Presently in Canada we are participating in the most important Canadian election in my lifetime and probably yours too. Our country is under active threat, both from a threat to our economy and a threat to our nation’s sovereignty itself. Whichever Prime Minster we choose to represent us on April 28, this person needs to deal with these significant threats and to provide solid and confident leadership in order to pursue policies that will enable our people to not just survive but thrive in this new world.

I believe this person is Mark Carney, and I will tell you why. Not because you must agree with me – there are reasonable preferences and positions that folks can take and arrive at different conclusions than mine here – but these are my conclusions as they apply to my situation and preferences.

Dealing with the threat to sovereignty.

The American administration is aiming for ownership of Canada’s energy, water, raw mineral resources, and territorial control over the arctic waters. This is under the guise of Canada being some “51st state”, and lets quickly and firmly dismiss this as the lie it is. The Americans do not even let their existing citizens vote when demographics are unsuitable to Republican successes, such as in Puerto Rico or Washington DC or various gerrymandered districts. The Americans do not want us to join them, they want to have our stuff. This is not a threat of annexation, this is a threat of conquest and annihilation.

This threat is compounded by the sabre-rattling of Alberta Premier Danielle Smith. She wines and dines and pals around with the very same American propagandists who are pushing to annihilate us. And she threatens to promote an independent Alberta if her idiotic and short-sighted demands are not met. Nevermind for a moment how stupid this is – Alberta would be isolated from Canada, and the Americans would seize on this vulnerability to bully them mercilessly – but let’s at the least just acknowledge this as one crucial aspect of leadership the next Prime Minister will need to deal with.

I do not believe that Jagmeet Singh is the ideal person to deal with these threats. Singh is a genuine and kindhearted man and I believe sincerely means well, but does not shown the strength that I believe is needed to handle this multifaceted crisis. He was outmaneuvered by Justin Trudeau when trying to push policy in the last government, and he was outmaneuvered by Pierre Poilievre when he was trying to collapse the last government. From the political choices he’s made in terms of policy priorities and more, I believe he is out of his depth to handle these times of crisis and opportunity. In other times, a leader with his personality traits might be a fine candidate but in my analysis these are not those times.

I also do not believe that Pierre Poilievre is suited for this task, not even close. Some people claim that he is “like Trump” but this is inaccurate in my view. Instead I believe he is a weak person, lacking in moral or personal convictions. There is a video that PP posted on his YouTube channel where he bullies some small-time rural journalist, seemingly proud of his own success at being a complete asshole. His posturing there reminds me of those two-bit “alpha” scammers who for the mere price of $20,000 will teach you how to appear strong and tough. But we all know the desperate people who fall for this sort of thing are weak and soulless – they need help and guidance, not the office of Prime Minister.

I do not believe that this weak and pathetic man will be able to stand up to people like Trump who is closely aligned with ideologically and culturally. Instead, I believe his “little man syndrome” personality will cause him to fold like a wet paper bag in any attempt at negotiations or defence of our country. And we see signs of this folding in practice, as he defends Danielle Smith’s ultimatum and her ongoing association and friendship with people attacking Canada. And I see him choose policy positions not rooted in convictions. Poilievre’s chasing of American culture war talking points (punching down on vulnerable minorities to score points with assholes), and his opposition of carbon pricing (easily the most reasonable market-based approach to reducing emissions), his attacks on science and in particular the attack on vaccinations – these all add up to a man who blows where the populist winds take him. We do not need someone like this when all the chips are down.

I do however believe that Mark Carney is a person who can successfully represent Canada and our values, and to be able to stand firm in the face of a difficult threat. I believe this because he has extensive experience in leadership roles in both the private and public sectors, and based on the reports of people who worked with him during these times. One does not get offered the job as the first foreigner in hundreds of years of history to lead the Bank of England by being an idiot or bad at his job in any way.

