A coalition including the BQ would be unacceptable by ANYBODY..........
Hmm...
If you read all the BQ campaign literature, you'd know they have totally dropped their call for separation. They are now pitching themselves as being the party to best represent Quebec interests in Ottawa.
It's not the first time a party based on a provincial perspective has evolved to a point where the original foundation is fundamentally changed.
If you can remember the Social Credit party, you'll remember their original core mandate was to nationalize all financial organizations, and make it so lending institutions would not do lending via fractional reserve accounting. You'll also remember they preached that the best way to keep the economy going was for government to print money and give everyone $25 per month to spend.
Their core constituency was Alberta, and their mark on that province today is ATB Financial, aka the Alberta Treasury Board, owned by the provincial government of Alberta.
They did some interesting things, like make their own currency which was valid in Alberta only, such that when people crossed into BC their coinage was useless, such that coin collectors used to sweep the grounds around railroad tracks crossing the Alberta-BC border hoping to find those rare Alberta coins.
It's too bad the Socreds never got more traction, because if they had, we wouldn't be in the recession we are now, because this recession was not created by inventory surpluses, which is what used to cause them... this one was 100% the result of kids gone wild on a sugar-high in a deregulated candy store.
Anyway, as you can see, the Socreds had some uber-left wing ideas. It's even in their name... *Social* Credit.
But by the time they'd crawled across the country into other provinces, and then into Ottawa, they'd morphed from being a private financier's nightmare to being the most fundamentally right-wing party in the nation.
Likewise, every Quebecker I know has told me that the time for them to separate is over.
They tell me the time for that would have been during the period when the Soviet Union was breaking up and new governments were forming in eastern Europe, when places like Czechoslovakia were breaking apart into Slovakia and the Czech Republic, and when the world was accustomed to new governments and rewritten maps.
Now they simply see it as the party to best represent Quebec's interests, and they tend to view the residuals separatists as being out of touch.
But Harper will keep doing what he does, which is confabulate.
Harper will say that the Liberals and NDP would form a coalition with the BQ like last time.
Except... last time... the BQ was *not* part of the Liberal-NDP coalition. The BQ said they would not stop the Liberal-NDP coalition and would not vote against it. That's no different than the BQ agreeing to not stop a Conservative initiative, which they have done on occasion.
Harper will say that having BQ complicity is effectively the same as being a legal part of the coalition, but it's not, because only members of the coalition get into cabinet. If the Liberal-NDP coalition had happened, there would have been *no* BQers in cabinet.
But let's suppose that the BQ were to join a Liberal-NDP coalition, which they wouldn't...
And let's suppose that the BQ was about separation, which it isn't anymore...
Even if the BQ were to join a Liberal-NDP coalition, which they won't, and even if they were focused on separation, which they're not...
Can you not see how pulling a separatist BQ into a coalition is the *best* way to dilute their focus and water down their ability to do an effective call for separation?!?
So, the BQ is not about separation, but Harper will confabulate and say they are.
The BQ would not join a coalition, but Harper will say they would.
And if the BQ were to join a coalition, then if they did have a separatist agenda, which they don't but which Harper will say they do, Harper will go on to say that their separatist sentiments will take over and dominate the coalition and force a separation of Quebec via the force of a mighty coalition, when in fact joining a coalition would dilute BQs focus.
Yet in the middle of all the ranting against coalitions, Harper will *never* mention that his own party is the result of a coalition of two parties that went beyond coalition all the way to merger.
Does Harper say *anything* that's not a twisting of the facts?
Why does he do it?
Maybe he likes to lie. Some people do.
But maybe it's that he likes being in charge, so he says what he knows his constituents believe in order to get elected, which means all that nonsense coming out his mouth is just a reflection of the bags-full of misconceptions that 39% of Canadians are walking around with in their heads.
That would be sad were it not so dangerous should it get power.
Imagine being ruled by a mob loaded up with false knowledge.
Might as well have a government of alien worshiping crystal gazers and homeopathic healers for all the difference it would make.