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Liberal (Minority/Majority) Government 2025 - ???

Fixing the problem isn't done by bringing in more people; even bringing in the right people. It is done by eliminating the reasons they are leaving in the first place. Think of your kitchen sink. Put the plug in and start filling it. When it reaches capacity, pull the plug. Water is draining out but it is going in as well so assuming the rates are the same you have reached status quo and that is what we are after in population. The plug is a satisfied population with no desire to leave and a rate of input (the tap) that equals the level of those leaving. If we need a half a million people coming in to keep our population balanced then I say again we have a serious problem and it isn't housing.

But lets talk about housing. Your so-called solution maintains a housing market that is not affordable to the majority of people looking for accommodation. It is arbitrarily protecting people who shouldn't have been there in the first place: the prices were just too high. I don't know how old you are or when you entered the market but I have survived through 17 percent mortgages and two market crashes. Market crashes aren't pretty and people get hurt but there is no other way that you are going to balance the market to permit today's 30 year old buyers to get into the market. Prices have to come down and come down significantly.
Im 39. I bought my house at 35. Im actually fine, as i own 30 percent outright and if i pooled my investments together, i could own another 30 percent. I would make out like a bandit buying property that my peers can no longer afford.

So i say this from a purely altruistic point of view. If you want to screw over, for life, people under 40, sure. Crash the housing market. See how many other dominoes go down with it.

Would make 2008 look like a walk in the park.
 
I said this when the market was on its way up and I will say it now, we should do everything in our power to pop the bubble as the longer we avoid doing so the worse it will be.

Yes some will get hurt, but that is the risk you take if you over-leverage yourself. The government shouldn’t be bailing out those who made poor decisions, individual profits, individual losses.
We can simply slowly, over generations, deflate the bubble. Because popping it wont be limited to the housing market. The broader canadian economy is very tied into it. Take down the housing market, take down the banks, take down the banks, well... 2008 on steriods.
 
I actually have a good idea.

PP wins the election.

PP crashes the housing market.

By the time the dust settles, and you have hundreds of thousands of homeless, a few bank failures, and the broader economy is in ruins, the CPC dont win another election for 30 years.

I like it.
 
I actually have a good idea.

PP wins the election.

PP crashes the housing market.

By the time the dust settles, and you have hundreds of thousands of homeless, a few bank failures, and the broader economy is in ruins, the CPC dont win another election for 30 years.

I like it.
That's a weird thing to say.
 
That's a weird thing to say.
The LPC introduced the NEP and were persona non grata for a generation, more like 2.

Imagine that, but on a national scale, and not just energy policy , but peoples literal homes and jobs, and the economy on a whole.

Its not far fetched to say any party does what people are so flippantly suggesting would be wiped out at the federal level coast to coast to coast.
 
The LPC introduced the NEP and were persona non grata for a generation, more like 2.

Imagine that, but on a national scale, and not just energy policy , but peoples literal homes and jobs, and the economy on a whole.

Its not far fetched to say any party does what people are so flippantly suggesting would be wiped out at the federal level coast to coast to coast.
Consigning hundreds of thousands of Canadians to homelessness to punish the Conservative party. That's one way to bump up our recruit numbers.
 
Consigning hundreds of thousands of Canadians to homelessness to punish the Conservative party. That's one way to bump up our recruit numbers.
Im not the one suggesting we just crash the housing market for hell of it.

But if anyone were so foolish as to do it, i would rather it be the CPC.
 
Build something. The PM should have a residence befitting a PM. But that house is tainted to me.
Is the land your house sits on less "tainted" by empropriation? Did you pay the government of France for your land? What about the Mi'kmaq?

Does 1943 magically make 24 Sussex less legitimate than any other expropriation?
 
This article is about the corrosive effects of the Tony Blair premiership in the UK and the stasis resulting from his promotion of what the Brits call Quangos (stand alone non-governmental organisations with regulatory powers) and his preference for subordinating parliament to the courts and the civll service.

It is my view that this particular philosophy has infected all the Westminster polities including ours.

The article addresses how only the authors of the system can correct the system. In the UK that is Labour. In Canada that is the Liberals.


"Is there any reason to expect Andy Burnham (assuming it is he) to break the pattern? Will he, like his predecessors, get in promising all sorts of things – welfare reforms, speedier deportations, more houses – only to find his proposals blocked by our bureaucracy and courts?

"Not necessarily. He starts with advantages that his predecessors lacked. First, and most obviously, he will not discover the problem while on the job, since almost everyone in politics now recognises it. Second, because he is taking over from a Labour prime minister, he will not come to office convinced that every problem stems from Tory idiocy. Third, being Labour, he can more easily repeal the most problematic laws.

"A Conservative ministry that set out to scrap the Equality Act or the Human Rights Act would be accused of bullying minorities. Labour would be trusted to remove the objectionable portions of those laws, perhaps replacing them with statutes that had similar names, but that did not give such huge powers to the deep state."

....

Arguably Mark Carney has already started treading this path. He is among the most Conservative Prime Ministers of my life time. He is not repealing laws so much as gutting them and working "over, under, around and through" them.

...

For me this is the most interesting part of the article because it resonates with my view of our Canadian problem.

"Even as I write, I sense the impatience of some readers. Few people are interested in process and, because of our media culture, we never blame civil servants, only politicians. You doubt me? OK. Can you name any of the officials involved in the only event at No 10 during lockdown that met the ordinary definition of a “party”, and which happened while Johnson was 40 miles away? Precisely.

"We are governed, not by the carousel of party politicians, but by the permanent apparat. That apparat might not be partisan, but it does have corporate opinions. It is safetyist, interventionist, eco-obsessed, Europhile, high-spending, woke and invulnerable to public opinion.

"We see its structural biases in every Whitehall ministry. Treasury officials ignore the dynamic effects of tax cuts. Home Office employees hate deporting illegal immigrants: it was their trade union that took the Rwanda scheme to court. The Education Department is slavering at the opportunity to replace Michael Gove’s knowledge-based curriculum with something less demanding and more anti-colonialist. The Business and Trade Department longs to sign up to EU rules. All subordinate their notional departmental goals to their twin ruling principles: net zero and DEI.

"Even more radical was the Blairite juridical revolution. In 2003, seemingly from no higher motive than his dislike of the “men in tights”, Tony Blair announced that the Lord Chancellor would no longer control judicial appointments, and that a Supreme Court would be created. On paper, the Lord Chancellor’s role had indeed been anomalous. He was a member of all three branches of government: head of the judiciary, Speaker of the House of Lords and a member of Cabinet.

"Yet, precisely because that combination was hard to justify, successive Lord Chancellors were meticulously neutral in their judicial appointments, promoting on merit. Once their function was taken over by a new Judicial Appointments Commission, the door was open to political favouritism, usually in the name of DEI, which eventually became formally recognised as part of the Commission’s remit.

"Result? We now have a troop of activist judges who legislate from the bench. Labour ministers are as frustrated as their Tory predecessors by the determination of immigration tribunals to overturn repatriation orders on the flimsiest of pretexts. They are frustrated, too, at the readiness of courts to stop people building runways, power stations, even houses.

"Eventually, Starmer himself, the very embodiment of a Doughty Street activist lawyer, came to see what was wrong: “For too long, blockers have had the upper hand in legal challenges – using our court processes to frustrate growth.” Naturally he, not the judges, took the rap."
 
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