He has used it in his favour. Ontario has voted Conservative in the past. It just has to be managed properly by the Conservative leader which the last 2 have failed to do.Like turdOWE would change a system that is rigged in his favour.
He has used it in his favour. Ontario has voted Conservative in the past. It just has to be managed properly by the Conservative leader which the last 2 have failed to do.Like turdOWE would change a system that is rigged in his favour.
Shooting for the Center, which a couple of decades ago might have been described at liberal-ish (left of but sort’a towards it). That’s not an accurate description of Liberals today though. I get what you’re try’n to say though.And that don't matter. The left was never gonna vote for him anyhow. You're shooting for the center, the moderates who are kind-sorta liberal-ish, the disaffected NDPers who are now seeing their party as the Libs tag-along little brother, and all the people of no or only loose party affiliation who are fed up with the feckless, nice-hair fascist. Not the ones who adore him, nor the ones who hates him forever, preciousss! They're in the bag.
I don't know, maybe a view from abroad could help clarify.Shooting for the Center, which a couple of decades ago might have been described at liberal-ish (left of but sort’a towards it). That’s not an accurate description of Liberals today though. I get what you’re try’n to say though.
The NDP (Federally) use to be out to the far left with what eventually became the Greens, but now the Liberals are out NDP’ing the NDP and have been trying to for years, and the Greens (both of them I think, unless there’s still three of them?) are still off somewhere in a wing. The NDP & Liberals have been propping up each other for years in their common agenda instead of just a sort’a ‘coincidental identical monopoly of announcements like we’ve seen in the trucker convoy thing’ but have only ‘come out’a the closet’ recently announcing their “non-coalition coalition” for synchronicity in announcement
That leaves Whatever Maxine Bernier’s breakaway party is called, and the Conservatives, and the Bloc Québécois (who’s only interest is Quebec and yet they’re still somehow a federal party?).
What is Centerist in TODAY’s political landscape in Canada?
The most recent guess I can find quickly predates that last (couple?, they happen so often lately) federal election and is from Spring of 2019.
It places the Liberals, NDP, PPC, Bloc, & Greens all over on the left (with Liberals closest to the middle of those mentioned above at that point), & the Conservatives to the center right.
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The Liberals arguably swung over to the left of the NDP to out-NDP them in the Liberal/NDP mating dance and union in their non-coalition coalition now that they’ve found the balls to tell their parents.
Maybe the whole country (the metropolitan Ottawa/Vancouver/Montreal/Toronto area’s anyway) have swung off to the left of the left….& that’s where the areas are ‘seat’ rich, even with the Conservatives getting the popular vote in the last two consecutive elections, we’ve gotten successive Trudeau governments regardless of the wants or needs of the rest of the country.
Now the Conservatives will have to swing ‘somewhat’ to the left a bit, as they have, within moderation, (& where would that put them on the political spectrum above?) but will have to keep in mind that they aren’t NDP/Liberals/CCP/BLOC/Greens when doing so…as they’re supposed to be the balance to the financial sieve, and the responsible parent in governance as their position and selling feature to those that eventually realize that someone has to pay for the Trudeau/Singh marriage.
Is there a direct relationship between Provincial and federal Conservatives in your area? We don’t have enough of a provincial Conservative party in BC to count so I don’t know what they do, but there is no relationship between thee BC Liberals and the federal liberals. BC liberals are more like conservatives.The problem I have with the above is that the CPC is too far left, that it should be over near Statism more.
But I agree that Liberalism has shifted more left itself, though I don't think it's gone passed NDP, rather I think NDP and Liberalism are neck and neck for a spot between Liberalism and Socialism.
The PPC is also wrong though to me; at least here in NB, they seemed more CPC/Statism than anything on the 'left'.
Greens, at least locally, seem more to be vying for the Liberal stance.
I know we're talking Federally mostly here, but I want to point out that Provincially, the CPC is not helping the Federal branch what so ever. Higgs has screwed the province over a LOT in his tenure and one of his latest gigs is to force - not suggest, FORCE, without much input of the locals at ALL - communities to amalgamate. If there wasn't so much wrong with the idea it might have been okay, but there's a push to get this done in basically 1 year, there was NO real consult with residents of the new 'Entities' (I'll be in 40), things we've been told were 'set in stone' turned out not to be when dealing with the Irvings, and there are too many questions and seeming conflicts of interest, IMO, for this to be legit.
When you have provincial parts of a party do shit like this, it reflects badly on the Federal level which is why I think sometimes the elections do go the way they do (on top of every other reason). If people think the province is screwing them over, the Federal under that same party will only do the same.
