His latest interview on the Hub seems to indicate he likely has not.And it sounds like they're counting on him not changing his stripes, hoping that gets them another win.
We'll see ...
His latest interview on the Hub seems to indicate he likely has not.And it sounds like they're counting on him not changing his stripes, hoping that gets them another win.
We'll see ...
I’m not putting g much stock in that one given this is a by election. But I can see how either side will use that.Will be interesting to see if he gets 83%
Good observation.Also, the Tories didn’t run against Chrétien in New Brunswick after he became Liberal and Opposition leader.
Mind you, most of the time when a leader of the losing party loses their seat, they resign.
True enough, but one could argue that this was effectively not the same seat as previous elections.Mind you, most of the time when a leader of the losing party loses their seat, they resign.
I think we can probably all just agree that there’s no meaningful and consistent convention on this; it tends to vary.True enough, but one could argue that this was effectively not the same seat as previous elections.
I think Poilievre looking into the House like a child in a Dickens novel for the past 2 months hasn't done wonders for his party or his image.I think we can probably all just agree that there’s no meaningful and consistent convention on this; it tends to vary.
I don’t know if “official opposition leader loses own seat, stays on as party leader, runs for another seat handed to him” has a modern precedent. We don’t have a mould for this; it’s just Poilievre and the party each making their decisions in their own interest. So far his dominance in the party is such that his and their interests overlap, at least to those making the decisions. But then, the CPC hasn’t had a forced decision point yet as they will come the leadership review. We’ll see how Poilievre does through the fall and winter. Being back in Parliament will restore him to his favourite pulpit at least
For those who want to watch/listen ....His latest interview on the Hub seems to indicate he likely has not.
“Wait, so now we can get these policies but without that guy? Great!” is a dynamic that’s happening right now and will so long as it remains true.I think Poilievre looking into the House like a child in a Dickens novel for the past 2 months hasn't done wonders for his party or his image.
Additionally, his relevance has taken a massive hit. He leaned into being portrayed as the "opposite of Trudeau" leader we needed; only to have the LPC call his bluff and do it themselves. A lot of the policies the LPCs are moving forward are ones the CPC have had in their playbooks for at least a decade.
I have a hard time thinking PP is who the CPC needs to counter a government they have so much common ground it. If he takes the same approach when he finally comes back to the House, he's going to come across as the whiny nerd who is bitter the cheerleader said no to him taking her to prom.
Running in an Alberta riding with the current atmosphere, I would suspect not. What may be more telling (assuming he wins) is how the polls assess his performance as Opposition leader.His latest interview on the Hub seems to indicate he likely has not.
I think Poilievre looking into the House like a child in a Dickens novel for the past 2 months hasn't done wonders for his party or his image.
Additionally, his relevance has taken a massive hit. He leaned into being portrayed as the "opposite of Trudeau" leader we needed; only to have the LPC call his bluff and do it themselves. A lot of the policies the LPCs are moving forward are ones the CPC have had in their playbooks for at least a decade.
I have a hard time thinking PP is who the CPC needs to counter a government they have so much common ground with. If he takes the same approach when he finally comes back to the House, he's going to come across as the whiny nerd who is bitter the cheerleader said no to him taking her to prom.
He’s certainly capable of being oppositional- but a fair bit of his policy lunch is getting gobbled up. It’ll be interesting to see what he can get new traction with.Running in an Alberta riding with the current atmosphere, I would suspect not. What may be more telling (assuming he wins) is how the polls assess his performance as Opposition leader.
From an organizational norms perspective, "one and done" is extremely damaging to the party.For the record, again, PP should step down as leader.
Sure, it can be. However they also need to be introspective, ask if the situation has changed, and if it has (and it has), ask whether they still have the right person at the helm. Maybe they do, maybe they don’t. Sunk cost fallacy can be damaging too.From an organizational norms perspective, "one and done" is extremely damaging to the party.
They haven't followed that tradition since King's day.I'm actually surprised that the Liberals are running a canadate, by tradition there are not supposed to contest this election.
It happened multiple times in the 1920s when Arthur Meighan and William Lyon Mackenzie King both lost their seats.I think we can probably all just agree that there’s no meaningful and consistent convention on this; it tends to vary.
I don’t know if “official opposition leader loses own seat, stays on as party leader, runs for another seat handed to him” has a modern precedent. We don’t have a mould for this; it’s just Poilievre and the party each making their decisions in their own interest. So far his dominance in the party is such that his and their interests overlap, at least to those making the decisions. But then, the CPC hasn’t had a forced decision point yet as they will come the leadership review. We’ll see how Poilievre does through the fall and winter. Being back in Parliament will restore him to his favourite pulpit at least
From an organizational norms perspective, "one and done" is extremely damaging to the party.
He’s certainly capable of being oppositional- but a fair bit of his policy lunch is getting gobbled up. It’ll be interesting to see what he can get new traction with.
Right? I feel a bit bad for Poilievre. It’s gotta sting a bit to put all that work in, take a double digit edge in the polls, and then still lose decisively and have the voters show more trust that the other guy is competent to actually bring policies to fruition than you are. I guess real world experience matters to some. Credit to him for sticking around to give it another try I suppose.Imagine a place where voters are so dissatisfied with the current government and it's policies after a decade of rule that the voters then re-elect the same government because it promised to implement the opposition's policies.![]()