Um, so is the Conservative voter suppression scandal swept under the rug ALREADY?
On the F-35: [url]http://translat...ederale/archives/2012/04/20120403-193708.html
A government worthy of a middle-east country.
Have to wait to see if elections canada finds more evidence and links it to the party
Alberta spending isn't high. It's our low taxes that put us in the red. And Danielle Smith wants to bring back ralphbucks no less. Guh.
"Funding will remain frozen and Canada will not purchase new aircraft until further due diligence, oversight and transparency is applied to the process..."
"We haven't yet signed a contract..."
@CBCAlerts: CBC/Radio-Canada to cut 650 positions over next 3 years. CBC has applied to run advertising on Radio 2. #cbc #cdnpoli
What great job creators the Conservatives are.
What great job creators the Conservatives are.
The NFB are getting hit pretty hard too. Sucks because I really liked that viewing area in the Toronto location.
650 jobs being eliminated at CBC/Radio-Canada... Ouch! It's also a bit awkward that there will be ads on Radio 2 and Espace Musique from now on. I guess it's okay in the end since there are tv ads on CBC/SRC channels.
NFB/ONF are also closing their Cinerobotheque in MTL on September 1st (they didn't update the page yet) and some of their viewing rooms in the greater toronto area. At least they still have their website :/
These cuts and 19 000 positions eliminated in the governement will probably help fund those F-35, right?
So is this F-35 thing going to be a big scandal or will it be forgotten like everything else?
Death by a thousand paper cuts. It won't matter until the writ is dropped.
edit: Their demise would probably be similar to how the PCs are dropping in Alberta. Just replace the WR with some other party...
The problem is that the only way the Liberals lost (all those years ago!) was when they lost Quebec... The Conservatives would have to lose support in Alberta/BC and I don't see people there running to the NDP any time soon...
Well, unless the WR becomes a national regional party like the Bloc. lol
The problem is that the only way the Liberals lost (all those years ago!) was when they lost Quebec... The Conservatives would have to lose support in Alberta/BC and I don't see people there running to the NDP any time soon...
Well, unless the WR becomes a national regional party like the Bloc. lol
Revenue said:As recently as 2008-09, natural gas and by-product royalties accounted for nearly half of total non-renewable resource revenue, but are now forecast to account for only 11% of the total in 2012-13
The Alberta election is peculiar to me.
You have a lot of people complaining about excessive spending, yet they never want to see cuts in healthcare and education, which are the two largest sources of expenditures last time I checked. A lot of conservatives here in Alberta point to the deficits to back up their argument that collectively the government is spending too much, yet completely neglect to ask whether the problem is revenue related. A huge portion of royalty revenue is actually from natural gas, which if you haven't checked lately is sitting at a 10 year low.
Furthermore, we shouldn't ignore the fact that an infrastructure build-out in the public sector to support the expanding economy is going to be extremely expensive, especially when one factors in that inflation is almost surely higher in Alberta than any other province. I don't believe per capita expenditures are completely accurate when comparing expenditures across provinces because costs are going to be higher in Alberta. Expenditures as a percentage of GDP would potentially be more accurate. Unfortunately I'm having trouble with Cansim so I can't look it up right now.
Does this completely explain the deficits? No, but it is a start, and a lot more intellectually honest that what the WR often puts out.
I'm not saying the government hasn't wasted money (see the stupidity of the carbon capture projects), just that anyone who thinks electing the WR will somehow fix the deficits is naive.
I don't think that policy really plays a large role in Alberta politics as a rule. Dogma, "who's got our back," and just a generally massive concentration of power into the hands of a relatively small political elite rule the day.
I don't think the plausible WR victory is really a lot like the previous upsets in Alberta politics in that the elite of Alberta politics seem to have just shifted their power base to a new party. This is why, for example, you wouldn't ever see WR become a federal bloc party. The powerful people in the WR party, and really no longer the PC party, are essentially the same as in the provincial arm of the federal CPC. They have no desire to conflict with that.
