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2025 Federal Election - 28 Apr 25

It's more our laws are stupidly weak
A matter that is entirely under our control.

If Chinese (or any other) influence in Canada were a pain point between us and the Trump administration, it'd be a pain point we could remove without needing any kind of cooperation from Trump. We could do it as a preventative measure even if we didn't know whether it was a pain point.

I judge the seriousness of our complaints against Trump by how hard we work on things entirely under our control. Almost half a year after the election of the guy openly threatening massive tariffs, we're still tied up in processes and arguments over streamlining inter-provincial movement of people, services, and goods.
 
He’ll get full support from the EI collecting clapping seals of that province!
Conservatives took that riding by 12% last election and it’s now polling as a toss up with a slight CPC lead well within the margin of error. Liberals have to be feeling pretty decent about things if they’re sending him out to contest a seat that went so decidedly blue last time.
 
Rough estimate is the CPC promises and tax cuts are in the 140Bn dollar ballpark. Looking to see that costed plan tomorrow about how they achieve that without running a deficit or without major program cuts they say they aren’t going to do…
 
Rough estimate is the CPC promises and tax cuts are in the 140Bn dollar ballpark. Looking to see that costed plan tomorrow about how they achieve that without running a deficit or without major program cuts they say they aren’t going to do…
That's the liberal estimate. An estimate made by the likes of Butts and Telford.

Although there is Carney’s admitted spending. $130 billion over and above what trudeau spent and his promise to only balance the operating budget after four years. Not to mention the cost of initiatives like 1000 new RCMP officers. No new pipelines and on and on.

It's all academic at this point though. The vast majority of voters have already decided who to vote for.
 
That's the liberal estimate. An estimate made by the likes of Butts and Telford.
Is it?
Although there is Carney’s admitted spending. $130 billion over and above what trudeau spent and his promise to only balance the operating budget after four years. Not to mention the cost of initiatives like 1000 new RCMP officers. No new pipelines and on and on.

It's all academic at this point though. The vast majority of voters have already decided who to vote for.
Sure.

I’m still looking forward to their costing. I’m sure they are scrambling last minute to get it done. Should be interesting.
 
I haven't seen much, from any party, yet about addressing our national productivity crisis. I can only assume they think it's too difficult to explain to we mere mortals:

Time to break the glass: Fixing Canada’s productivity problem​


Productivity is a way to inoculate the economy against inflation. An economy with low productivity can grow only so quickly before inflation sets in. But an economy with strong productivity can have faster growth, more jobs and higher wages with less risk of inflation. That’s why I want to talk about Canada’s long-standing, poor record on productivity and show you just how big the problem is. You’ve seen those signs that say, “In emergency, break glass.” Well, it’s time to break the glass.

Back in 1984, the Canadian economy was producing 88% of the value generated by the US economy per hour. That’s not great. But by 2022, Canadian productivity had fallen to just 71% of that of the United States. Over this same period of time, Canada also fell behind our G7 peers, with only Italy seeing a larger decline in productivity relative to the United States.

Improving productivity in Canada needs to be a priority for everyone, and there are two basic strategies for doing it. One is to have the economy focus more on the industries that add greater value than less-productive activities. The other strategy is to keep doing the jobs we’re doing but do them more efficiently. Ideally, Canada would use both strategies, leading to an economy with strong productivity growth and a large concentration of high-value industries.

Unfortunately, Canada’s recent record isn’t very good on either front. That may seem strange. After all, Canada is known for some high-value industries, such as energy and aerospace. But while the level of productivity here is high, the growth rates aren’t necessarily strong. At the same time, some industries in Canada have shown pretty good productivity growth over the past couple of decades.1 But these include sectors such as retail and wholesale trade, which tend not to generate the same amount of output per worker as sectors like energy or aerospace.

 
Oh well I guess we’ll see if they are right tomorrow. It’s a lot of tax cuts and spending they’ve been promising with very little on the how without deficit spending on their part.

It'll be interesting if for no other reason than the liberals weren't able to steal any info from it. They don't know what Poliviere's plan is so they are just throwing out guesses. However, Carney has been spinning lies the whole campaign. No reason to stop now.

But yes, we'll see. Really, all that matters at this point is the final poll on the 28th. The only poll that's based in reality.
 
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