- Reaction score
- 5,973
- Points
- 1,260
David Akin (Sun News) has been looking at races across Canada and has published estimates in something he calls the "Predictinator;" this is how he guesstimates the outcome right, now, five months out:
That would be just about the worst possible outcome ...
My current, five months out, sense is that the CPC is old and stale; it hasn't shown us anything new and interesting ~ things like the TFSA matter, they're good policies, but they're hard to "sell," they're streak, not sizzle. Old, stale parties usually lose. We Canadians don't, usually, vote for anyone, we vote to "throw the rascals out."
If we're in a mood to do that (throw the Tories out) then my preferred outcome would be something like this:
BQ (or other Quebec nationalists): 8
CPC: 117
Greens: 6
Liberals: 64
NDP: 140
Others: 3
That would give us a slightly left of centre NDP government, sustained, for 18 months or so, by the centre Liberals. It would give the CPC time to develop new ideas and get a new leader. I think M. Trudeau, if he keeps the party mired in third place, will move on and make way for a better leader. (Bear in mind, I have said, several times, that I want the Liberals to survive and prosper because we always need an alternative to the government of the day. My problem with the LPC in 2015 is its leader. I do not believe that Justin Trudeau is in any way suited to lead a G7 nation.)
That would be just about the worst possible outcome ...
My current, five months out, sense is that the CPC is old and stale; it hasn't shown us anything new and interesting ~ things like the TFSA matter, they're good policies, but they're hard to "sell," they're streak, not sizzle. Old, stale parties usually lose. We Canadians don't, usually, vote for anyone, we vote to "throw the rascals out."
If we're in a mood to do that (throw the Tories out) then my preferred outcome would be something like this:
BQ (or other Quebec nationalists): 8
CPC: 117
Greens: 6
Liberals: 64
NDP: 140
Others: 3
That would give us a slightly left of centre NDP government, sustained, for 18 months or so, by the centre Liberals. It would give the CPC time to develop new ideas and get a new leader. I think M. Trudeau, if he keeps the party mired in third place, will move on and make way for a better leader. (Bear in mind, I have said, several times, that I want the Liberals to survive and prosper because we always need an alternative to the government of the day. My problem with the LPC in 2015 is its leader. I do not believe that Justin Trudeau is in any way suited to lead a G7 nation.)