Canadians voting this year after all…
Turns out not only are Canadians going to the voting booths, we’re going to be casting our votes almost a month before Americans do. Our Prime Minister called a ‘snap election’, meaning there isn’t much time for campaigning and it’s going to be a 100 meter dash to the finish line rather than a marathon. This means one on air gaffe, or one mess up during the debates and that could cost you the entire race. It’s a risky way to run an election, but the minority government seems to think it’s the way to go I guess based on polls and what not. I think Stephen Harper (our PM) is playing with fire.
The Liberals and NDP were only 5 seats shy of a coalition government. So a five seat improvement isn’t a hard goal to accomplish, especially if it will kick the other side out of power. That is the result I see happening, another minority but with a new face incharge of everything and the PCs out of power. That would be a nice change. It’s also interesting that the election was called for October 14th, which is a day after this year’s thanksgiving holiday. I guess the PC party is trying to catch people travelling but I don’t think it’s going to work. They’ll be a decent turnout for this one, and we’ll be out in force to cast our ballots. I know I will be. I’ll be out there to vote for the party I support, which is the New Democratic Party… the NDP. I’ve been a long time supporter and am more happy with this party than I ever have been before, so I’m behind them again this time around. Will be interesting to see if they can get enough seats to land that coalition needed to toss Harper out of the Prime Minister’s office…
Peter
The race is on: Harper calls election for Oct. 14
Source: CTV.ca News Staff
Canadians will go to the polls on Oct. 14, after Conservative Leader Stephen Harper met with Governor General Michaelle Jean Sunday morning and asked her to dissolve Parliament.
“Between now and Oct. 14, Canadians will choose a government to look out for their interests at a time of global economic trouble,” Harper told reporters on Sunday after he triggered the vote.
“They will choose between direction or uncertainty; between common sense or risky experiments; between steadiness or recklessness.”
Harper said his government delivered on its commitments and developed consensus on major issues such as the mission in Afghanistan and Indian residential schools.
“But now we have come to a moment where the people of Canada have to choose the way forward.”
Hours later, Harper began his campaign in Quebec City, telling supporters that the Bloc Quebecois was no longer relevant and it was the Conservatives — not the Bloc — who had succeeded in recognizing the province as a nation.
“I remember when the Bloc arrived in Ottawa requesting four years to create Quebec sovereignty. That was 18 years ago,” he said.
“Eighteen years later, the Bloc is still there, and still doesn’t have sovereignty. Dear friends, in two-and-a-half years we have achieved concrete results for Quebecers.”
Meanwhile, the opposition leaders wasted no time reacting to Harper’s election call:
* Liberal Leader Stephane Dion called the election a “stark choice” between his party and “most Conservative government in our history”
* Bloc Quebecois Leader Gilles Duceppe called Harper’s vision “illogical and inspired by (U.S. President) George W. Bush.”
* NDP Leader Jack Layton — perhaps trying to echoe U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama — said his party offered real change, ” instead of Mr. Harper’s approach”
* Green Party Leader Elizabeth May said the “our species stands on a precipice on this planet” and urged people to embrace her party’s vision
At dissolution, the party standings in the 308-seat House of Commons are as follows:
* Conservatives – 127
* Liberals – 95
* Bloc Quebecois – 48
* NDP – 30
* Independent – 4
* Vacant – 4
One of the Independents, Blair Wilson of B.C., announced last weekend he is now a Green MP.
Harper identified the Liberal party as his principal opposition, although the NDP has ignored the Liberals in the early going and tried to position itself as the progressive alternative to the Tories.
Harper noted that there are four parties on the left looking for support, and said his party was the choice of centre and right voters.
Nasty campaign?
In an exclusive interview aired today on CTV’s Question Period, Harper said he expects a nasty election campaign.
“To be really honest, I anticipate a very nasty, kind of personal-attack campaign,” he told Lloyd Robertson, CTV’s chief news anchor and senior news editor, taped Saturday at Harrington Lake.
“That’s just what I’m anticipating; that’s what the opposition has done in the past. I think that whether Canadians agree with what we’re doing or not, I don’t think they’re going to believe the kind of personal attacks and scare tactics that we’ve seen in the past.”
The Tories have made Harper the centrepiece of their campaign, and the NDP have aimed their initial ads at Harper.
On Sunday, Harper told his news conference that he wouldn’t be getting nasty with the other leaders.
“I have good relations with most of the other leaders and I respect all of them as individuals and as political adversaries,” he said.
“We disagree. I think we have lots of scope in this election to go after the positions these leaders have taken.
“The Liberal Party, is running on a policy, a tax increase, a carbon tax (that) it doesn’t want to talk about. So, I think that’s why they are going to spend our time attacking us and attacking me personally. Certainly, that’s been the tenor of the last few months of Parliament, so that’s what I expect we’ll have more of,” Harper said.
Early election call
The election writ was dropped despite the Conservative Party’s own legislation that set a fixed election date for October 2009.
Critics have charged the Tories of breaking their own law for political gain, and Sunday morning the Liberal Party issued a press release on the matter, under the subject header “Conservative Broken Platform Promise of the Day.”
“(Harper) is the one who brought in the law … and then just threw it out,” former Liberal cabinet minister Sheila Copps told CTV Newsnet Sunday morning from Ottawa.
The NDP said the election call raises key issues that will be central in the campaign.
“It’s another example of how Mr. Harper can’t be trusted, and I think this is a good opportunity to take a look at leadership in this campaign,” NDP strategist Brad Lavigne said.
Although the election call had been widely anticipated for several weeks, there were questions Sunday about the readiness of Stephane Dion’s Liberals.
The Liberals’ election plane is not expected to be ready until near the end of the week, and Dion will reportedly travel by bus for the first few days of the campaign. The Conservatives claimed that’s a blunder which raises questions about his leadership and organizational skills.
Copps said the Liberals are ready for a tough election fight and local candidates across the country are fully prepared.
“People’s expectations of Mr. Dion have been driven into the ground by Mr. Harper’s negative ad campaigns,” Copps said, noting that voters will get a different picture of the Liberal leader during the campaign.
God, I wish our campaigns last 5 weeks instead of 2 years.
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RYN: I know you left it before the election was called… Our conservative MP has been going door to door and to events since he was elected as the candidate. What do you think of the election being called prior to the by-elections? I know that calling the election now was what was thought to be in the best interested. It was thought it was best to call it before the by-elections to prevent
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people from going the the polls twice and in a short period of time. They didn’t want another election going going over the December holidays. I also guess there is some unspoken rule not to call an election during convention as the parties put som much money, time and effort into them. And while I do support the our government, all the great things they’ve done, and the Conservative Party
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I do wish that the election hadn’t been called until AFTER the Conservative & Liberal Conventions, both in November. A lot can be done at these conventions that can drastically change a platform, etc. Enjoy the rest of your day!
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I always thought it was sketchy that the prime minister basically had power to dissolve parliament. Though it shows how pathetic the Tories are that they, apparently taking a page from the pathetic GOP’s focus on faux issues, have made the readiness of an election plane their first faux issue.
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