Reminder: if you want to vote in the CPC leadership race, the deadline is 5 PM EST today!
*Hard copy registration to be submitted, online registration is until midnight according to their HQ.
Reminder: if you want to vote in the CPC leadership race, the deadline is 5 PM EST today!
Jason Kenney is now saying that children's parents should know if they sign up for a gay straight alliance at school.
http://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/kenney-meets-with-postmedia-editorial-board
Jason Kenney is now saying that children's parents should know if they sign up for a gay straight alliance at school.
http://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/kenney-meets-with-postmedia-editorial-board
Stay losing, Albertan PCs. Seriously, their leader is openly advocating outing children. This is not the policy of a party that should be in power in the 2010s (and hopefully won't be come the next Albertan election when the NDP will likely win again).
Fucking disgusting. As a trans person fuck that noise.Jason Kenney is now saying that children's parents should know if they sign up for a gay straight alliance at school.
http://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/kenney-meets-with-postmedia-editorial-board
Jason Kenney is probably not going to be the leader of a united conservative party at this point if it forms.He's way to divisive to the general electorate in Alberta despite what the people who voted him leader of the Alberta PC's think.
2. Harpers succession could have turned into a battle-by-proxy between the two factions that resumed their cohabitation within a reunified Conservative party over his decade in power. The old divide between former Tories and ex-Reformers could have resurfaced over the yearlong leadership campaign.
That is not happening.
Or, at least, it is not happening in a defining way.
None of the presumed front-runners has emerged as a stalking horse for one or other of the two factions. If anything, some of the leading figures on both sides of the Conservative schism of the recent past are looking beyond the front-runners for a possible successor to Harper.
From his new niche as Albertas Tory leader, Jason Kenney used an editorial board meeting with Postmedia this week to warn Conservative members against OLeary. He says the reality-TV star is unqualified to lead the federal party.
On Tuesday, former Progressive Conservative leader Peter MacKay showed up at an fundraising event for Ontario MP Erin OToole.
Neither Kenney nor MacKay has had a kind word for the identity-driven immigration policies promoted by Leitch.
...
5. There is little doubt that the choice of a polarizing leader, one who is unloved by his caucus to boot, would shrink the Conservative tent to the Liberals advantage.
Anyone who covered the near-implosion of the Canadian Alliance under Stockwell Day 15 years ago has first-hand knowledge of the perils of electing a leader who is not equipped to command or keep the respect of his or her caucus.
Yeah, but if it's not him it's probably going to be Fildebrandt lol.
The Conservative leadership race has been hard to watch, unless you support the Liberals or any other political party in Canada in which case its been a laugh a minute. But for people like me, I am left wondering how I ended up in a party seemingly dominated by xenophobic, economically illiterate, populist buffoons.
While the majority of naturally conservative voters welcome refugees, believe in climate change, and dont care if the neighbour smokes weed, the majority of leadership candidates are actively opposed to all those things. And because this latter group dominates the CPC, and has for some time, we ended up here. The Liberals are sitting safely in power, espousing whatever patchwork ideology works best for them this year, while most Conservative leaders inexplicably race each other to the right, abandoning the center entirely. This leaves voters like me cringing as they are forced to make the ridiculous choice between Trudeau or Trost.
Maybe its time we considered starting something new: a right of centre party that genuinely believes in individual liberty, that the state has no right to tell us who we can love, what we can smoke or what we can saya party that doesnt want to put more people in jail, but rather believes citizens should be given every opportunity possible to defend themselves before the law.
This would be a conservative party that believes in equality for all regardless of race, creed, language, sexual orientation, or gender a party that doesnt see feminism as a left-wing plot, that doesnt worry if we dont share the same values, and is not frightened of everyone and everything.
This leaves voters like me cringing as they are forced to make the ridiculous choice between Trudeau or Trost.
This is basically how NDP voters feel too, so... yay. lol
We Need To Do Something About the Senate Story #47298765: http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/lynn-beyak-residential-school-survivors-1.4046329
IMO the status quo is better than electing it.
A country of this many people only having 1 level of parliament?
Nah, just strip the Senate's ability to stop or delay legislation beyond a year, and/or make the senate elected. Either one.
Well, this lady was appointed by Stephen Harper, so she's not a reflection on the current appointments procedure regardless.We don't need another layer of elected politicians. We do need a better system of appointing senators though. We can appoint judges very well, we should be able to more or less competently fill the upper chamber.
Of the remaining 13 of Harper's first batch of 18 appointees, only one (New Brunswick senator John Wallace) did.I can't remember, have any of the self-imposed 8 year Harper Senators stepped down yet? Or has it been less than 8 years since he introduced that rule?
Probably the dumb thing is that being a Senator is basically a lifetime appointment.
I can't remember, have any of the self-imposed 8 year Harper Senators stepped down yet? Or has it been less than 8 years since he introduced that rule?
