The Porn Dude

Harper and MacKay asked to Apologize to Chief Justice

IM469

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2012
11,144
2,499
113
Never apologized for countless other worse decisions - why start now ?
 

Viggo Rasmussen

New member
Feb 5, 2010
2,652
0
0
Too bad it wasn't a reporter, he could have appointed them to the Senate.

It was the Geneva-based International Commission of Jurists.
 

FAST

Banned
Mar 12, 2004
10,065
1
0
People should be apologising FOR are legal system,...not TO it.

FAST
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,229
17,295
113
Harper and Mackay are trying to stack the supreme court benches so rulings go their way. This would be a disaster for bill 36.

I can't wait for these idiots to lose their power of terror in 2015!
 

FAST

Banned
Mar 12, 2004
10,065
1
0

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,229
17,295
113
Trudeau Liberals Widen Lead Over Conservatives, Poll Suggests

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2014/07/25/justin-trudeau-liberals-majority-poll_n_5620755.html


Justin Trudeau's federal Liberals would be in majority government territory if an election were held tomorrow, a new poll suggests.

According to a survey from Forum Research released Thursday, the Liberals have widened their lead over the governing Conservatives to 16 points. Forum has the Grits at 44 per cent support, followed by Stephen Harper's Tories at 28 per cent and Thomas Mulcair's NDP at 18 per cent.

Trudeau has the highest approval rating of the main three federal leaders at 46 per cent, followed by Mulcair at 40 per cent and Harper at 33 per cent.

In a release accompanying the poll, Forum president Dr. Lorne Bozinoff pointed out that while Trudeau and Harper both poll near the same level as their parties, that is not the case for the NDP leader.

"Tom Mulcair significantly outperforms his party… by a factor of two, and that's a worrisome sign. He makes it easy to park a vote yet not commit to supporting the party in the general election," he said in the release.

Trudeau also comes out on top on the question of who would make the best prime minister, with 30 per cent backing the Liberal leader, 27 per cent supporting Harper and just 16 per cent picking Mulcair.

The poll also asked respondents to weigh in on whether or not they think Harper will call a vote before the scheduled date of October, 2015. There have been rumblings the Tories could pull the plug next spring after releasing a budget and, as reported in The Hamilton Spectator Friday, Conservatives have already nominated more than 100 candidates.

Just half of the voters surveyed think the vote will take place as scheduled with Harper as Tory leader. About 21 per cent told Forum they think Harper will resign before the next election.

The interactive voice response telephone poll surveyed 1,624 randomly selected Canadians over the age of 18 last Friday. It has a margin of error of plus or minus two per cent, 19 times out of 20.

A similar Forum poll released in June had the Grits at 39 per cent, followed by the Tories at 31 per cent, suggesting momentum rests with Trudeau's party.

Yet, the new numbers paint a different picture than results from a survey released by Abacus Data earlier this month. The Liberals also led in that poll at 34 per cent support among decided voters, followed by the Tories at 31 per cent and NDP at 23 per cent.

But HuffPost contributor Eric Grenier concluded that while the Liberal edge was holding firm, the Tories were recovering from some of their lowest points since coming to office in 2006. And with Mulcair's approval numbers rising, Grenier wrote that a "tough, three-way, regionalized race" awaits voters in 2015.

Of course, many will say the only poll that matters comes on election day.

:canada::thumb:
 

lovelatinas

Well Known Member
Sep 30, 2008
6,678
2
38
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2014/07/25/justin-trudeau-liberals-majority-poll_n_5620755.html


Justin Trudeau's federal Liberals would be in majority government territory if an election were held tomorrow, a new poll suggests.

According to a survey from Forum Research released Thursday, the Liberals have widened their lead over the governing Conservatives to 16 points. Forum has the Grits at 44 per cent support, followed by Stephen Harper's Tories at 28 per cent and Thomas Mulcair's NDP at 18 per cent.

Trudeau has the highest approval rating of the main three federal leaders at 46 per cent, followed by Mulcair at 40 per cent and Harper at 33 per cent.

In a release accompanying the poll, Forum president Dr. Lorne Bozinoff pointed out that while Trudeau and Harper both poll near the same level as their parties, that is not the case for the NDP leader.

"Tom Mulcair significantly outperforms his party… by a factor of two, and that's a worrisome sign. He makes it easy to park a vote yet not commit to supporting the party in the general election," he said in the release.

Trudeau also comes out on top on the question of who would make the best prime minister, with 30 per cent backing the Liberal leader, 27 per cent supporting Harper and just 16 per cent picking Mulcair.

The poll also asked respondents to weigh in on whether or not they think Harper will call a vote before the scheduled date of October, 2015. There have been rumblings the Tories could pull the plug next spring after releasing a budget and, as reported in The Hamilton Spectator Friday, Conservatives have already nominated more than 100 candidates.

Just half of the voters surveyed think the vote will take place as scheduled with Harper as Tory leader. About 21 per cent told Forum they think Harper will resign before the next election.

The interactive voice response telephone poll surveyed 1,624 randomly selected Canadians over the age of 18 last Friday. It has a margin of error of plus or minus two per cent, 19 times out of 20.

A similar Forum poll released in June had the Grits at 39 per cent, followed by the Tories at 31 per cent, suggesting momentum rests with Trudeau's party.

Yet, the new numbers paint a different picture than results from a survey released by Abacus Data earlier this month. The Liberals also led in that poll at 34 per cent support among decided voters, followed by the Tories at 31 per cent and NDP at 23 per cent.

But HuffPost contributor Eric Grenier concluded that while the Liberal edge was holding firm, the Tories were recovering from some of their lowest points since coming to office in 2006. And with Mulcair's approval numbers rising, Grenier wrote that a "tough, three-way, regionalized race" awaits voters in 2015.

Of course, many will say the only poll that matters comes on election day.

:canada::thumb:

This is because I tell a my family members, cousins and workplace associates, plus I use social media. the truly evil hidden agenda that the Harper government has if they have a majority for another 4 years. Maybe it gets their attention. I can't make them vote Liberal or NDP but at least I got them thinking.
 

Marcus1027

New member
Feb 5, 2006
921
0
0
Harper and Mackay are trying to stack the supreme court benches so rulings go their way. This would be a disaster for bill 36.

I can't wait for these idiots to lose their power of terror in 2015!
What? And have the return of the inept and innately corrupt liberals to return?
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,229
17,295
113


What? And have the return of the inept and innately corrupt liberals to return?
Why do you think Harper along with Duffy and others are not corrupt? Joy Smith with her so called Joy Smith Foundation is not corrupt and poised to take her share of the $20 million for her so called foundation? All governments of every stripe are corrupt, it's all about getting elected and don't give a rat's ass about what is good for the public. If you ever are caught paying for sex and dragged through the court system remember to tell the judge....

Your Honor but but Stephen Harper is my man, please let me go.....
 
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