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And if they went off half-cocked just to do something, they'd get dinged too, sooooo ....Right. The government will have to figure it out since Canadians didn't give the Liberals a majority.

And if they went off half-cocked just to do something, they'd get dinged too, sooooo ....Right. The government will have to figure it out since Canadians didn't give the Liberals a majority.
It would open the door for Cheryl Gallant to be leader! Who?
They're doing what all opposition parties do, voting against the government on things that will pass without their votes... Pretending it's a uniquely CPC thing is disingenuous.CPC doing what CPC does best under this leader, vote against anything and everything the gov puts down. Once again showing Pierre Poilievre’s party doesn't care about holding the government accountable or helping Canadians, it just says no.
Depending on the model, definitely.In order for that to be legally binding I think there would have to be some form of 'uber treaty' or something. A piece of government legislation would only bind the Crown side and, push come to shove, a FN could say the umbrella group no longer speaks for them. A similarity would be a union being the legal bargaining unit for a group of employees.
I think you ment to say a frickin idiot.
all spending bills are confidence motions as far as I recall, and No, holding the government to account and just voting no on everything are two entirely different things.They're doing what all opposition parties do, voting against the government on things that will pass without their votes... Pretending it's a uniquely CPC thing is disingenuous.
If it was a confidence motion with a fear the newly elected government would fall, the LPC and CPC would be working together to get it passed.
And if they went off half-cocked just to do something, they'd get dinged too, sooooo ....![]()
The same comment keeps re-appearing extolling Carney's education. It gets very tedious reading replies that all start with the phrase "Besides, Carney...". Go back to basics. If you walked into your bank and said to your financial guru "I make 100000 a year. I am going to borrow a million from you and give a third of it away to foreign governments, give another third away to support domestic projects that have no chance of ever being viable and use the final third as collateral to borrow another million from the bank next door" He would laugh you out of the building or have you committed as being a danger to yourself and your family. But for Carney, we excuse him by running his credentials up the flagpole and saluting them. Dumb.The Liberals promised a $40B deficit then blasted through the "guard rails" and hit almost $62B. That's not an accounting error.
Liberals word when it comes to money isnt worth much.
Besides Carney is a Harvard educated super economist with a PhD and experience running two world banks. I keep reading how incredibly qualified be is. I'm sure he can do better than some estimates where tax dollars are going to go.
My fingers are crossed, too, in spite of some at least yellow cards (Gilbeault being allowed to beak off without visible sanction or public contradiction, 2 x senior ministers not speaking to media at CANSEC) so far.All things considered I'm glad we have a banker prime minister over a typical politician (allegedly). It might be what we need to get Canada off the crappy trajectory the LPC has us on.
I have hope for him but Carney hasn't exactly proved he's not a typical Liberal politician yet.
Maybe if he shines through the next 4 years the Liberals may get a majority.
that one third you claim isn't viable however has investors and provincial governments screaming over, like Doug fords dumb 401 tunnel, or Smith wanting to revive northern gateway to a port the company didn't even originally want to go to, and doesn't support reviving.The same comment keeps re-appearing extolling Carney's education. It gets very tedious reading replies that all start with the phrase "Besides, Carney...". Go back to basics. If you walked into your bank and said to your financial guru "I make 100000 a year. I am going to borrow a million from you and give a third of it away to foreign governments, give another third away to support domestic projects that have no chance of ever being viable and use the final third as collateral to borrow another million from the bank next door" He would laugh you out of the building or have you committed as being a danger to yourself and your family. But for Carney, we excuse him by running his credentials up the flagpole and saluting them. Dumb.
My fingers are crossed, too, in spite of some at least yellow cards (Gilbeault being allowed to beak off without visible sanction or public contradiction, 2 x senior ministers not speaking to media at CANSEC) so far.
Then again, I was willing to give the guy with the cute socks and nice hair the benefit of the doubt when he first started, too. At least this guy, like you say, has at least some real-ish world experience going in.
Every party has their interesting collection of idiots in safe ridings who wield party influence and power.I think you ment to say a frickin idiot.
And people wonder why I have trouble supporting the conservatives any more.
