Cute. In this case however the loser is fucking the prom queen.red said:"Losers always whine about their best. Winners go home and fuck the prom queen." Sean Connery - The Rock
Cute. In this case however the loser is fucking the prom queen.red said:"Losers always whine about their best. Winners go home and fuck the prom queen." Sean Connery - The Rock
Clement is a damn decent guy. He is no longer the right wing ideologue that he once was. He is much more of a centralist and more of a pragmatic realist than he was in the past.emerging44 said:McCay, or, how about Prentice? But definitely Harper, Flaherty, Baird and Clement gone.
A pothead in charge of the MP, no way I will go there.LancsLad said:POT Party.
danmand said:A pothead in charge of the MP, no way I will go there.
I agree, down with Harper!!LancsLad said:Please try to keep up with the group.
POT are the Pissed Off Taxpayers and we are not going to take it anymore.
It's difficult to understand and then you proceed to explain it ?great bear said:It is difficult to understand how the Conservatives put themselves in this position. This mess is a direct result of the PMO controlling the total agenda with little or no input from the elected caucus. GB
Ordinarily, I would agree with you. But with Dion as leader, the Liberals are damaged goods. Any Gaffe would doom them in an election with `other than Harper` as leader. If Harper resigns in favor of, say, Mckay, then the Liberals could begin acting as if they are putting Canada first by dealing with the largest minority party(while still holding a stranglehold over policy) and await their new leader(almost assuredly Ignatieff)Bud Plug said:I told you so!![]()
https://terb.cc/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=209220
I don`t think a switch in Conservative Party leadership will resolve the problem. If parties do not merge, I think we will see an increasing number of minority and/or coalition governments.
See what did I tell youbbking said:... but again the public financing is part of a larger reform which the Liberals did at their disadvantage. This has more to do with HARPO's bullying tactics carrying over from the last Parliament despite HARPO'S assurances on election night.
bbk
I would agree with you if they had run as a coalition. I expect the results would have been remakably different if they had run.bbking said:Clearly you have no idea how a Parliamentary democracy works ... I would say that a combination of Parties that represent 64% of the public vote has pretty good mandate.
If we had a more equal representation system ... this would be common place ... as it is in most of Europe.
Canadians did speak loudly in the last election, they returned a minority Parliament with the expectations that ALL Parties work together. Clearly since last Thursday's economic update Harpo's Conservatives have shown that they are more interested in partisan politics and not the good of all Canadians.
bbk
You are mistaken. The parliamentary system does not directly elect its head of state or its government. It elects members of parliament who in turn determine who will form a government. Harper does not enjoy the confidence of the House of Commons. The coalition that is in the process of self-creation has a good shot at the job. This situation is not new in Canadian politics. It has happened before.Quaggitty said:Even if you don't like Harper or the conservatives can you not see that it is important to allow the canadian people the right to decide on their government. Put it to the people I would much rater pay for an election than watch this country crumble
Train: you should hear me try and explain the lipstick smears on my winkie to my wife.train said:It's difficult to understand and then you proceed to explain it ?![]()
I agree with your explanation but of course the Liberals and NDP would have to admit then that this is 100% about having their allowance curtailed. They will spin this in some other way so as to not make this a matter of greed.
landscaper said:it would be very interesting if the gg told the coalition that there options are to work with the govt or go to the polls what would their response be?
They would point out that a majority of MP's representing a majority of Canadians have passed a motion of non confidence indicating that is impossible, and that a majority of MP's representing a majority of Canadians do not want another election.landscaper said:it would be very interesting if the gg told the coalition that there options are to work with the govt or go to the polls what would their response be?