Non-Coalition Coalition that’s Definitely NOT a Coalition…

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,174
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Regina, Saskatchewan
You wont find a magic 8 ball that isnt cut with meth or fenty. We are the powerless proletariat. It has come to where left or right is meaningless. We are at the whims of the elite.
Of course , as it has always been .
…& the next nonconfidence vote regarding the current Liberal/NDP & NDP/Liberal government with their Ripped/Torn Up non-coalition coalition that’s definitely not a coalition-type coalition agreement will be on Monday, three days from now…what will Jagmeet Singh do?
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Poilievre kicked off debate in the House of Commons Thursday on a cheekily worded Conservative motion designed to use Singh’s own words against him.

The motion quotes some of Singh's harshest language against the Liberal government along with his staunch support for organized labour.

Poilievre told the House his non-confidence motion will afford MPs the chance to vote on the "wise things that he said" when it's expected to come up next week.

He said if Singh votes against it, that means "he does not want to take responsibility" for his words and have voters "judge his record and his plans."
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,174
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Regina, Saskatchewan
The Liberals are obsessed with getting their gimmicky GST holiday passed. At the same time, on Nov. 29, Statistics Canada announced that for the sixth consecutive quarter (and the eighth quarter in the last nine), Canada’s per-capita Gross Domestic Product declined.
So with two weeks notice, & NDP backing, the Liberals have brought in their GST partial temporary holiday.
 
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IdRatherBeSkiing

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May 28, 2007
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Taxslave2

House Member
Aug 13, 2022
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Singh speaks out of both sides of his mouth. At least until his solid gold pension is secure.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,174
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Singh’s party has been the only leg of a shakey table that’s been propping up the Liberals since they eked out another minority in 2021. The NDP leader has used the grip he holds to squeeze money out of the government for such favoured projects as sort of a national pharmacare and sort of a national dental care, both of which provide limited benefits to specific recipient groups at serious cost to a treasury that is already deeply in debt.
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Well, good for him, you might sayWhat else is the NDP for but to get money for social benefits for those who can’t otherwise obtain them?

Fair enough. But Canada’s finances are now so fraught the prime minister has seen his finance minister tender her resignation while publicly castigating him for pursuing “costly political gimmicks which we can ill afford and which make Canadians doubt that we recognize the gravity of the moment.”

She didn’t have to spell out which gimmicks she meant. Canadians had already figured that out for themselves, making clear that they recognized Trudeau’s last-minute, desperation-driven unveiling of a Christmas tax break and a $250 handout as a political stunt intended to buy votes.

Freeland’s departure leaves Trudeau isolated at the top of a regime in which even his most senior cabinet member no longer has confidence.

In addition to her role as finance minister, Freeland served as deputy prime minister, a post bestowed on her by Trudeau at a time he recognized her as his most able lieutenant and a possible successor. Yet so corroded has her trust in him become that she chose to walk away just hours before she was due to deliver an economic update intended to set out the country’s course at a time of immense uncertainty.

Her departure, she said, came after Trudeau chose the Friday before her speech to inform her he no longer wanted her in the job. That inexplicable example of horrific timing came after reports he’d been once-again wooing former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney as her replacement, even though he lacks a seat in the Commons.

No one knows what Carney thinks of this mess, as he wisely evaded invitations to share his thoughts. Could anyone with his background possibly throw themselves willingly into a tire fire like the one spewing toxic fumes across Canada’s benighted capital?

Freeland’s rebuke is easily the most damning to strike a flailing prime minister, but adds to a growing body of humiliating rebuffs. His cabinet has been steadily leaking members as ministers depart in search of more secure employment than a government consistently 15-20 points back in the polls, led by a man the majority of Canadians say they wish would resign.
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So battered is his standing that the incoming president of the United States has taken to openly mocking him, referring to Trudeau as “Governor … of the Great State of Canada.”

Billionaire Elon Musk derided him as “an insufferable tool.”

