Nppe. The CPC is no longer Progressive Conservative.
We must mind that the meaning of words change over time, referred to as semantic drift. The PCs were never “
progressive” in the modern, woke sense of the word. Back in the early 1900s, the
Progressive Party was a US inspired, free trade focused movement that caught on in the Prairies. Its leader, John Bracken, was the premier of Manitoba. When he later agreed to run for the leadership of the federal Conservative Party in 1942, he did so on condition that the party be renamed the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. That's where the
Progressive in PCs comes from. It has never referred to today's
progressive movement and its emphasis on social equality, environmental protection, diversity, expanded social programs, higher taxes on the wealthy, and policies advancing diversity, gender rights, etc.
Excluding Campbell and Clark's short windows, we've only had two postwar Progressive Conservatives Prime Ministers, Mulroney (1984-1993) and Diefenbaker (1957-63). I would not consider either of their governments as
progressive in today's sense. For example, in 1990, Mulroney introduced Bill C-43 to make abortion a criminal offence unless a doctor determined the woman’s health was at risk. Diefenbaker does deserve credit for passing the Bill of Rights and in extending the federal vote to all First Nations people without forcing them to give up treaty rights. But still, neither of these men or their government's were progressive as we use the term today.