The CPC and the WR would, if anything, probably enjoy a much closer relationship than the PCs and the CPC ever did.
So is this F-35 thing going to be a big scandal or will it be forgotten like everything else?
Governments usually fall through a confluence of factors, this will add to the pile. That said, we're headed into a constit break for Easter, so it's entirely possible that this will be gone and forgotten in two days.
After all, little money of the giant $60B claim (or whatever it was) has actually been spent. No matter how abhorrent the (non) procurement process and oversight processes are, they don't resonate. Administrative, hypertechnical errors may well come across as hinky, but they rarely - if ever - stick.
Eh, the Liberals lost one regional support base (starting with the prairies) after another until the only one they were left with was Ontario and the meritimes. Ontario is key to winning, but Ontario alone can't win.
The same is true of Alberta for the Conservatives, except even more so. I don't think you can consider the CPC's support base in BC or the other two prairie provinces to be quite as much like the Bloc's dominance of Quebec as the CPC's support base in Alberta is.
But mild erosion of support in Alberta and more significant erosion in BC, Sask, and Manitoba would do huge harm to the CPC's ability to form a majority government, and all those things are actually happening right now. It's just a question of whether or not they persist through to the next election.
Frankly, I think the odds of the CPC forming a majority government in 2015 are fairly low. Canadian political pundits have a habit of turning short term trends into ridiculous long-term prophesies, and I don't see Harper's CPC's dominance being any more permanent and perpetual than the Liberal party's 90s dominance, the PC Party's dominance in Alberta (look at it crumble), or any of the other myriad ubermensch party prophecies we've heard in this country. And in 2015, the CPC will have been in power for over 10 years, and that's a long time for any political dynasty in Canadian politics.
I guess the real question is who would anyone in the west vote for except for the CPC? Even if Mulcair ends up being better than Jack Layton, the NDP is dead in non-GTA/Hamilton Ontario and Alberta and the Liberals are still trying to figure out how to be relevant, I suppose.
I guess the real question is who would anyone in the west vote for except for the CPC? Even if Mulcair ends up being better than Jack Layton, the NDP is dead in non-GTA/Hamilton Ontario and Alberta and the Liberals are still trying to figure out how to be relevant, I suppose.
Eh, I think most people saw the Liberals crumbling the moment Chretien jumped ship. The same thing happened with Blair and Labour in the UK after all.Eh, you're extrapolating far too much here. We're one year off one election and 3 years from the next. Trying to prognosticate where any given party is 'dead' from that is just ridiculous. Such guesses in 2003 would have had the Liberals ruling into eternity. Basically, your post is doing the exact thing I mentioned. Turning a short term trend into some kind of permanent fact.
I'm sure current polls are based on presumed discontent with the CPC rather than any real support for the NDP though - especially since Mulcair hasn't really had any time to make his mark (outside of his party anyway). If the strategy is to just be personality-less like Harper was when he was in opposition and let the government destroy itself? Maybe those poll results are onto something. But unlike the CPC, the NDP has to define itself against both the government and the Liberals, so they don't have the luxury of "at least we're not them" as a form of attack.Um, not sure if you read the poll numbers, but the NDP is enjoying an up-tick in BC. Also, the NDP is gaining in the Atlantic provinces too.
maharg is right in that, if current projections hold, the CPC will be back in minority territory in 2015.
Eh, I think most people saw the Liberals crumbling the moment Chretien jumped ship. The same thing happened with Blair and Labour in the UK after all.
I don't think it's unreasonable to look at the last couple of decades of election results that suggest that the only real Federal battleground is Ontario and that the NDP have no real chance here. And looking at the Liberals, we've gone through three ineffective party leaders to an interim leader that the Conservatives are already attacking with smear ads (Rae ruined Ontario, etc, etc). Is it possible something will change in the next couple of years to revitalize the Liberal party? Would an NDP-Liberal merger be on the table if either side of that little debate becomes desperate? Any of that can happen. But I'm looking at trends that begin with Layton being made NDP Leader and Martin floundering his way to a minority government.
