There's
a useful article by Kady O'Malley in iPolitics that concludes with this paragraph:
"The prime minister would definitely do well to keep those breathlessly hagiographical headlines in perspective – and, for heaven’s sakes, just stop gloating
over that boxing match already. But the rest of us might want to do the same with our reflexive eye-roll when he’s depicted as anything more than a pretty-boy
dilettante who lucked into the job based on his family name."
Now I know some of you will have reflexive eye-rolls when Ms O'Malley, a CBC reporter, is cited but she's right,
in my opinion:
1.
Team Trudeau (the PMO, which now has tentacles inside the PCO) remains locked in campaign mode; they scored such a big, unexpected win that they didn't have to worry about governing in 2016, they could just bask in the glory of it all, but they didn't accomplish much, legislatively, in 2017, either and people are starting to notice. Now, 2018 is time to start campaigning again but one should want to run on a record. Currently the Trudeau record is underwhelming; and
2. Teams
Blue and
Orange need to get over the "just not ready" and "being PM is not an entry level job" notions: Canadians didn't buy it. Canadians
like Justin Trudeau, despite the Khard fiasco they still trust him more than they do Andrew Scheer and whoever will lead the NDP.
Both sides All sides need policies that will make sense to enough Canadians ... tactically the Conservatives need to keep hammering out-of-control, never ending deficits; it's a long, hard slog to make that case but Canadians are, generally, a thrifty, frugal people ~ who love free stuff ~ and they can be frightened into fiscal responsibility. The NDP needs to hammer at the broken promise of electoral reform (that caused (I have read) as many as 1 million normally NDP voters to shift to the Liberals, many, mainly, on that issue) and to stress that Trudeau's "middle class" appears to exclude hourly wage earners. The Liberals need to cobble together a coherent "vision" of the Canada they want ... Canadians will not settle for "I'm not Stephen Harper" in 2019.