nfitz
Superstar
The Conservatives seem to be slowly swinging further left, back to where the Progressive-Conservatives used to be. Surely the 2% gain is more of a reflection of this, than anything else.If we're talking trends, the Conservatives increased their support by about 2% in the last election, where the NDP surged by 12.5%. There's not much of an argument to be made claiming that the country swung to the right in the last election.
In Ontario, for Hudak to get a majority, it would require that the NDP have a reasonable showing. To date, the NDP are flying so far below the radar provincially, that I doubt many people could even identify the gender or hair colour of the current NDP leader, let alone their name. It would only take a small shift from the currently high NDP support back to the Liberals, for it to be a minority, and perhaps even Liberal, government.
Hard to see how Hudak really is going to offer a unique alternative to McGuinty, given except for some very minor issues, much of his policy is the same. To the point of saying he will continue the HST and Health tax, which the Tories harshly attacked as being unnecessary at the time.
At the same time, some of Hudak's suggestions seem bizarre - such as getting rid of the Family Day long-weekend.
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