Canada’s premiers lectured him over critical remarks on Trump’s victory that Ontario Premier Doug Ford denounced as “not helpful at all.” As it happens, those remarks centred on Americans’ failure to choose a female president, an obvious irony now that the only woman ever to serve as Canada’s finance minister says she can no longer work with him.
Trudeau has moved the government sharply to the left; between them, the Liberal/NDP and NDP/Liberals share about 40 per cent of voter support. It’s possible a significant number of “progressives” who can’t bring themselves to back Trudeau again could opt for New Democrats instead, potentially returning the party to the Official Opposition status it held before 2015.
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Canada needs a government that isn’t in the process of chewing off its own leg. Jagmeet Singh has the ability to offer that opportunity. A failure to act is the sort of thing restless voters might remember.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,174
9,564
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Singh’s party has been the only leg of a shakey table that’s been propping up the Liberals since they eked out another minority in 2021. The NDP leader has used the grip he holds to squeeze money out of the government for such favoured projects as sort of a national pharmacare and sort of a national dental care, both of which provide limited benefits to specific recipient groups at serious cost to a treasury that is already deeply in debt.
View attachment 26220
Well, good for him, you might sayWhat else is the NDP for but to get money for social benefits for those who can’t otherwise obtain them?

Fair enough. But Canada’s finances are now so fraught the prime minister has seen his finance minister tender her resignation while publicly castigating him for pursuing “costly political gimmicks which we can ill afford and which make Canadians doubt that we recognize the gravity of the moment.”

She didn’t have to spell out which gimmicks she meant. Canadians had already figured that out for themselves, making clear that they recognized Trudeau’s last-minute, desperation-driven unveiling of a Christmas tax break and a $250 handout as a political stunt intended to buy votes.

Freeland’s departure leaves Trudeau isolated at the top of a regime in which even his most senior cabinet member no longer has confidence.

In addition to her role as finance minister, Freeland served as deputy prime minister, a post bestowed on her by Trudeau at a time he recognized her as his most able lieutenant and a possible successor. Yet so corroded has her trust in him become that she chose to walk away just hours before she was due to deliver an economic update intended to set out the country’s course at a time of immense uncertainty.

Her departure, she said, came after Trudeau chose the Friday before her speech to inform her he no longer wanted her in the job. That inexplicable example of horrific timing came after reports he’d been once-again wooing former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney as her replacement, even though he lacks a seat in the Commons.

No one knows what Carney thinks of this mess, as he wisely evaded invitations to share his thoughts. Could anyone with his background possibly throw themselves willingly into a tire fire like the one spewing toxic fumes across Canada’s benighted capital?

Freeland’s rebuke is easily the most damning to strike a flailing prime minister, but adds to a growing body of humiliating rebuffs. His cabinet has been steadily leaking members as ministers depart in search of more secure employment than a government consistently 15-20 points back in the polls, led by a man the majority of Canadians say they wish would resign.
View attachment 26221
So battered is his standing that the incoming president of the United States has taken to openly mocking him, referring to Trudeau as “Governor … of the Great State of Canada.”

Billionaire Elon Musk derided him as “an insufferable tool.”

Canada’s premiers lectured him over critical remarks on Trump’s victory that Ontario Premier Doug Ford denounced as “not helpful at all.” As it happens, those remarks centred on Americans’ failure to choose a female president, an obvious irony now that the only woman ever to serve as Canada’s finance minister says she can no longer work with him.
Trudeau has moved the government sharply to the left; between them, the Liberal/NDP and NDP/Liberals share about 40 per cent of voter support. It’s possible a significant number of “progressives” who can’t bring themselves to back Trudeau again could opt for New Democrats instead, potentially returning the party to the Official Opposition status it held before 2015.
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
27,707
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Singh’s party has been the only leg of a shakey table that’s been propping up the Liberals since they eked out another minority in 2021. The NDP leader has used the grip he holds to squeeze money out of the government for such favoured projects as sort of a national pharmacare and sort of a national dental care, both of which provide limited benefits to specific recipient groups at serious cost to a treasury that is already deeply in debt.
View attachment 26220
Well, good for him, you might sayWhat else is the NDP for but to get money for social benefits for those who can’t otherwise obtain them?