Further, Carney’s values are not based on the populist winds of the day, his positions are well-defined intellectually and spelled out in his 2021 book on economics entitled “Values”. And finally, the way he handles deliberately hostile press in a no-nonsense way demonstrates that he is quick-witted and confident, not looking to deflect or avoid conflict. Carney also places much emphasis on being results-oriented – a difficult task that many in politics have promised and failed to deliver on in the past – but is an attitude that absolutely what we need to bring to government. Carney’s focus, dedication, experience, and confidence – I believe this is what we need from our leadership today.

Dealing with the restructuring of the Canadian economy

The recent US election has proven that a majority of voters that country do not prioritize or value consistency or rationality in their international relations. Regardless of the outcome of the current trade war, they have unambiguously demonstrated that they cannot be trusted going forward. This is rather inconvenient for Canada, given the deep economic times that have built up since the original NAFTA was signed. The current leadership in the US is deeply erratic and irrational and does not hesitate to blatantly lie even when absurd. This means that Canada has no choice but to permanently alter our relationship with this country, and will in turn require significant economic restructuring. It is crucial that we do this well, as this will affect jobs and groceries and frankly most aspects of our lives.

I do not believe that Jagmeet Singh is suited for this task. He has not shown a focus on economic issues, and many of the policies he has proposed have been ill-considered. There is a false believe in the current zeitgeist that the political left cannot have good economic policies, but this is false. There is a leftist answer to the housing crisis – if the market fails, the government should build homes. There is a good leftist answer to the grocery crisis – the companies should be broken up or disbanded. If markets fail, you step in to provide an alternative that works. But Singh has not proposed anything near this, and the half-measure solutions he has proposed such as a profit cap on companies is dangerously ignorant of how markets work, and would cause real harm in addition to being ineffective.

I also do not believe that Poilievre is suited for this task, not even close. Poilievre has shown himself to be devotee into the cult of free markets. His solution to any problem he faces is to cut taxes, cut services, cut workers, cut everything. It’s a misplaced devotion, as the market cares about an efficient outcome not one that works for humans. If the free market benefits from uncosted externalities such as pollution, than to serve his cult he must deny climate science as it’s inconvenient for short-term profits. When wealth inequality spirals out of control he must embrace that and expand with more tax cuts for the people who already have so much.

Canada cannot cut its way into the future when we are facing these difficult economic conditions. Reducing spending during a recession is an incredibly stupid proposal, and we have seen these austerity measures fail time and time again around the world as it triggers less spending and thus prevents economic growth. In no uncertain terms, Poilievre’s plan will lead to a severe economic depression – economic suicide. Yet there he is out on the campaign trail, wanting to cut anything and everything to aid the superrich and proudly show off his ignorant and blind faith in the free market. He papers over his ignorance with slogans designed to trick people who are not paying attention and don’t understand what is at stake. This must be stopped.

I do believe that Mark Carney is the person to handle the task of restructuring Canada’s economy. He is an insider who was worked at hedge funds and private banks, and helmed the Bank of Canada and Bank of England and helped shepherd both through significant crises. But he’s also an insider who is keenly aware of the failures of the blind worship of free markets that we see demonstrated by Poilievre. Carney’s 2021 book, “Values”, is an intellectual refutation of how markets can and have led us astray from benefiting humanity when left unrestrained. This is precisely the situation Canada finds itself in as this new economic crisis begins, and we need someone who understands this to help lead us out of it.

Carney understands that to survive and thrive in the coming years, we need urgent work to build and invest in infrastructure, industry, and national defence. Not to cut services and people, but to redirect money and people into the many – many! – things we need to forge our new future. And he knows that results are what matters, not good intentions. This is not a game to him, he doesn’t need to run for a pension or personal wealth or anything else a cynic might suggest someone goes into government for. He quit his cushy job and signed up to be the new face for a legion of deplorables to channel their anger at with their hastily printed “Fuck Carney” signs, and I believe he did this because he wants our country and it’s people to thrive.

Conclusion

I don’t know what the future holds, or if Mr Carney will live up to these expectations if elected. If he doesn’t, we will need better representation from the other parties to hold him to account and give a good alternative. A permanent one-party political system is not what I or anyone else should want.

