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Liberal Minority Government 2025 - ???

This is the situation and position most Progressive Conservatives/Red Tory find themselves in.

Except I don’t think “Red Tory” and “Reform”, etc work anymore. I’m an OG Reform/CA voter and I’m not comfortable with the turn the Tories are taking. Ben Woodfinden had a good article in The Line how it’s more a split between struggling young people (who have no idea what a Red Tory or Reformer are) and comfortable Boomers. As a Gen X’er, I straddle these two worlds so I’m kind of schizophrenic.

Anyways, it’s an interesting read.

 
Some more good news for Canada, Carney, Ford and Windsor

Stellantis hiring 1,400 for third shift at Windsor plant​


 
Seems the Cons are making some changes...


Good recent interview:

Good call - let's see how the Team Blue ship sails with this guy as the navigator/ops O.

Also curious to see what kind of "advisor" role Jenni Byrne will end up playing, and the specifics.

More on Outhouse here
 
Except I don’t think “Red Tory” and “Reform”, etc work anymore. I’m an OG Reform/CA voter and I’m not comfortable with the turn the Tories are taking. Ben Woodfinden had a good article in The Line how it’s more a split between struggling young people (who have no idea what a Red Tory or Reformer are) and comfortable Boomers. As a Gen X’er, I straddle these two worlds so I’m kind of schizophrenic.

Anyways, it’s an interesting read.

That's a fantastic read.

To me it highlights the primary threat to the CPC, which in turn highlights the "why" to the decision on doubling down on a negativity focus rather than pivoting to show a more mature and moderate "you can trust me to govern" side

Grievance politics need something to grieve. Therefore conditions actually getting better - and/or being felt to be getting better, is an existential threat to Poilievre's PM ambitions. Whether through LPC competence, the coming intergenerational wealth transfer, a shift in intergenerational support structures, or the simple passage of time- anything that makes the 20-40 vote less mad is bad for him.
 
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Do you feel this is where Canada is currently at?
Anecdotally, the pain level seems to have gone down, and the noise level around it certainly has- atleast in my area of rural SW Ontario.

Gas isn't 1.85, mortgage rates have come down, housing prices are dropping as the urban-> rural flow has stalled/reversed.

There are still angry and hurting people, but it seems like a much less universal state- even though there's still a lingering pessimistic feeling.
 
Anecdotally, the pain level seems to have gone down, and the noise level around it certainly has- atleast in my area of rural SW Ontario.

Gas isn't 1.85, mortgage rates have come down, housing prices are dropping as the urban-> rural flow has stalled/reversed.

There are still angry and hurting people, but it seems like a much less universal state- even though there's still a lingering pessimistic feeling.

It's going to be a long time before people actually recover from the pain of the last decade. One can't easily just obtain the current lower mortgage rate unless their renewal is due now, for example. Groceries are still sky high and set to increase. Overall price of commodities hasn't improved, look at the price of vehicles for example. Time will tell.
 
Do you feel this is where Canada is currently at?

I'm sure those in support of Carney and the LPC will tell you things have improved. And I guess just not being his predecessor is an improvement, but I paid 16$ for a chicken shawarma on Saturday night...
 
I'm sure those in support of Carney and the LPC will tell you things have improved. And I guess just not being his predecessor is an improvement, but I paid 16$ for a chicken shawarma on Saturday night...
Meal or just the sandwich?
 
I'm sure those in support of Carney and the LPC will tell you things have improved. And I guess just not being his predecessor is an improvement, but I paid 16$ for a chicken shawarma on Saturday night...
I think the atmosphere improved.

$55/kg for steak from the canex hurts my peasent sensibilities.
 
According to this the government was not interested in Potash export from Canada? I find this hard to believe


Mind you seems this article really needed a better editor who had access to a map of BC

However, in the spring, Nutrien even offered to build in either Vancouver or Prince George if the Carney government wanted to prove its commitment to unleashing growth in the Canadian economy

Ah yes that famous, bustling port of Prince George BC
 
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