During the election, even after the Wall Street crash, when Harper was explicitly asked whether his party would run a deficit, he explicitly stated that he wouldn't. This of course might have helped him win the election because the other leaders were too honest to make such a promise. Not a very fair playing field now is it?
Now if the Conservative party were in some form of co-alition right now, it could be excusable since it would be the co-alition and not just the Conservatives alone who would be planning deficit spending. But the Conservatives are not in any co-alition right now and as such ought to have a duty to either stick to their election promise of no deficit no matter what, or enter into a coalition with some other party, most likely the Liberal party.
Do you think the Conservative Party ought to stick to its election promise in the absence of a coalition?
Now if the Conservative party were in some form of co-alition right now, it could be excusable since it would be the co-alition and not just the Conservatives alone who would be planning deficit spending. But the Conservatives are not in any co-alition right now and as such ought to have a duty to either stick to their election promise of no deficit no matter what, or enter into a coalition with some other party, most likely the Liberal party.
Do you think the Conservative Party ought to stick to its election promise in the absence of a coalition?