Fair enough. But Canada’s finances are now so fraught the prime minister has seen his finance minister tender her resignation while publicly castigating him for pursuing “costly political gimmicks which we can ill afford and which make Canadians doubt that we recognize the gravity of the moment.”

She didn’t have to spell out which gimmicks she meant. Canadians had already figured that out for themselves, making clear that they recognized Trudeau’s last-minute, desperation-driven unveiling of a Christmas tax break and a $250 handout as a political stunt intended to buy votes.

Freeland’s departure leaves Trudeau isolated at the top of a regime in which even his most senior cabinet member no longer has confidence.

In addition to her role as finance minister, Freeland served as deputy prime minister, a post bestowed on her by Trudeau at a time he recognized her as his most able lieutenant and a possible successor. Yet so corroded has her trust in him become that she chose to walk away just hours before she was due to deliver an economic update intended to set out the country’s course at a time of immense uncertainty.

Her departure, she said, came after Trudeau chose the Friday before her speech to inform her he no longer wanted her in the job. That inexplicable example of horrific timing came after reports he’d been once-again wooing former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney as her replacement, even though he lacks a seat in the Commons.

No one knows what Carney thinks of this mess, as he wisely evaded invitations to share his thoughts. Could anyone with his background possibly throw themselves willingly into a tire fire like the one spewing toxic fumes across Canada’s benighted capital?

Freeland’s rebuke is easily the most damning to strike a flailing prime minister, but adds to a growing body of humiliating rebuffs. His cabinet has been steadily leaking members as ministers depart in search of more secure employment than a government consistently 15-20 points back in the polls, led by a man the majority of Canadians say they wish would resign.
View attachment 26221
So battered is his standing that the incoming president of the United States has taken to openly mocking him, referring to Trudeau as “Governor … of the Great State of Canada.”

Billionaire Elon Musk derided him as “an insufferable tool.”

Canada’s premiers lectured him over critical remarks on Trump’s victory that Ontario Premier Doug Ford denounced as “not helpful at all.” As it happens, those remarks centred on Americans’ failure to choose a female president, an obvious irony now that the only woman ever to serve as Canada’s finance minister says she can no longer work with him.
Trudeau has moved the government sharply to the left; between them, the Liberal/NDP and NDP/Liberals share about 40 per cent of voter support. It’s possible a significant number of “progressives” who can’t bring themselves to back Trudeau again could opt for New Democrats instead, potentially returning the party to the Official Opposition status it held before 2015.
Nope I say the block will once again be the official opposition. Time will tell .
 
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,174
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Regina, Saskatchewan
“We simply cannot go on like this,” Poilievre said. “Mr. Trudeau is being held in office by one man: Mr. Jagmeet Singh.”
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In September, the federal New Democrats pulled their support from the supply-and-confidence agreement with the Liberal government, which so far has meant absolutely nothing.
 
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,174
9,564
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Regina, Saskatchewan
In September, the federal New Democrats pulled their support from the supply-and-confidence agreement with the Liberal government, which so far has meant absolutely nothing.
#1 on my list to get rid of.
Maybe you’re not alone there.
 
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,174
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Regina, Saskatchewan
1734556530470.jpeg
“Everything’s on the Table!”
“Everything’s on the table!”
“Everything’s on the table!”
“Everything’s on the table?”
"If there's a vote on the table about retaliatory tariffs to fight back against Trump, versus calling an election in the midst of threats to hundreds of thousands of jobs, I want to make a decision that's in the best interest of my pension Canadians," Singh said.
"I'm not going to speculate on what that decision is now, but I can tell you what I am saying right now, Trump is a real threat. People are worried about their jobs. Trudeau has to go. I'm not going to speculate about what's going to happen months (???) from now. When that happens, I'll make a decision."