If you disagree with my perspectives and my conclusions here, please take some time and become active in whatever group represents your beliefs – and do your best to help channel them into being the best possible versions of themselves. When I say these times are crucial, that doesn’t mean you have to agree with me, it means you need to stop coasting. Get out of your comfort zone, dare to give a fuck even if you step on some toes in the process or seem uncool in the process.

Too many of our American neighbours chose inaction, and it has already cost them dearly. Gourd only knows how much worse it will get for them in the coming months and years. We Canadians do not have to share their fate, we can learn from their choices and their plight. I challenge you – yes you, the reader – to do something. Register to vote. Watch the leaders in their press conferences and see how they respond to questions. Look at the policy platforms as they are released. Ask questions, don’t just take anyone’s word for any of this including me. Go to your local representative’s campaign office and ask questions. Volunteer. It’s your country, it’s important.

Choose action, and relish in the soulful feeling that you are standing with so many Canadians all doing their part to help save our country.

  • CaptainCancel@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    I usually vote NDP, as they’ve the most pro-union party. If Canadian sovereignty is on the line, I want the smartest fucking person in charge. I’m lucky that my area always leans left for our MP. For others, I just hope the vote doesn’t get split between NDP and Liberal in more conservative areas.

  • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    I do not believe that Jagmeet Singh is the ideal person to deal with these threats. Singh is a genuine and kindhearted man and I believe sincerely means well, but does not shown the strength that I believe is needed to handle this multifaceted crisis. He was outmaneuvered by Justin Trudeau when trying to push policy in the last government, and he was outmaneuvered by Pierre Poilievre when he was trying to collapse the last government. From the political choices he’s made in terms of policy priorities and more, I believe he is out of his depth to handle these times of crisis and opportunity. In other times, a leader with his personality traits might be a fine candidate but in my analysis these are not those times.

    So what you’re saying is, the NDP is your preferred party, but you’re voting Liberal because you think Carney has better political clout than Jagmeet Singh.

    And of course, Poilièvre isn’t even a valuable option at this point, unless you want to serve Canada on a silver 51st state platter to Trump.

    It’s damn shame, I tell ya. We need the NDP now more than ever in Canada. we need their policies and we need their ideas to help the average middle class Canadian and a party who thinks outside the box instead of just trying to work with the broken system we have. But because of the fucking Americans, always fucking up democracy around the world, we have to choose the lesser of two evils, yet again.

    In 4 years, if Trump finally leaves office (because there’s a chance he might not at the end of his mandate) and the U.S. finally elect a better more centrist candidate, I hope to god that we vote for the NDP in power to finally get the government and the services we deserve.

    • ninthant@lemmy.caOP
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      3 days ago

      So what you’re saying is, the NDP is your preferred party, but you’re voting Liberal because you think Carney has better political clout than Jagmeet Singh.

      I feel like this is willful misrepresentation of what I was saying here. Instead I am saying that Singh has not demonstrated the specific leadership skills that I believe are essential for success in the coming years, nor has the policy priorities indicated a good path forward. And that while he seems to be a genuine and kind man with good intentions, that he is not a good choice in the here and now – not in policy and not in personality.

      The NDP is not my preferred political party, but a version of it might be. An NDP that didn’t play for the centre with half-measure solutions, but instead an NDP that was authentic and said fuck galen weston if he steals from us by price fixing bread we take his company and put it up for auction and let someone else try. And if that person can’t figure out how to sell bread than the government can hire some canadians to bake bread and sell it at cost from the ruined husk of HBC stores. And if no one can figure out how to unfuck the housing market than they can just step in and make homes themselves.

      And they can expand Canada Post to deliver packages cheaply from coast to coast to enable small businesses to thrive. And they can seize factories owned by Americans when they tariff us and make our own shit in them with our steel and aluminum. They can nationalize industries like fibre internet which tend towards monopolies, and they can break apart companies that have consolidated into oblivion. And they can hire Canadians to write open-source software to replace expensive american consultants contracts that drain money from our governments at all levels. They could apply an export levy to unprocessed raw material exports, especially non-renewable ones because we don’t fucking need to sell a limited resource on the cheap.

