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Liberal Minority Government 2025 - ???

Out of curiosity I checked Internet Archive back as far as November, no obvious CPC branding in his website that far back other than colour scheme.

I would be surprised to see him break with the party. There’s nowhere else for him to go that would improve his fortunes. He’s not gonna go LPC, and the PPC would be a joke if they were relevant enough to even still be thought of. His realistic best bet is some leadership role within one of the CPC factions and fight it out for prominence post-Pierre. Not that that’s a great spot to be in either… But he won’t keep that MP pay and pension under any other branding.
I also looked at a few LPC and CPC Twitter accounts and none have any real branding beyond some links and titles. I sup spect official MP Twitter handles have to all follow similar rules as dictated by parliament.

I wouldn’t read too much into it either.
 
In France they look down on you if you speak Québécois French.

Years ago, a friend (and fellow Newfoundlander) related a story about when he was a Med A with the Van Doos in Germany. They were in France on the French Commando Course and one evening while they were off the camp and in town at a restaurant the waitress had to keep asking the Van Doos to repeat their orders because she couldn't understand them. Eventually, my friend (whose French language skills were acquired on the year long French course before being posted to the bn) had to translate his comrades' Joual into something the waitress understood.

And in a reversal of understanding dialects, another friend met and married a French girl while he was posted to Lahr. She was from a village across the Rhine, North of Strasbourg. Though he wasn't French Canadian he was comfortable speaking French. Their wedding was in her home village and I attended as one of his witnesses (needed for the civil marriage by the mayor the evening before the church wedding). He did warn me that her family might be difficult to understand when I went to the family gathering before we went to city hall. They spoke an Alsatian dialect at home. While not fluent in French, I do get by, but by combining my limited German I was able to understand about a quarter of what they were saying.
 
Years ago, a friend (and fellow Newfoundlander) related a story about when he was a Med A with the Van Doos in Germany. They were in France on the French Commando Course and one evening while they were off the camp and in town at a restaurant the waitress had to keep asking the Van Doos to repeat their orders because she couldn't understand them. Eventually, my friend (whose French language skills were acquired on the year long French course before being posted to the bn) had to translate his comrades' Joual into something the waitress understood.

And in a reversal of understanding dialects, another friend met and married a French girl while he was posted to Lahr. She was from a village across the Rhine, North of Strasbourg. Though he wasn't French Canadian he was comfortable speaking French. Their wedding was in her home village and I attended as one of his witnesses (needed for the civil marriage by the mayor the evening before the church wedding). He did warn me that her family might be difficult to understand when I went to the family gathering before we went to city hall. They spoke an Alsatian dialect at home. While not fluent in French, I do get by, but by combining my limited German I was able to understand about a quarter of what they were saying.
There are a few French communities in northern France and along the Normandy coast where you would think you were in Lac St-Jean or any other more isolated Quebec village.
 
My wife is France-French; born there to immigrant parents, who then left and raised her in Canada. Francophone family at home, but being out in BC, little opportunity to ‘Canadianize’ her French.

When we last visited France circa 2018 or so, I was able to get by…. Sensed some of the mild scorn in Paris, but none at all when we went south to Provence.

No reason the French would be any more culturally monolithic than Canadians.
 
I have been to France 12 times in the past and on Friday my wife and I fly out to Montpellier for my 13th trip to France.
My French is just above basic and it’s what I’ve learned here in Canada. I use it extensively when I’m in France and I have never once been ‘looked down on’ when I speak it. Maybe during my 12 previous visits (which have ranged from a long weekend when I lived in Belgium to the 23 day trip across the entire west side of the country during the first time we took our 10 and 12yr old kids), I’ve managed to not meet those that you have, that made you feel inferior for speaking Québécois.
The French that I’ve met in the towns and smaller cities throughout France are some of the nicest, friendliest people I’ve ever encountered. If they weren’t I wouldn’t have wasted my vacation time and money going so many times over the decades.
I’ll post a follow up after our visit to Montpellier and the areas south-west of there where we are going to scout out possible winter retirement options in the future.

Par Montpellier on ne parle pas le francais. On parle l'occitane.

😁
 
Canada NewsBusinessCanada

Why Canada, with huge gas reserves, is buying it from Australia​

<In a particularly potent illustration of the dysfunction of the Canadian energy sector, Canada is now importing natural gas from Australia despite sitting atop one of the largest gas reserves on earth.