I suppose the real sign of any change in the winds would be whenever Harper decides to retire. I imagine he's learned that much from his predecessors that he doesn't want to stick around just to be labelled a loser. Let the next guy who takes over be burdened with that label.
I'm sure current polls are based on presumed discontent with the CPC rather than any real support for the NDP though - especially since Mulcair hasn't really had any time to make his mark (outside of his party anyway). If the strategy is to just be personality-less like Harper was when he was in opposition and let the government destroy itself? Maybe those poll results are onto something. But unlike the CPC, the NDP has to define itself against both the government and the Liberals, so they don't have the luxury of "at least we're not them" as a form of attack.
Eh, I think most people saw the Liberals crumbling the moment Chretien jumped ship. The same thing happened with Blair and Labour in the UK after all.
I don't think it's unreasonable to look at the last couple of decades of election results that suggest that the only real Federal battleground is Ontario and that the NDP have no real chance here. And looking at the Liberals, we've gone through three ineffective party leaders to an interim leader that the Conservatives are already attacking with smear ads (Rae ruined Ontario, etc, etc). Is it possible something will change in the next couple of years to revitalize the Liberal party? Would an NDP-Liberal merger be on the table if either side of that little debate becomes desperate? Any of that can happen. But I'm looking at trends that begin with Layton being made NDP Leader and Martin floundering his way to a minority government.
Ok, so let's take a time machine back to 2003:
Throwing your question back to you, in 2003 the "liberals were crumbling", but who are people going to vote for? A Toronto city councilor with delusions of grandeur or a hardcore conservative from Alberta? Obviously the Liberals are in bad shape, but the new CPC has to deal with their legacy of being a bunch of redneck hicks merged with the party that lost official party status only 10 years ago! And the NDP, hah. They're lucky when they can muster up more than 10 seats.
I dunno if you were paying attention then, but that's pretty much exactly what someone would have said if you'd suggested a CPC government in 2003. By 2005 things may have been a bit more obvious, but ehhh, the idea of Liberal hegemony over the government was still pretty firmly entrenched and it led to just as ridiculous prophesies about parties never being able to make a vote in X region or Y region.
At any rate, Quebec is key to the NDP the way Ontario (not Alberta) is key to the CPC. I think both are taken on much more faith than they deserve for their respective parties, but it's the CPC's game to lose here.
I think this will resonate a lot more than it did when it caused our last election. Now it stinks of a massive coverup of incredible misspending. That won't play well at all.
Although I think the American primary process is a bit ridiculous, if each of the former Liberal party leaders had to go from province to province to get votes from local Liberals, those weakness probably would have been exposed fairly quickly.I still can't believe no one checked his background for such weaknesses. I can't believe they elected Dion either. Hopefully they do a thorough background check for the next leader.
He was good at exploiting it. I mean, sure he won based on various lies (we'll kill GST) and incompetent moves from Campbell's campaign (the ad with his face), but he was also able to destroy Day as well - split base or not.The decline of the liberals started long long before they even had Chretien (well, as leader). They only survived the 90s off the back of a split right.
Yeah, I think the Liberals are mostly done. The problem is that as long as both parties exist, the votes in the Maritimes end up being a toss-up and work against whoever is able to be a credible alternative to the Tories.I think your skepticism comes from an assumption the Liberals have any hope of a comeback in 2015. I don't think they do. Their Ontario base is all they have left and they really have nothing to offer in any kind of agreement with the NDP anymore. All that leaves is whether or not the Liberal voters in Ontario will buy in with the rest of the country on the NDP being the new federal party of the left and start doing what NDP voters have been doing for decades: Vote strategically.