      And they can hire people to maintain national parks, and hire bus drivers to connect communities. And have sharply progressive income tax and throw in some wealth taxes and land value taxes and seize assets of companies using tax havens. And we can throw out policies the Americans pressured us into such as insanely long copyright laws which stifle culture and free expressive. We could ban foreign ownership of our media institutions. We could levy significant taxes on the techbro companies that got into a position of monopoly by using venture capital and if they refuse to pay we can block them and canadians can find new platforms. We could radically expand the CBC to make it a glowing showcase of Canadian culture both for independent and commercial content. And I could go on and on for fucking ever.

      If the NDP had even a fraction of that, and Carney drops the ball with his market-based approach, then I’m fucking there for it. Because even though I’m a market-oriented person like Carney is – if people like me drop the ball, we need the ball to be picked up by someone who can use it.

      But that’s not the reality we have right now. The NDP of right now is playing at being centrist and in my opinion is doing a relatively lousy job of it. And maybe that’s because the things I suggested are too radical for Canadians? But I see the enthusiasm for the optimism of someone like Charlie Angus here or Bernie Sanders or AOC in the US and I have to think maybe we could fucking try? Because it was ever gonna work it’s got to be when Canadians feel like the system has beaten them down.

      Sorry if this seems too aggressive. My intended tone is inspirational, not a negative attack on your question. Because I think the core of what you’re saying is correct. I want those things and think Canada needs that energy, but also I don’t want the current version of what the NDP is offering.

      • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Ok, there’s a lot to comment here.

        I feel like this is willful misrepresentation of what I was saying here. Instead I am saying that Singh has not demonstrated the specific leadership skills that I believe are essential for success in the coming years, nor has the policy priorities indicated a good path forward. And that while he seems to be a genuine and kind man with good intentions, that he is not a good choice in the here and now – not in policy and not in personality.

        I understand the part about the man not being a good fit right now. But about the policy priorities, I disagree with you. And I think if you took the time to read a bit about the NDP’s history in the past 20 years, their priorities are pretty much in line with everything else you mentioned. The only problem is they never got a majority and always had to work, at best, with a minority government where they had to make alliances to try and pass whatever they could.

        The NDP is not my preferred political party, but a version of it might be. An NDP that didn’t play for the centre with half-measure solutions, but instead an NDP that was authentic and said fuck galen weston if he steals from us by price fixing bread we take his company and put it up for auction and let someone else try. And if that person can’t figure out how to sell bread than the government can hire some canadians to bake bread and sell it at cost from the ruined husk of HBC stores. And if no one can figure out how to unfuck the housing market than they can just step in and make homes themselves.

        The NDP had to work with what they had. Having never had a majority, they couldn’t pass any of their bills. I can bet my top dollar that they would have done something about the bread price fixing, about the price gouging at the groceries, about minimum wage employees not getting any reward for working and keeping stores open for the public during a gobal pandemic. They also would like to implement better tax laws so wealthy people pay their fair share.

        The NDP is also thinking outside the box when it comes to the housing crisis. The Liberals are giving tired old solutions that don’t work, or will still benefit the wealthy because they refuse to work outside the system. But the NDP is proposing something else. You should look it up.

        The NDP are not playing centrist. Again, they’re trying to work with the Liberals to pass whatever bills they can. The Liberals will never allow some things like changing the income tax rules for wealthier people. They’ll also defend companies that lobby them. So what can you do when you’re not even the official opposition party? There isn’t much. We’re lucky we got the 10$ daycare that the NDP has been pushing for ages. We’re lucky we got the expansion of the dental care covered by our public insurance. And we’re lucky we got a bunch of other things, all thanks to the NDP. Even though the Liberals are taking the credit for it when the NPD has been fighting for these things for decades.

        But that’s not the reality we have right now. The NDP of right now is playing at being centrist and in my opinion is doing a relatively lousy job of it. And maybe that’s because the things I suggested are too radical for Canadians? But I see the enthusiasm for the optimism of someone like Charlie Angus here or Bernie Sanders or AOC in the US and I have to think maybe we could fucking try? Because it was ever gonna work it’s got to be when Canadians feel like the system has beaten them down.

