Brandon716
Senior Member
Actually a long term coalition with the NDP where the Liberals and NDP don't run competing candidates and set aside certain ridings for each party may be the best unite-the-left effort that could occur. That's the only way to create a more-permanent left leaning movement.
I wouldn't consider that unless Ignatieff fails to ignite energy into the Liberal party, but its a viable option in the future should it become necessary.
Liberals simply never will be competitive in select ridings such as Hamilton or the West, and the NDP will never be competitive in much of the country. But a new coalition should the Ignatieff Liberals fail should never be completely shelved.
But do I think Ignatieff deserves to lead the Liberals and see what he can do? Absolutely. He would have been leader of the Liberals already if Dion hadn't come back with that strong surprise win, and Dion has already had his chance. I don't get people who say Ignatieff was chosen in a backroom deal, there was already a convention and he already nearly won. The other guy had his chance already, and Ignatieff already gained enough votes in the last convention to prove his stature. I love how the Cons love to paint the Liberals as some group akin to the Soviet system, choosing leaders and giving the public the shaft when the Cons are trying to run an extreme mandate with a minority government on 36% of the popular vote. LOL Hypocrisy is fun to watch.
I also laugh at people who say this coalition is undemocratic and simultaneously claim Canada is a harshly centrist nation. I thought the definition of setting aside differences, working together to bring together parties that gathered 62% of the popular vote is as Democratic and "centrist" as it gets. The Liberal-NDP coalition didn't officially form a coalition with the Bloc, they just got an agreement not to be voted against in terms of the budget and a confidence vote for two years. That's the magic necessary to make a coalition work.
Canadians need to realize Parliamentary government has procedures and they work really well. It would have taken 12 years, minimum, for the Liberal party to be reborn and test 3 different candidates had they been a major American party. In Canada, the more responsive system of government has allowed 3 years to pass since Martin plunged the Liberals into darkness for them to come out with a new image.
That's a decade Canada didn't lose, because its political system is superior and the best available in North America.
That, and the actual operations behind government don't shut down even though Parliament is prorogued. Clement was able to negotiate an auto bailout after Parliament was prorogued, afterall. I don't see this as a total crisis. Its all showing how weak Prime Minister Harper's leadership is.
I wouldn't consider that unless Ignatieff fails to ignite energy into the Liberal party, but its a viable option in the future should it become necessary.
Liberals simply never will be competitive in select ridings such as Hamilton or the West, and the NDP will never be competitive in much of the country. But a new coalition should the Ignatieff Liberals fail should never be completely shelved.
But do I think Ignatieff deserves to lead the Liberals and see what he can do? Absolutely. He would have been leader of the Liberals already if Dion hadn't come back with that strong surprise win, and Dion has already had his chance. I don't get people who say Ignatieff was chosen in a backroom deal, there was already a convention and he already nearly won. The other guy had his chance already, and Ignatieff already gained enough votes in the last convention to prove his stature. I love how the Cons love to paint the Liberals as some group akin to the Soviet system, choosing leaders and giving the public the shaft when the Cons are trying to run an extreme mandate with a minority government on 36% of the popular vote. LOL Hypocrisy is fun to watch.
I also laugh at people who say this coalition is undemocratic and simultaneously claim Canada is a harshly centrist nation. I thought the definition of setting aside differences, working together to bring together parties that gathered 62% of the popular vote is as Democratic and "centrist" as it gets. The Liberal-NDP coalition didn't officially form a coalition with the Bloc, they just got an agreement not to be voted against in terms of the budget and a confidence vote for two years. That's the magic necessary to make a coalition work.
Canadians need to realize Parliamentary government has procedures and they work really well. It would have taken 12 years, minimum, for the Liberal party to be reborn and test 3 different candidates had they been a major American party. In Canada, the more responsive system of government has allowed 3 years to pass since Martin plunged the Liberals into darkness for them to come out with a new image.
That's a decade Canada didn't lose, because its political system is superior and the best available in North America.
That, and the actual operations behind government don't shut down even though Parliament is prorogued. Clement was able to negotiate an auto bailout after Parliament was prorogued, afterall. I don't see this as a total crisis. Its all showing how weak Prime Minister Harper's leadership is.
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