- Reaction score
- 1,512
- Points
- 1,260
Loachman said:Who would have voted for him, or be "fawning over" him now, based upon his abilities, were he bald and named "Smith"?
Change your name and find a hair specialist?
Loachman said:Who would have voted for him, or be "fawning over" him now, based upon his abilities, were he bald and named "Smith"?
??? Hmmm, yet "ABC - Anyone But Conservatives" was an acceptable platform 18 months ago.Altair said:... at some point they are going to need to convince people of reasons why to vote for them other than we aren't the liberals.
If it's ABL, one can easily shift their vote to the NDP, no?Journeyman said:??? Hmmm, yet "ABC - Anyone But Conservatives" was an acceptable platform 18 months ago.
Altair said:If it's ABL, one can easily shift their vote to the NDP, no?
CPC still need to try show people why they should vote for them, and not just focus on being a group focused of raging against the liberals.
Nope. Governments change only when Canadians want to vote someone out. I can't think of a single government change since Mulroney where Canada voted someone in.
Say what you will of the NDP, but they have their message back on track and a bunch of policy ideas out. The conservatives...no carbon tax, liberals suck, anything else?
If that's the case, nothing really matters before the election campaign starts.Underway said:Conservatives don't need anything until election time. No one pays attention too opposition platforms until an election is called. Then approximately 20% of us always vote Conservative, 22% always vote Liberal, 12% always vote NDP, 10% minds can be changed and remainder don't vote. So how does a platform matter right now again?
Remius said:Lumber, I think that that we are doing a lot worse if we also just dismiss this as just what he is wearing and an "accidental invite" given to a convicted criminal.
I could care less about what he is wearing (he is looking a bit ridiculous though). I won't put the accidental invite on him but I am concerned that he might be hurting relations with India. India is a major player and emerging economy seen by some as a foil to China. Accidental invites and other gaffes are not acceptable. Not at that level and not when a lot is at stake. Things like this can come back to haunt.
pbi said:When an Indian PM comes to Canada, do we hope to see him wearing a plaid shirt, or a curling team windbreaker, or snowshoes?
pbi said:I share Remius concern that this silly, almost patronizing behaviour could harm relations with India, one of the world's most important countries, and a coming economy we could tap into. What is the point of this Mr Dress Up business? When an Indian PM comes to Canada, do we hope to see him wearing a plaid shirt, or a curling team windbreaker, or snowshoes? It seems like another case of quite bad judgement.
And I voted for his government!! Yow. That stings.
Avec les pom pom?Lumber said:québec style toque
Underway said:Avec les pom pom?
pbi said:When an Indian PM comes to Canada, do we hope to see him wearing a plaid shirt, or a curling team windbreaker, or snowshoes?
Lumber said:I think it would be awesome if a foreign head of government or state put on a flannel jacket and got photographed in line for a double-double at tims, or was scene sporting a québec style toque while eating poutine, or wearing a stetson and cowboy boots, swigging a Keyston XL.
I'm proud of our Canadian stereotypes and our cultural garb, and to see a foreign dignitary sporting it in good fun would make me smile.
Altair said:If it's ABL, one can easily shift their vote to the NDP, no?
CPC still need to try show people why they should vote for them, and not just focus on being a group focused of raging against the liberals.
Say what you will of the NDP, but they have their message back on track and a bunch of policy ideas out. The conservatives...no carbon tax, liberals suck, anything else?
pbi said:This seems to be a constant problem for what I like to call "moderate conservatism" (or maybe Red Toryism ;D ) in the last few years. There appears to be an almost irresistible temptation to begin drifting towards the right wing and angry populism.
I don’t think a new centrist party is what we need. I think it would be better to roll-back/undo the Unite the Right merger. I think there were a lot of “blue Liberals” who could regularly be counted upon to vote LPC but would have comfortably voted PC given any dissatisfaction with their usual party, and there were a lot of “red Tories” who could regularly be counted upon to vote PC baring any specific dissatisfiers. With the merger of Progressive Conservatives and social conservatives, the CPC is now far enough right so as to no longer compete for the centrist vote against the Liberals. With his right flank secured, Justin Trudeau was free to lead the Liberals to flank the NDP to the left during the last election.FJAG said:You don't have to look as far as the US however to see the issue. We had our own "divide/reunite" the right period with the Reform party. (which I do not put in the same category as the Tea Party, Alt-Right etc.). The trouble is that conservatism is a numbers game and one constantly has to enter into unholy alliances. The best thing would be if the more conservative Liberals and the more liberal Conservatives could create a true centrist party and leave the NDP and the more extreme right to the fringes where they belong.
In this photograph released by the Amritsar District Public Relations Officer on February 21, 2018, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (second from right), his wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau (left), daughter Ella-Grace and son Xavier prepare chappati for a communal vegetarian meal known as 'langar' at a community kitchen at the Golden Temple in Amritsar.HANDOUT / AFP/Getty Images
Crisis over.After weeks of mounting tensions, Alberta and British Columbia moved Thursday to cool off the trade war that had threatened to escalate into a full-blown constitutional crisis.
“In a small way today, B.C. blinked,” Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said after B.C. softened its stance on the most controversial of a five-point plan to boost oil-spill preparedness on the West Coast. As a result, she said, Alberta would lift its ban on B.C. wine.
B.C. Premier John Horgan denied that he was backing down from a fight with Alberta when he announced earlier Thursday that his government would proceed with the first four points of his environmental protection plan but send the fifth and most controversial point – restricting the flow of diluted bitumen from Alberta – to the courts in a reference case.
To that end, Horgan said he was assembling a legal team to make the case that B.C. does have the jurisdictional power to limit the interprovincial trade of oil, which Ottawa and Alberta both dispute.
Altair said:http://nationalpost.com/commodities/b-c-to-seek-reference-case-in-courts-over-pipeline-dispute/wcm/875e4768-b85a-4d67-8aab-a8085cb59a11
Crisis over.
No need for the feds to get nasty. Everyone happy?