The fall sitting began with Singh “tearing up” the two-party pact that saw the NDP back the Liberals up on confidence votes.

The fall sitting ended with the NDP remaining the only opposition party still propping Trudeau's government up, with the Bloc Quebecois and Conservatives pushing for an early election.

Asked what he sees as the downside in pulling support now, Singh said: "Why would I box myself in and say I'm going to do something definitive when we don't know what's going to happen?"

The NDP leader continued to say that he wants to see what transpires over the next few weeks, and will wait until the country has a better sense of what's going on….somewhere about February 25th 2025 or later???
Speaking on CTV Power Play on Monday, New Westminster—Burnaby MP Peter Julian offered up a curious timeline for when the NDP would join opposition parties in toppling the government in a confidence vote.

“What (NDP Leader) Jagmeet Singh said very clearly is that the Prime Minister has lost our confidence, he must resign,” Julian told host Vassy Kapelos.

“When we come back in the new year, in February/March, (???) if the Prime Minister is still in office at that time, if he hasn’t stepped down, I think the NDP will be taking the taking the proper conclusions on that as Jagmeet Singh said, and would be using all of the tools that we have available.” (???)

Despite the House of Commons calendar clearly stating Jan. 27 as the first day of the 2025 session, Julian insisted measures wouldn’t be taken until well over a month after MPs return from their Christmas break.

According to calculations by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF,) Singh’s six-year eligibility for a lifetime parliamentary pension begins on Feb. 25, 2025.
Singh has the wherewithal to put this dreadful government out of its misery, yet he’s consistently refused to support non-confidence votes that would have done just that. The unmitigated hypocrisy of New Democratic Party Leader Jagmeet Singh during the recent chaotic days in Parliament is breathtaking.
 
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,174
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Regina, Saskatchewan
1734613468653.jpeg
The federal NDP leader has spent this week furrowing his brow and occasionally shaking his first about the outrage he has witnessed on Parliament Hill: That is, Liberal infighting.

It’s too much, Singh says. The Liberals should be focused on more important things. And that’s why he’s calling on Justin Trudeau to resign.

That is, quite plainly, not up to Jagmeet Singh. He has no more right to demand that the Liberal leader resign than he does to demand that Disney stop remaking old movies or that the Blue Jays sign a power-hitting outfielder. None of it is in his portfolio.

What he can do, however, is withdraw support from the Liberal minority government, which he has still not, somehow, managed to do.
Freeland, eventually, after several years as a loyal henchman, refused to be a rubber stamp, so she was tossed aside in favour of Dominic LeBlanc, a close family friend of Trudeau’s who is sure to do the prime minister’s bidding for as long as he lasts in the job. Having a puppet in the finance portfolio has always been the goal of Justin Trudeau — a man who should go down in history as Canada’s worst ever finance minister…& Jagmeet Singh can’t not (intentional double negative) support him.
 
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petros

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Nov 21, 2008
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View attachment 26285
The federal NDP leader has spent this week furrowing his brow and occasionally shaking his first about the outrage he has witnessed on Parliament Hill: That is, Liberal infighting.

It’s too much, Singh says. The Liberals should be focused on more important things. And that’s why he’s calling on Justin Trudeau to resign.

That is, quite plainly, not up to Jagmeet Singh. He has no more right to demand that the Liberal leader resign than he does to demand that Disney stop remaking old movies or that the Blue Jays sign a power-hitting outfielder. None of it is in his portfolio.

What he can do, however, is withdraw support from the Liberal minority government, which he has still not, somehow, managed to do.
Freeland, eventually, after several years as a loyal henchman, refused to be a rubber stamp, so she was tossed aside in favour of Dominic LeBlanc, a close family friend of Trudeau’s who is sure to do the prime minister’s bidding for as long as he lasts in the job. Having a puppet in the finance portfolio has always been the goal of Justin Trudeau — a man who should go down in history as Canada’s worst ever finance minister…& Jagmeet Singh can’t not (intentional double negative) support him.
Is Jagmeet running a peddle powered tuk tuk?