The reason we do lifetime appointments is that we want Senators to not be beholden to anybody. The same reason we appoint judges to life and pay them well. I'm generally against term limits, if you have a qualified person why show them the door?
The worst thing I can imagine for the Senate is to fill it full of partisan hacks. We already have a chamber for that, we don't need two. Fix the appointment process and the rest will take care of itself.
Get rid of the senate.
Sober Second Thought my ass.
This is where I'm at too. I'm not personally aware of any time the Senate has actually been useful in modern history (I'm open to being informed otherwise) aside from them pushing back against the current government's unconstitutional assisting dying legislation (which was a good and salutary thing in my mind, but they were toothless in the end).
Either we give them some consequence in the legislative process by linking them to elections, or we get rid of them. The status quo of straight appointments is not good.
I also don't think that the Supreme Court appointment process is analogous to what we want for Senators considering the vast difference in the role.
Senators already have a mandatory retirement age of 75. That was provided for by the British North America Act, 1965.A Canadian Supreme Court Justice stays on the court until they're 75 (assuming they're still able to serve at that age/have not decided to retire earlier) at which point they must retire (The current Chief Justice, Beverly McLachlin, will be retiring in September 2018, assuming she doesn't retire sooner. My thoughts are that the Senate should adopt similar retirement measures to SCoC along with additional rules that would allow the Senate to be penalize or remove a member for misconduct like what we've seen with Beyak and Meredith. As I understand it, that would require an amendment to the Constitution so it would be difficult to entrench them but it would not be an impossible task.
There should be some method to keep them accountable to the people, directly or indirectly.
Senators already have a mandatory retirement age of 75. That was provided for by the British North America Act, 1965.
While an amendment could make this more explicit, most legal scholars are of the opinion that the Senate already has the authority to remove members for misconduct under the general provisions of Section 18 of the Constitution Act, 1867.
That's not at all the purpose of the Senate, and it never has been. The Supreme Court ruled just a few years ago, in smacking down Harper's proposed reforms, that the Senate exists to serve as a place of sober second thought. I know that's a clichéd statement at this point, but it's also true -- it really is there to serve a review and analysis function, and to create legislation like the genetic discrimination bill that wouldn't have a big constituency in the House. I'm interested in seeing how Trudeau's reforms impact the Senate, because I could see a legislature full of independent senators having a pretty drastic impact on how our country functions. It won't be immediately apparent, but eventually I think they'll start to assert themselves in interesting (and hopefully beneficial) ways.
Pretty funny to watch what is happening with Bombardier in QC right now. Even Couillard's government is embarrassed. After losing almost a billion last year, eliminating 7500 jobs, being close to bankruptcy and after begging a cool 1 billion $USD from the QC government and 2 billion $USD investment from the CDPQ in their transport division they've voted ridiculous bonuses to their executives. The high life is back, time to burn fresh public money after being rewarded for burning the company into the ground. The fired employees must be fuming right now.
Loved the fact that Couillard tried to spin the poor deal he got in the C Series spinoff company as a positive otherwise he would have had to intervene in this mess.
lolOf the remaining 13 of Harper's first batch of 18 appointees, only one (New Brunswick senator John Wallace) did.
8 years sounds like a good time. That's basically one or two terms of a government.The reason we do lifetime appointments is that we want Senators to not be beholden to anybody. The same reason we appoint judges to life and pay them well. I'm generally against term limits, if you have a qualified person why show them the door?
The worst thing I can imagine for the Senate is to fill it full of partisan hacks. We already have a chamber for that, we don't need two. Fix the appointment process and the rest will take care of itself.
Harper already tried that, and didn't get anywhere.Mainpoints, renegociate this third world treaty with the states
Watched part of the CPC debate on illegal immigration. All brought good points though leitch sounded like a clinton teleprompter.
Mainpoints, renegociate this third world treaty with the states, increase economic migration, more refugees sponsored by the private sector, increasing border patrol across these vast areas being exploited, Trudeau resinding his tweet about how Canada has welcoming arms as that sends the wrong message, most agreed the RCMP are already well funded and are taking care of this situation quite well though a couple disagreed, Deepak (thats his name right?) wanted to lessen the vetting process and get immigrants and refugees processed faster (he did not word it this way but its the same thing), and family reunification was also a big thing.
all around good answers from everyone I heard
Harper already tried that, and didn't get anywhere.
Well, he had to come to Earth eventually.I wonder how brad wall feels about this recent poll.
http://www.mainstreetresearch.ca/wall-approval-falls-budget-disapproval/
So far the incumbent parties are all cruising in the by-elections. Liberals are presently above 50% in their ridings, the Tories have 70%+ in the Calgary seats.
Edit: A welcome to the House of Commons to Emmanuella Lambropoulos, Mona Fortier, Mary Ng, Stephanie Kusie and Bob Benzen. That's +4 for women in the House, which is nice.