general Sheila Fraser, and aboriginals who were abused at residential schools.
This week, he took to Twitter to promote a boycott of Tim Hortons, an unusual attack on a big employer by the employment minister.
Like a lot of what this government is doing these days, that move seems aimed at motivating core voters rather than reaching undecided voters. Not a good sign.
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Poilievre popularity problem bad sign for party | Brantford Expositor
Coalition seems like a significant possibility.
Who do you see the conservatives forming a coalition with?