That said, I never said I thought anyone but the CPC would form government in 2015. I consider it more possible than maybe a lot of people, but what I said I felt was unlikely was the CPC forming a *majority*. I don't, personally, think anyone will form a majority in 2012. The electoral math is against the current state being stable, ESPECIALLY if the Bloc makes a comeback, imo.
Haha, fair enough.Stockwell Day was a disaster all on his own. He didn't need any help from anyone. Basically the right's version of Dion.
Although I think the American primary process is a bit ridiculous, if each of the former Liberal party leaders had to go from province to province to get votes from local Liberals, those weakness probably would have been exposed fairly quickly.
Looking at how all this stuff happens, it's all back room deals anyway. The frontrunners promise the losers-to-be something in order to get their endorsement and hopefully their delegate votes for the next ballot. There's no real vetting process.
(Remember, Peter McKay only became PC leader after he made a promise to not merge with the Alliance. Of course, we know how that turned out. I'm sure that guy wishes he could have taken that back. )
I think Mulcair had it wrapped up so much that there wasn't any real point. I'm sure some of them found the anti-Mulcair stuff a bit counter-productive as well (Certainly, all of the Republicans are damaged goods in some way at this point).I can agree with this idea. If it was similar to the American process you could be sure that his competitors would have tried to find these flaws beforehand. Instead, they were revealed to the world days after he was elected as the leader or the Liberal party. The only way Dion made it to the top was because of these back room deals too. I'm quite happy these kind of shady deals didn't seem to be present during the NDP leadership campaign. After each rounds, the defeated candidates simply told their supporters to vote for who they thought would be the best leader and it didn't seem like there were some forced rallying like analysts suspected there would be.
I have an open-ended question for every user that frequents this thread:
How long have you been studying, keeping up with, or participating in politics?
I read this thread and become jealous of how one can talk about these matters. I've only just recently decided to try and become interested/follow Canadian politics (mostly because I live here). Over the past year I have tried to keep up with the majority of events happening within Canadian politics, but I don't feel as though I can discuss it with as much ease and intelligence like I have seen other members/people do. It bothers me that I am so ignorant about this topic. I guess I have a couple of other questions:
How do you become aware of these stories? Do you visit a popular news site on a regular basis, have a schedule that you follow everyday?
How many hours per day would you say that you spend discussing/reading different news stories?
Do you do it because you are passionate about it, or because you feel as though you need to in order to become a better human being?
It was fun to watch government in process and actually legitimized the function of the Senate in my eyes.
Yeah, it's the one thing that I wish they'd drop, since it's such a pointless thing to bring up and isn't anything that anyone in Canada is ready to tackle in the short or long-term anyway.The NDP's dogmatic anti-senate position is something that really irks me about them.
Mulcair (or whomever) will learn the hard lesson that Harper learned when he tried to play that game - that their legislative process will grind to a halt and that the only way to fight it is to stack the upper house.I can't even imagine what they'll do if they form government. The CPC could really screw them over with their control of the senate if they refuse to seat anyone. Here in Alberta where we actually have the whole senator-in-waiting elections, the NDP refuses to nominate anyone.
I have an open-ended question for every user that frequents this thread:
How long have you been studying, keeping up with, or participating in politics?
I read this thread and become jealous of how one can talk about these matters. I've only just recently decided to try and become interested/follow Canadian politics (mostly because I live here). Over the past year I have tried to keep up with the majority of events happening within Canadian politics, but I don't feel as though I can discuss it with as much ease and intelligence like I have seen other members/people do. It bothers me that I am so ignorant about this topic. I guess I have a couple of other questions:
How do you become aware of these stories? Do you visit a popular news site on a regular basis, have a schedule that you follow everyday?
How many hours per day would you say that you spend discussing/reading different news stories?
Do you do it because you are passionate about it, or because you feel as though you need to in order to become a better human being?