As I pointed out, all opposition parties do this, so don't pretend it's unique to PP or the CPC. It's cheap politics, but it's what they all do.all spending bills are confidence motions as far as I recall, and No, holding the government to account and just voting no on everything are two entirely different things.
doesn't change the comment though. Wasted money is wasted money. We have dozens of foreign counties standing in line to reap of our largesse much of which is either wasted or spent on politically expedient projects that accomplish nothing. Decades ago we supplied blood-line Holsteins to Uganda to help boost their dairy production. Idi Amin gave a huge BBQ type party for the diplomatic community shortly thereafter. Guess what was on the menu at 10,000 a head? The provinces seem to be just as good at wasting moneythat one third you claim isn't viable however has investors and provincial governments screaming over, like Doug fords dumb 401 tunnel, or Smith wanting to revive northern gateway to a port the company didn't even originally want to go to, and doesn't support reviving.
A sinking ship... Canada's economy in a nutshell, thanks largely to the Liberal government. Let's see if the new guy can pull it out of the nosedive:
Smith said she’s optimistic about Alberta’s relationship with Carney.
“This new prime minister - I’ll give him credit for this - he has met with us many times,” she said.
She said Carney’s next visit to Alberta will come on Sunday (Edit: Today June 1) where she expects he will be meeting with business leaders “to get an idea of what it is that Alberta wants.”
“I can tell you they’re going to mirror the same things that we want, because I’ve been talking with them a lot, and we’ll go to Saskatoon for a first ministers’ meeting.
“I don’t think we have to wait that long. I think we will know in the communique that comes out after a day and a half of meetings, whether this government is serious about changing course, or whether we’re just going to have to double down on the fights. You don’t have to wait that long - just a couple more days.”
Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Friday his priority is mining in the “Ring of Fire,”
Ford said he believes Carney will pick a few priorities across the country that would have a major impact.
“One has to be the pipelines,” Ford said, adding Canada can’t “be relying on the U.S. any longer” as its primary energy customer.
“I think a priority is to bring the whole country together,” Ford said. “The previous government and previous prime minister didn’t show enough love, in my opinion, to Alberta and Saskatchewan. We have to be a united country.”
In a mid-May letter to Carney, Moe pitched 10 policy changes he said the federal government should make to reset Ottawa’s relationship with Saskatchewan.
His requests include starting negotiations with China to remove its tariffs on Canadian agri-food products, repealing the oil and gas emissions cap, expanding pipeline capacity and building trade and economic corridors across the country.
In May, New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt shared on social media her province’s priorities for nation-building projects, including critical mineral projects that are ready to move now.
She said New Brunswick ports are “ready to increase national and international trade with additional investments” and that the province is a leader in modular home building, ready to “tap into investments to tackle the national housing crisis.”
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew also sent Carney a letter in May pitching federal-provincial partnership on several projects, including a trade corridor through the Port of Churchill, establishing Indigenous “fair trade zones” and developing critical minerals infrastructure. In his letter, Kinew called his province “the Costco of critical minerals.”
A May 1 letter from Eby to Carney cited four “priority areas” he said require closer partnership between B.C. and Ottawa: the ongoing softwood lumber dispute, efforts to streamline rail and trade corridors, clean energy and critical mineral projects, and housing affordability and homelessness.
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PM Carney taps former UN ambassador Marc-André Blanchard as chief of staff
Canada’s former ambassador and permanent representative to the United Nations Marc-André Blanchard will serve as Marc Carney’s chief of staff beginning in July, the prime minister announced in a post on X Sunday.www.ctvnews.ca
Don’t know a lot about him
He’s got experience as a senior executive with Canada’s second largest pension fund pension fund, and he was pre of the NAFTA council for a time… Both of those bode well from a standpoint of being informed and probably pretty pragmatic and economically conventional. He’s previously worked on a prime ministerial transition team. I’m sure those who’ve already committed themselves to being anti-Carney will find things to object to, but to my amateur eye he would appear to have the chops for the role.Nothing raising any immediate red flags from my quick look-through. Seems very much like Carney, but with more diplomatic experience in the mix. If anything it'll make those that are not a fan of Mendicino happier? Time will tell.