        Yeah what you suggested is pretty darn radical. Seizing properties and things like that is too much. This will scare away any foreign business that wants to establish themselves here and chase away much needed jobs and investments.

        And yes there’s an increase in enthusiasm for Charlie Angus here and the NDP but people are still voting Liberal because, with the first pas the post system, it’s the only vote that can definitely beat the Conservatives. Where as splitting it between the Liberals and the NDP could lead the Conservatives into becoming the winning party, even if it’s a minority. And even with a minority, nobody wants Poilievre as their prime minister. That’s the fundamental problem. We need to change our voting system.

        Sorry if this seems too aggressive. My intended tone is inspirational, not a negative attack on your question. Because I think the core of what you’re saying is correct. I want those things and think Canada needs that energy, but also I don’t want the current version of what the NDP is offering.

        No worries. It does sound like you’re very passionate about this but, we’re just debating. And we’re all friends here. ;) We just want what’s best for our country. ❤️

        • ninthant@lemmy.caOP
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          I deeply appreciate that you took the response in the context it was meant. The medium of text is hard sometimes and when I see a rant emerging from my passion I worry that it can be misconstrued.

          The NDP had to work with what they had. Having never had a majority, they couldn’t pass any of their bills. I can bet my top dollar that they would have done something about the bread price fixing, about the price gouging at the groceries, about minimum wage employees not getting any reward for working and keeping stores open for the public during a gobal pandemic.

          This is a specific area of complaint that I have with Singh. Because this area is a no-brainer win for them but they played it so incredibly centrist.

          What we need from the food security issue — people not being able to afford food — is actual change. Trudeau and Singh were very happy to bring up the CEOs to lecture them on how mean they were, but this was a PR stunt not actual change.

          In this case I believe there are two approaches that make sense. One would be to use a market-oriented approach and use competition laws to break up monopolists and prevent mergers and ensure that regulations do not stifle new entrants.

          The other approach would be to have the government to use the grain that we grow in Canada and hire Canadians to bake that into bread and sell the bread at a break-even rate. And not just for bread, any type of essential food product that the market is failing to deliver. Like a national scale Farmers Market.

          But the NDP doesn’t propose that they propose price caps. Price caps betray a fundamentally ignorant understanding of how markets work, and could cause real harm from food shortages.

          However I am convinced from reading Carney’s book that he understands the market-oriented solution I outlined earlier. I have not seen specifics on his plan in this area but I am confident that he knows what a good market-oriented plan would be.

          But this is why I say that I want the NDP (and hell even the CPC if I’m dreaming) to put out better alternatives. Because if Carney is elected and fails on this we need to jettison him and replace him wiry someone who can deliver results. Becuse results is what we need.

          They also would like to implement better tax laws so wealthy people pay their fair share.

          Agreed. Specifically I believe a land value tax and other wealth tax, along with a crackdown on tax havens is absolutely needed. The NDP should begin and end every speech on this point and hell use it as a comma.

          Yeah what you suggested is pretty darn radical. Seizing properties and things like that is too much. This will scare away any foreign business that wants to establish themselves here and chase away much needed jobs and investments.

          This is a good point and you’re absolutely correct that we need to ensure that overly punitive measures don’t scare away new entrants either domestic or foreign.

          So yeah seizing a company should not be the first resort but it should be on the table for cases of extreme and persistent corruption. And maybe that wouldn’t be the favourite on Bay Street but I can imagine the general public being on board for this.

          Because people are genuinely sick of the status quo. I can’t prove this but in my head canon, if this election was Charlie Angus vs JT vs PP, I think the LPC would be wiped off the map and the NDP would have a real shot at winning. Maybe that’s a stupid thing to believe, I’m not a pollster but that’s the energy I get from talking with my friends and family and acquaintances.

          You made many other good points but I have to leave it at that for now. I appreciate your perspective.

          • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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            I deeply appreciate that you took the response in the context it was meant. The medium of text is hard sometimes and when I see a rant emerging from my passion I worry that it can be misconstrued.

