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


Yeah, in contrast to when Prime Minister Harper announced in 16 July 2010, Canada’s intention to buy 65 F-35s. The contract was signed right after that…..
Imagine the blowback when German car companies or whatever other industrial benefits are cancelled if PP does that.

That's why the F35 and the EH101s were so easy to cancel. There wasn't much in terms of stakes.

That's why Carney is tying these up with Canadian jobs and Canadian industry as opposed to simply signing the deal. Sure, PP may want to cancel but if doing so leads to layoffs of XXXX many canadians, he may think twice.

Another reason I want the Gripen. Canadian politicians are less likely to cancel orders when its Canadian jobs on the line, example, GDLS
 
Under the Conservatives it looks like the AOPS took 3 years and 3 months from decision to contract. I can see Carney pushing for a quicker timeframe, benefits of having a business minded boss and not a politician.
They were more than just signing though. Didn't they have to go through the design certification and costing first? From what I have heard the 212CD is an off-the -shelf purchase with I am guessing the installation of 110 power.
 
Basically Avi is unelectable. Every actual election (outside NDP leadership race filled with blue haired crazies) he has lost.

The NDP is withering on the vine, sad to say.
No strategic error that has been made at the federal level over the past 50 years has been greater than Pierre Poilievre demolishing Jagmeet Singh and the NDP.

If Canada becomes a two party (plus the BQ) political system, I don't know what the CPC does.
 
Convince me in less than 6-8 sentences as to why Canada should continue to have an upper governmental body?

Go!
 
No strategic error that has been made at the federal level over the past 50 years has been greater than Pierre Poilievre demolishing Jagmeet Singh and the NDP.

If Canada becomes a two party (plus the BQ) political system, I don't know what the CPC does.
Absorbs the right side of the LPC after the LPC is dragged left by the remnants of the other parties. Pretty much the same thing observed in the US.
 
Supposedly StatsCan is following this guideline.

"The 15 to 24 age range used by Statistics Canada is the global standard set by the International Labour Organization (ILO) to specifically measure the transition of individuals from full-time education into the workforce."

"However, because the 15-24 bracket lumps together high-schoolers looking for part-time work with university graduates starting their careers, economists often break it down further (e.g., separating 15-19 from 20-24) to get a clearer picture of the job market"

The range of 15-19 and 20-24 is alot more logical and its a break (especially under the old 'Grade 13 era') of those in high school and those out of high school.


StatCan said youth aged 15 to 24 added 33,000 jobs in June, mostly in part-time work. Workers aged 25 to 54 saw similar gains while older members of the labour market faced losses.

The unemployment rate for returning students -- those planning to head back to school in the fall -- was 15.3 per cent in June, 2.1 percentage points lower than the same month a year ago. This was still higher than the pre-pandemic average of 13 per cent.

The agency noted however that job prospects varied widely within this age group.

Returning students aged 20 to 24 saw an unemployment rate of 8.2 per cent in June, while those aged 17 to 19 faced a jobless rate of 16.5 per cent. Teens aged 15 or 16 recorded an unemployment rate of 30.6 per cent in June as they searched for work in the waning days of the school year.

It really seems that the 'right' people are reading our forums.......
 

StatCan said youth aged 15 to 24 added 33,000 jobs in June, mostly in part-time work. Workers aged 25 to 54 saw similar gains while older members of the labour market faced losses.

The unemployment rate for returning students -- those planning to head back to school in the fall -- was 15.3 per cent in June, 2.1 percentage points lower than the same month a year ago. This was still higher than the pre-pandemic average of 13 per cent.

The agency noted however that job prospects varied widely within this age group.

Returning students aged 20 to 24 saw an unemployment rate of 8.2 per cent in June, while those aged 17 to 19 faced a jobless rate of 16.5 per cent. Teens aged 15 or 16 recorded an unemployment rate of 30.6 per cent in June as they searched for work in the waning days of the school year.

It really seems that the 'right' people are reading our forums.......
Typical summer job boom, not surprised about the 15/16 stat. The rules for hiring youth under 16 are strict in many provinces which makes employers unwilling to hire them
 

StatCan said youth aged 15 to 24 added 33,000 jobs in June, mostly in part-time work. Workers aged 25 to 54 saw similar gains while older members of the labour market faced losses.

The unemployment rate for returning students -- those planning to head back to school in the fall -- was 15.3 per cent in June, 2.1 percentage points lower than the same month a year ago. This was still higher than the pre-pandemic average of 13 per cent.

The agency noted however that job prospects varied widely within this age group.

Returning students aged 20 to 24 saw an unemployment rate of 8.2 per cent in June, while those aged 17 to 19 faced a jobless rate of 16.5 per cent. Teens aged 15 or 16 recorded an unemployment rate of 30.6 per cent in June as they searched for work in the waning days of the school year.

It really seems that the 'right' people are reading our forums.......
What's interesting is that the unemployment rate seems to 'halve' when moving from one age sub-bracket to the next.

Age 15-16 - 30.6% unemployment
Age 17-19 - 16.5% unemployment
Age 22-24 - 8.2% unemployment
 
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