The numbers are fun, the
strategies and
tactics are fascinating, but: there is some good news and some bad news.
The good news is that we have a pretty robust, open, generally fair democracy. We all, well most of who are qualified, get to vote ... if we choose. And the party that the greatest number of us select is very likely to form a government. It is very likely that 60%+ of us are going to wish, on 20 Oct 15, that someone else was forming the government, but
c'est la vie, as they say. There's more good news: none of Prime Minister Harper, Opposition Leader Mulcair or M Trudeau are
bad men; none are going to turn into a right wing despot or a left wing nut. Most of the couple of thousand Canadians who will stand for office are similar to the leaders, not
bad, not really
good, perhaps, but, by and large, acceptable.
Now the bad news: none of Prime Minister Harper, Opposition Leader Mulcair or M Trudeau are particularly
good leaders for a country that must tack its way into strong
strategic (international), domestic/social and economic headwinds. It's not going to be smooth sailing and I doubt that any of the three current party leaders is really who any of us wants.
I will not welcome an NDP government, if that's who we all choose. But I doubt it will do real, serious, long term harm to our country, despite my mistrust of the economic and fiscal motivations of M Mulcair's back-bench and
base.
I am not really afraid of a government led by M Trudeau, if that's the party we select. Despite my reservations about his
'bottom', he can put together a pretty solid front bench. I doubt his government will do much real damage either.
I rather hope Prime Minister Harper's Conservatives are re-elected, despite my real, serious reservations about Prime Minister Harper as a
leader. I believe the CPC has a good team and
I hope that Prime Minister Harper, who
I believe has been
tarnished, perhaps irreparably damaged by his own words and deeds, will resign and make way for a new, better leader. But the CPC may have run its course, for now; it may need a rest on the opposition benches benches while it reconsiders its aims and objectives for Canada. That is the normal and natural fate of all political parties. It is why our ramshackle, messy democracy is, always, better than even the best managed one-party state.
My :2c: because I think too many of us take all this too seriously ... Remember
what Gloria Gaynor said: those political buggers will be back and we will survive, no matter which of 'em
leads our country.