            No problem. :)

            This is a specific area of complaint that I have with Singh. Because this area is a no-brainer win for them but they played it so incredibly centrist.

            Yeah, I don’t know if the majority of people are ready yet for their actual plans. So they’re trying to win over some votes from the center at least. Baby steps.

            What we need from the food security issue — people not being able to afford food — is actual change. Trudeau and Singh were very happy to bring up the CEOs to lecture them on how mean they were, but this was a PR stunt not actual change.

            In this case I believe there are two approaches that make sense. One would be to use a market-oriented approach and use competition laws to break up monopolists and prevent mergers and ensure that regulations do not stifle new entrants.

            The other approach would be to have the government to use the grain that we grow in Canada and hire Canadians to bake that into bread and sell the bread at a break-even rate. And not just for bread, any type of essential food product that the market is failing to deliver. Like a national scale Farmers Market.

            But the NDP doesn’t propose that they propose price caps. Price caps betray a fundamentally ignorant understanding of how markets work, and could cause real harm from food shortages.

            However I am convinced from reading Carney’s book that he understands the market-oriented solution I outlined earlier. I have not seen specifics on his plan in this area but I am confident that he knows what a good market-oriented plan would be.

            But this is why I say that I want the NDP (and hell even the CPC if I’m dreaming) to put out better alternatives. Because if Carney is elected and fails on this we need to jettison him and replace him wiry someone who can deliver results. Becuse results is what we need.

            Food insecurity is a huge, HUGE issue for me. Absolutely nobody should go hungry in a country of plenty like Canada. I totally agree with your that when price gouging became too obvious, the government went way too soft on grocery chains, and especially Galen Weston and friends. (Like Éric Laflèche of Metro, who’s just as guilty.)

            Canada has a supply management system that puts in quotas for things like dairy. I tried to look (quickly and briefly) if there was something similar for grains but I didn’t find anything. The thing about putting a price on grains to try to lower the price of bread or other derivatives won’t change anything. Even if the grain sells for less, companies, whose bottom line are profits for investors, are going to keep price gouging us to maximize profit. That’s just how capitalism works. (And it sucks) And I don’t know that a government bread would fix this issue.

            I think the government just needs to put their fucking balls on the table and fine grocers huge amounts for what they did. Teach them a fucking lesson. And also incentivize people for creating grocery CO-OPs. This is the real solution to the grocery chain price gouging. A solid CO-OP can negotiate prices down to ensure they sell their merchandise at the lowest cost. And the members of that CO-OP all have a say in how the business is run. Think how condos are managed with general assemblies where everybody votes and representatives are elected to work in the best interest of the co-owners, except it’s a grocery store and every other CO-OPs work together in price negotiations. And the bottom line isn’t making a profit for investors, it’s being able to sell food at the lowest price possible to everybody.

            They also would like to implement better tax laws so wealthy people pay their fair share.
            

            Agreed. Specifically I believe a land value tax and other wealth tax, along with a crackdown on tax havens is absolutely needed. The NDP should begin and end every speech on this point and hell use it as a comma.

            Fuckin’ A.

            Yeah what you suggested is pretty darn radical. Seizing properties and things like that is too much. This will scare away any foreign business that wants to establish themselves here and chase away much needed jobs and investments.
            

            This is a good point and you’re absolutely correct that we need to ensure that overly punitive measures don’t scare away new entrants either domestic or foreign.

            So yeah seizing a company should not be the first resort but it should be on the table for cases of extreme and persistent corruption. And maybe that wouldn’t be the favourite on Bay Street but I can imagine the general public being on board for this.

            Because people are genuinely sick of the status quo. I can’t prove this but in my head canon, if this election was Charlie Angus vs JT vs PP, I think the LPC would be wiped off the map and the NDP would have a real shot at winning. Maybe that’s a stupid thing to believe, I’m not a pollster but that’s the energy I get from talking with my friends and family and acquaintances.

            Totes.

            You made many other good points but I have to leave it at that for now. I appreciate your perspective.

