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The 2008 Canadian Election- Merged Thread

Now, should the Liberal party manage to reincarnate some of their great leaders from the past like Lester B Pearson, Louis St Laurent or Sir Wilfred Laurier I would be more than willing to take a look, but their current "socialist lite" version holds few attractions, even for socialists.

I can respect that.  Would you be more amenable to a Liberal Party lead my Michael Ignatieff? 
 
Yet another poll

http://www.ottawasun.com/News/National/2008/02/24/4872028-sun.html

Tories, Grits in dead heat

By CHRISTINA SPENCER, NATIONAL BUREAU


It's a tie.

Despite weeks of election brinkmanship over Afghanistan, crime legislation and the imminent federal budget, the Conservatives and Liberals are not wooing voters away from each other.

A new Nanos Research-Sun Media poll shows the two main parties each with 34% of support from committed voters. Both have made slight gains since early February -- at the expense of the New Democrats.

Support for the Bloc Quebecois and the Greens remained stable through the month.

"We have a dead heat," said pollster Nik Nanos. "If an election were precipitated as a result of the budget, it's really anybody's game."


The Liberals remain ahead of the Tories in Atlantic Canada and Ontario. The Tories lead in the West and the two parties are virtually tied for second place in Quebec, where the Bloc dominates voter preferences.

The NDP's loss of support went not to the Greens, but to the big parties, particularly the Conservatives.

LOCKED UP

"You have to remember the Conservative party in its current iteration is a combination of the old Reform Party and the Progressive Conservative party, so there's a bit of the protest vein still there," said Nanos. "When the NDP goes down in western Canada, the Conservatives actually benefit."

Even a month of verbal jousting over Canada's Afghanistan policy didn't move the numbers between Tories and Grits. Instead, voters perceive that the politicians are trying to work it out, Nanos said. "The issue does not really lead to an advantage for either party."

Why voters have not shifted alliances lies in what Nanos called "key vote drivers" -- the reasons people back a certain party in the first place.

The poll found that 19% of Liberal supporters, about one in five, back the party simply out of tradition, in other words, because they always have. No other party enjoys such levels of automatic support.

Among those who like the Conservative party, the key attraction is the party's policies and platform, cited by more than one-quarter of Tory electors as their motivation for voting blue.

LEADERSHIP NOT AN ISSUE

The NDP also garners high marks from supporters for its policies, and is clearly perceived by its backers as the most caring for working people.

More than half of Green supporters back that party as "best for the environment."

In determining what drives voters, the issue of leadership was ranked low by supporters of every party.

"The fact of the matter is that Canadians aren't thrilled about any of the federal leaders at this point," said Nanos. While it's true Conservative leader Stephen Harper usually leads Liberal Stephane Dion in polls on leadership, it's not what attracts voters to his party.

"What's driving the Conservative vote is the policy initiatives Stephen Harper is undertaking," Nanos said. "What's driving the Liberal vote is not Stephane Dion -- it is the tradition of voting Liberal."

The poll of 1,001 Canadians was conducted Feb. 16-20, 2008. It is considered accurate to within plus or minus 3.1%, 19 times out of 20. For more information, see www.nanosresearch.com
 
stegner said:
I can respect that.  Would you be more amenable to a Liberal Party lead my Michael Ignatieff? 

Considering I had thought Mr Dion would raise the intellectual bar and challenge the Conservatives (before seeing him in action), I will reserve judgment on Mr Ignatieff for now.
 
Based on his performance to date.... I don't rate Mr Ignatieff very highly... he's running neck & neck with Stephane IMHO

Unfortunately, I don't see any real leadership in the Liberal party at this particular moment.... great critics but, no leaders in sight
 
Remember that when the Liberal leadership review first came up, all the first stringers opted out.....this has been, and continues to be the B team we are playing with....
 
Remember that when the Liberal leadership review first came up, all the first stringers opted out.....this has been, and continues to be the B team we are playing with....

Maybe even the "c" team.  That darn Paul Martin scared away a lot people from the Liberal party. 

Though looking at the Conservatives; they are no great shakes either.  Harper is no John Diefenbaker (my favorite Prime Minister ever) or even a Robert Stanfield.  Sigh.  What happened to the visionaries in Canadian politics?



 
stegner said:
... John Diefenbaker (my favorite Prime Minister ever) ....  Sigh.  What happened to the visionaries in Canadian politics?

- I'll take Borden over Dief the Chief. 

- A true visionary would have funded the AVRO Arrow somehow.  Also, his vacillation over accepting nukes gave the U.S. a reason to sub in their ringer: Pearson.

Lesson: Visionaries must survive in government to actually accomplish anything.
 
- A true visionary would have funded the AVRO Arrow somehow.

His one mistake.  ;)

Visionaries must survive in government to actually accomplish anything.

There was a lot of American pressure to oust Diefenbaker-while I will take the histories that claim the CIA ousted Diefenbaker with a grain of salt- it is clear that there was American interference in the Chief's ouster. 

 
Whoa on the Avro Arrow and Diefenbaker. The program was based on cost plus ten(?) percent and was wildly overbudget. It threatened to consume the entire defence budget, not just the capital program. As I understand it, the military chiefs, including the chief of the air staff, had recommended it be cancelled. The Liberals had dodged the issue and the Chief finally took the unpopular and unfortunate decision.