This week, an LNG tanker called the Maran Gas Hector pulled into an LNG import terminal in Saint John, N.B., after charting a 25,000 km course direct from Gladstone, Australia.>

Couple things the article doesnt mention is that the TC mainline provides the majority of gas to Eastern canada. Ive also found a couple articles mentioning its actually cheaper for eastern canada to import gas from the US, and others then the cost of importing gas from BC and western canada.

A difference of thousands of kilometers closer of US shale gas vs western canada gas makes it more about economics than anything.
 
bit of a change. We found that the French were generally hospitable except for those from Paris and they even looked down their noses at someone from Dijon
Ah, the New Yorkers of France :)
Yes and I'm curious to see what Montpellier and Beziers will be! The area from Montpellier to Bezier to Perpignan to the Spanish border is the last large area of France that I've not been so I'm curious to see if they are chocolatine or pain au chocolat. I'm really hoping that I can find my most favourite French pastry somewhere in the area. Its called a 'Sacristain' and its typically found only around Saint-Remy-de-Provence/Vaucluse area.
Pretty close to all the other maps dividing France into chocolate-laminated-pastry enclaves :)
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I think this is worth mentioning. Javani very recently removed all mention of being a CPC member from his X.

Maybe some news soon, possibly Monday?

View attachment 98842
Ooooooh - maybe the post-trip chat didn't go as planned? What appears to be the riding association's page hasn't changed - as of this post, yet, anyway ....
A quick screen capture for ... posterity? :)
1772997240693.png
Interesting to see what happens next.
 
Out of curiosity I checked Internet Archive back as far as November, no obvious CPC branding in his website that far back other than colour scheme.

I would be surprised to see him break with the party. There’s nowhere else for him to go that would improve his fortunes. He’s not gonna go LPC, and the PPC would be a joke if they were relevant enough to even still be thought of. His realistic best bet is some leadership role within one of the CPC factions and fight it out for prominence post-Pierre. Not that that’s a great spot to be in either… But he won’t keep that MP pay and pension under any other branding.
Devils advocate:

For a rookie with no material role in caucus he's done a great job building a personal brand and getting national airplay. If he doesn't like the direction of the pivot towards moderation and statesmanship that Poilievre is (finally) showing, sitting as an independent to be able to toot his own horn without whip or restriction might just set him really well to do the bolded, and Durham is a conservative enough seat that a prominent independent running on a True Blue - PP is a sellout message couldn't be written off.
 
Devils advocate:

For a rookie with no material role in caucus he's done a great job building a personal brand and getting national airplay. If he doesn't like the direction of the pivot towards moderation and statesmanship that Poilievre is (finally) showing, sitting as an independent to be able to toot his own horn without whip or restriction might just set him really well to do the bolded, and Durham is a conservative enough seat that a prominent independent running on a True Blue - PP is a sellout message couldn't be written off.
The man had a nationally syndicated radio show. He had a personal brand well before the jump into politics.
 
Yes, exactly. The amount of space he takes up in the public discourse and the reach of his voice far outstrips his political role and seniority.
Ego? As a driver? For politicians? So young to be so cynical :)

Meanwhile, coming up ....
 
Ego? As a driver? For politicians? So young to be so cynical :)
While there might be ego or ideological chafing, IMO they wouldn't be the main driver. Moreso the idea that Jamil Jivani the public figure might be better served in a hypothetical CPC coupe by being Jamil Jivani the outspoken Independent Maverick than Jamil Jivani the muzzled backbencher.
 
While there might be ego or ideological chafing, IMO they wouldn't be the main driver. Moreso the idea that Jamil Jivani the public figure might be better served in a hypothetical CPC coupe by being Jamil Jivani the outspoken Independent Maverick than Jamil Jivani the muzzled backbencher.
Some could say Leslyn Lewis has a bit of potential for this approach, too, but she seems to be staying put (as far as we know, anyway).
 
I saw a poll today that had the CPC down the 60s in seats.

Its a free fall, I will call it.
It's a combination of soft CPC voters shifting in ridings where the CPC is competitive, and the exodus of NDP voters to the LPC.

It's exacerbated by the inefficient vote distribution of the CPC.
 
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Getting wider.

Every alarm bell should be going off in the CPC with how close the Liberals have gotten to them in Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.


 
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Getting wider.

Every alarm bell should be going off in the CPC with how close the Liberals have gotten to them in Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.


CPC is nose diving, at this rate they will be at 25% national support within a few weeks, and be wiped out in urban areas
 
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