Liberals agree not to run candidate against Green leader

MrNose

New Member
Apr 13, 2007
2
0
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would you mind explaining how this hurts the NDP? I can't see how they would do anything but welcome the dichotomy. Dion dropped his spoiler and pegged May into a riding she can't win.

the best hustles ALWAYS look like mistakes.

Well I was addressing motive here, not what will actually happen. If Liberals remain loyal to Dion and May manages to grab some red tories she could win, but if Liberals split between the NDP and the Conservatives out of anger and the NDP doesn't lose votes based on the "ooh, a party leader" factor than its a toss up between Mackay and the NDP candidate.

I also just found out that every NS Lib MP was initially against this plan before they were "persuaded" not to be by Dion. Does every party not care about NS?
 

westmanguy

Council Member
Feb 3, 2007
1,651
18
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Green doesn't necessarily mean your left leaning...
...Wikipedia, exert from "Elizabeth May" profile

Stance on abortion

May has recently made controversial statements on the issue of abortion. Although Green Party policy is officially pro-choice, while speaking to the Sisters of St. Joseph during the London by-election, May stated that she personally sees the issue as a "moral dilemma" and not "clear-cut black-and-white". May, who is a Christian, further stated her personal views, "I'm against abortion. I don't think a woman has a frivolous right to choose". In the past, May reported, she has "talked women out of having abortions". She further stated, "I would never have an abortion myself, not in a million years. I can't imagine the circumstances that would ever induce me to it". However, on the other side of the issue, May believes that they must be legal and available, because "If we make them illegal, women will die".[12] Following reports of May's statements, prominent Canadian feminist Judy Rebick announced that she was withdrawing her previous support of May and the Green Party due to May's questioning "the most important victory of the women's movement of my generation". [13]
Responding to Judy Rebick’s open letter, Elizabeth May explicitly reaffirmed that she supported a woman's right to access a safe and legal abortion and that “I never said a woman's right to choose trivialized anything. Not ever.” To clarify the misunderstanding around the Green Party’s recently approved Pro-Choice/Pro-Life position, Elizabeth May further wrote “Some feminist scholars have pointed out that the slogan 'right to choose' focuses on too narrow a context. What are a woman's real rights in society? Where are our economic rights? While a woman must have the right to terminate a pregnancy, what of the larger context? What about the on-going struggle to create a truly equal relationship of sexual equality that might (would) help avoid unwanted pregnancies in the first place? What about the responsibility of both sexual partners to avoid unwanted pregnancy (and while on the topic, to avoid sexually transmitted diseases that would be reduced through use of condoms)? I believe that respectful dialogue is possible even around such an emotionally charged issue as this. Not every opponent of legal abortions is unthinking. Neither is every supporter of legal abortion unwilling to acknowledge the moral complexity of the issue. Some common ground could be found, I believe, when the discussion shifts to a broader context”.

May is against abortion!
 

Toro

Senate Member
May 24, 2005
5,468
109
63
Florida, Hurricane Central
Allright, whose the wussy?

Liberals agree not to... April 14th, 2007 03:33 AM Bad joke
 

MikeyDB

House Member
Jun 9, 2006
4,612
63
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One of the side-effects that irked me was Jack Layton commenting on the Liberal-Green coalition of sorts....called the agreement made contrary to open and fair democracy...meanwhile Jack the Inept....was the guy who supported the Liberals when that was convenient a few months ago....kept the Libs in when they should have been kicked out...
Jack Layton should bottle his ineptitude and hypocrisy...I'm sure there's a market for it ...perhaps south of the 49th????
 

westmanguy

Council Member
Feb 3, 2007
1,651
18
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I think Jack Layton realizes the Libs. are screwed and its going to be a Conservative win next election (with big minority or small majority), and he wants to align himself with the Cons for now.
 

MikeyDB

House Member
Jun 9, 2006
4,612
63
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Like Mackay and Day....Layton couldn't find his arse with both hands and a road map...
NDP....nauseating disapointing politicians....
 

westmanguy

Council Member
Feb 3, 2007
1,651
18
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Do not get me wrong, I dislike the NDP.. they are even worse then the Libs.

But the NDP is not a big threat... just a $hit disturber in elections, and they disturb the left not the right. Same with the greens.

Green & NDP just take away from the Liberals. And I don't think we will get NDP voters this year voting Liberal strategically... most people now Dion is a sinking ship.