This was during a tough economic downturn and a drop in the value of the dollar. The defence budget was targeted for economies; one effect was that the money from the sale of surplus equipment to other NATO countries that had been banked by DND to purchase new equipment was siezed and applied to other uses.

Like it or not, Dief had made enemies in the Kennedy adminstration by his obvious personal dislike of JFK and his refusal to order the Canadian forces to support the US and the other NATO allies during the Korean missile crisis. His vacilliation on the subject of arming the already purchased and deployed weapon systems in Europe and at home resulted in public interference by the Americans in the general election that resulted in a minority Liberal government. He had already been damaged when the MND and number of other ministers resigned over the same issue and publicly criticized him.

edit  - typos corrected.
 
Old Sweat said:
Whoa on the Avro Arrow and Diefenbaker. The program was based on cost plus ten(?) percent and was wildly overbudget. It threatened to consume the entire defence budget, not just the capital program. As I understand it, the military chiefs, including the chief of the air staff, had recommended it be cancelled. The Liberals had dodged the issue and the Chief finally took the unpopular and unfortunate decision.

This was during a tough economic downturn and a drop in the value of the dollar. The defence budget was targeted for economies; one effect was that the money from the sale of surplus equipment to other NATO countries that had been banked by DND to purchase new equipment was siezed and applied to other uses.

Like it or not, Dief had made enemies in the Kennedy adminstration by his obvious personal dislike of JFK and his refusal to order the Canadian forces to support the US and the other NATO allies during the Korean missile crisis. The MND His vacilliation on the subject of arming the already purchased and deployed weapon systems in Europe and at home resulted in public interference by the Americans in the general election that resulted in a minority Liberal government. He had already been damaged when the MND aa number of his ministers resigned over the same issue and publicly criticized him.

- CF-105: Should have funded as an "Industry Canada demonstrator", or somesuch. Rather than chop up 31 airframes.
- Korean missle crisis?: So much for my Spanish lessons before going to Miami!
 
Yeah, I meant Cuban, but my brain farted.

There wasn't the money in the Federal budget (which was tiny in constant dollars terms compared to today) at the time to fund the project. The challenge was that the unit cost was going to be too large to provide the number of aircraft needed. There is some documentary evidence (which I have not seen) that the Americans approached the Canadian ambassador in Washington with an offer to aid in the funding, but he turned them down without forwarding the offer to Ottawa.

In my opinion the decisions that doomed the industry was made several years later when the government axed the Avro Jetliner program. It is not generally known that Canada had developed the second jet civil transport to fly, but cancelled the program to concentrate on defence production.
 
The entire Arrow thing is a thread hijack, and should be split from this thread.

There were lots of different reasons that conspired to kill the Arrow program, everything from technical challenges with the missiles and fire control system, ever escalating unit cost, changing military environment (ICBM's were becoming the obvious threat, so there would be no Soviet bomber armadas to shoot down) and national pride when approaching other nations as potential customers ("Not invented here, I'm afraid"). Like dinosaurs, the CF-105 was very specialized for it's defence niche, so when the environment changed, it could not adapt and survive.

Now back to the crystal ball to see if there will be an election or not..................
 
If Stephan Dion was to ask a real question of substance with the expectation of a clear and detailed answer, I suspect the Conservative front bench would be gobsmacked. Of course if the Conservatives gave a clear and detailed answer the opposition benches would probably require immediate CPR......

Thucydides, was it so very different when the Liberals formed the government? The House has been run this way for decades, and it doesnt matter who is in power.
 
My feelings are that the Conservatives think they can (and are quite prepared to) fight an election on any issue the Libs might throw at them. 

Witness the Budget, responsible, cautious, prudent.  No huge vote buying, but lots of little focused programs which can be seen as down-payments on previous election promises.

While I believe that Harper has sold his soul to the devil re his Afghanistan compromise it is a platform to drag the uninformed on side, and therefore should an election be called a position he could spin to win. 

The crime bill threat to the Senate was perhaps Harpers boldest step.  He issued an ultimatum to the Senate knowing full well his party's ability to fight an election on that bill and also knowing that De-Yawn would issue martching orders to the Liberal Senators to avoid any such election.

Steven Harper continues to play chess at a "Deep Blue" level while Dion plays tic-tac-toe...  Yes I know the analogy usually used is checkers, but that is far too advanced a game for Dion in my opinion.
 
Steven Harper continues to play chess at a "Deep Blue" level

Proof of this would be a majority government.  Grandmaster's wouldn't need to sell their souls either. 
 
stegner said:
Proof of this would be a majority government.   Grandmaster's wouldn't need to sell their souls either. 

No, proof of that is that he continues to govern in spite of the fact that all the rest of them who control the majority have said they want him gone.

 
No, proof of that is that he continues to govern in spite of the fact that all the rest of them who control the majority have said they want him gone.

They say that but they don't mean it.  The NDP seems to like Harper more than Martin.
 
The math seems simple enough: the combined number of opposition seats is greater than the governing party, therefore the governing party can be ejected at will. Given @ 60% of Canadian voters will support left wing parties, the calculus won't change much in the short to medium term.

Despite all this, the Conservative government has not only lasted two years in office, but also passed much of its legislative platform, rather than cowering in the front benches and letting the opposition dictate the agenda as the previous minority government did.

Would a majority government be nice? Sure it would. Is it required? We have a rare example of a minority government which can govern as a majority, so as long as Prime Minister Harper can play his masterful tactical game, they will govern until October 2009.
 
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