Charest is a TurdOWE bootlicker. Anyone not supporting the convoy is a traitor.Charest says Poilievre should be suspended from CPC leadership race because he supported the convoy.
I think Charest should be suspended because he supports the carbon tax. Just more divisive politics from the Laurentien elites
Is there a direct relationship between Provincial and federal Conservatives in your area?
We don’t have enough of a provincial Conservative party in BC to count so I don’t know what they do, but there is no relationship between thee BC Liberals and the federal liberals. BC liberals are more like conservatives.
Well, the political compass I posted is three years old & an election (or two) back, and things have shifted around somewhat…& it’s federal as opposed to individual provincial entities.The problem I have with the above is that the CPC is too far left, that it should be over near Statism more.
But I agree that Liberalism has shifted more left itself, though I don't think it's gone passed NDP, rather I think NDP and Liberalism are neck and neck for a spot between Liberalism and Socialism.
The PPC is also wrong though to me; at least here in NB, they seemed more CPC/Statism than anything on the 'left'.
Greens, at least locally, seem more to be vying for the Liberal stance….etc….
Spending is where the policy differences show up big time bvetween the right and the left. While there is wisdom to tightening the purse strings and shrinking the size of government, history has shown us a bleak downside to that strategy. The market freedom gained by lower regulation has given us economic and social inequality that has grown out of control to the point where it is having effects on our day to day lives in terms of health and social problems, and environmental decline. In short, we have turned over control of the economy to the corporate sector and they are using that power irresponsibly.Over the next three years, as inflation grows and paycheques purchasing power shrinks, and Justin has to not only further rent Jagmeet’s backing (which he would do anyway & has for years now), but out-Left him to make the NDP more irrelevant, the financial spiral will become obvious to all but the upper & lower extremes of the financial compass…and people will wake up, and realize they need to get their financial house (federally) in order.
Yes the robber barons are making a comeback and leaving death and destruction in their wake . It looks like all regulatory bodies are having their budgets slashed and employment standards being squashed .Spending is where the policy differences show up big time bvetween the right and the left. While there is wisdom to tightening the purse strings and shrinking the size of government, history has shown us a bleak downside to that strategy. The market freedom gained by lower regulation has given us economic and social inequality that has grown out of control to the point where it is having effects on our day to day lives in terms of health and social problems, and environmental decline. In short, we have turned over control of the economy to the corporate sector and they are using that power irresponsibly.
Control of the economy should reside with the corporate sector. Governments, and especially clueless left leaning ones have shown they are incapable of being fiscally responsible. Even the majority of social programs, which are based on sound ideals all show significant lack of basic fiscal responsibility.Spending is where the policy differences show up big time bvetween the right and the left. While there is wisdom to tightening the purse strings and shrinking the size of government, history has shown us a bleak downside to that strategy. The market freedom gained by lower regulation has given us economic and social inequality that has grown out of control to the point where it is having effects on our day to day lives in terms of health and social problems, and environmental decline. In short, we have turned over control of the economy to the corporate sector and they are using that power irresponsibly.
We've been handing over more and more control to the corporate sector for the last forty or fifty years ans what have we got to show for it? A vanishing middle class and a dying environment. I'll tell you what's clueless, it's the "profit above all else" mindset of the very few at the top of the food chain.Control of the economy should reside with the corporate sector. Governments, and especially clueless left leaning ones have shown they are incapable of being fiscally responsible. Even the majority of social programs, which are based on sound ideals all show significant lack of basic fiscal responsibility.
Destroying resource sector jobs in rural ares to buy votes from clueless city leftys is not good governance.
You are still living in the 1960’s , we have the largest middle class in the history of mankind , if you missed the boat , whose fault is that ? So does the corporate sector control the regulatory agencies , WCB , the CRTC and the CRA ? Where is this dying environment ? I can see beatle killed pine in our forests , but there is growth exploding in those forests , the same with clear cuts after a year or two the forest floor is booming . Our atmosphere is much cleaner then forty or so years ago as well what with the usage of natural gas and unleaded gasoline . Your doom and gloom senarios do not fit reality imho .We've been handing over more and more control to the corporate sector for the last forty or fifty years ans what have we got to show for it? A vanishing middle class and a dying environment. I'll tell you what's clueless, it's the "profit above all else" mindset of the very few at the top of the food chain.
PS: What is it about people like you that find it so hard to express themselves without insult and name-calling ? Didn't your parents ever teach you any manners ?