            No problem :) It’s a good intellectual exercise and I appreciate it.

      • Dearche@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Hear hear!

        Personally, all my life I’ve felt like the Liberals have just been the lesser of two evils. One party that simply wants to enrich themselves and their buddies, and another that will enrich those at the top and hope that anything they don’t catch will trickle down, despite that those at the top have long since learned to sieve with ceramic nano-filters.

        The NDP’s been the only party that had any momentum that would even entertain ideas that were actually left of center, but frankly Singh’s flip flopped all over the place like a beached catfish. He lacks ideals he can build a spine around and instead prioritizes trying to steal votes from those further right than him.

        We need a party that actually has strong convictions and are willing to take chances on them, speak of ideals for a better Canada and build plans around them rather than try to sneak some votes away from other parties like some jealous catfish.

        This is why I keep voting Liberals. Not only because first-past-the-post means that votes to third parties tend to be wasted votes, but because the NDP just keeps failing to hold any sort of conviction beyond being an opportunist. Especially the last decade.

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    I am fully aware that openly supporting the person who is currently leading in the pools is hardly a daring or provocative take. I don’t expect this to change the world, I find personal value in structuring my thoughts in an organized way and sharing them with people. If you read it, thanks for reading, if not I’m not offended. Cheers.

  • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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    From what I’ve seen Singh has great leadership and he cares more about Canada (patriotism) than the other leaders but I have no problems with Carney, May, or Blanchet though I recognize it would take a coalition for him to be PM

  • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    Thanks for this; it’s refreshing to see someone else with an almost identical take to my own.

    Just a few things to add…

    1. I also don’t think this is the time to go Green. While the Green Party actually has an excellent platform, they don’t have the people to implement it.
    2. Here in Canada, we vote for our representatives. In other times, I wouldn’t care so much about party leadership, and would instead vote for the MP I think would best represent me and my community in Ottawa. However, in this election, it really is about voting for the party that can support the best leader for the time. And that’s currently Carney.
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      Correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe Canadian MPs vote very consistently along party lines – so with few exceptions I don’t believe choosing based on your local representative is the most rational choice. This is why I stress the party leadership here. However, you aren’t a robot and you don’t have to go with what some asshole keyboard warrior like me thinks is a rational choice. If you have a strong belief in a particular local candidate, they can be where the next generation of leadership comes from.

  • Arghblarg@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    The Americans do not even let their existing citizens vote when demographics are unsuitable to Republican successes, such as in Puerto Rico or Washington DC

    This, 1000%. Anyone who thinks they would let a new “51st” state, especially one with so many ‘left-leaning’ (compared to US metrics on political views) people living there, have full statehood, is hopelessly naive.

    We’d end up being some second-class territory without full voting rights, a true vassal state, enslaved and disenfranchised.

    • ninthant@lemmy.caOP
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      3 days ago

      In their defence, after meeting with Danielle Smith and Kevin O’Leary… can we really blame the Americans for thinking we were dumber than a sack of hammers and would fall for it?

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    I agree with you. I would want to support the NDP but the party of Singh has not put forward big or crazy ideas, and sound like Orange-crush flavoured Liberals now that Trudeau is out of the equation. And he has spent far too much time doing the same thing Poilievre is doing except less effectively: explaining why what Trudeau is doing was bad.

    Someone like Charlie Angus needs to bring a protégé under their wing to propel them to new leadership of the NDP, in a similar way Bernie Sanders is setting up a career for AOC as a potential way forward for the all-too-stubborn DNC.

    My hot take is that an NDP-er from the Prairies, like Sam Beck, Rachel Notley (provinical politicians), or Leah Gazan need to take the reins of the federal NDP, and connect the Prairies back to their communal farming history (and Gazan is the best choice for Winnipeg Centre MP). I believe they have a balanced view of understanding the needs of farmers, miners, union workers, in ways that resonate with the common people including Atlantic Canada and Quebec, but wouldn’t tie themselves up in culture war crap and lobbyist influences. They would not be scared to take actions that Jagmeet Singh seems to be too hesitant to.