Why are there so many rumblings about Liberals trying to push Trudeau out?
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Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸replied to Nick Pilon last edited by
@npilon I don’t think it has much of anything to do with US politics aside from the use of Facebook/Twitter as a disinformation platform by the CPC. People get tired and bored of governments and leaders. That’s just what happens and Trudeau needs to walk away to give the best chance for us to avoid disaster and continue the good he’s done.
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Nick Pilonreplied to Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸 last edited by
@chris I absolutely think it has to do with *media dynamics*. Cochrane is following, nearly to the letter, the exact script that was used in the US to force Biden out - find a couple of elected reps on the fringe of the party's coalition, loudly platform them, then move towards the center and try to force more reps to align with their fringe. Make it clear you won't let them talk about anything else until they do what you want.
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@chris I don't think "people get bored of gov'ts" is supported by Canadian history. I think it's something our news media has taken to repeating, because they like Pierre Poilievre and want him to win.
But do you see the news media saying Ontario is getting bored of Doug Ford or Saskatchewan is tired of Scott Moe - both elected a mere 3 years after Trudeau? No. Why?
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Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸replied to Nick Pilon last edited by
@npilon i think if you look at the history of Canadian (and pretty much any western democracy) elections/governments you will most certainly see that outside wartime, electorates tire of leaders and/or parties after about 10 years. To your point, yes, there is some media push but to say it is entirely that I think is naïve, and it doesn't matter now anyway. The path is clear, just as it was for Biden. And speaking of Biden... thank god, because Kamala is killing it now. The Liberals need to try the same thing. As for Scott Moe, he's facing the first real challenge to his government he's ever had. Let's hope the NDP pull it out.
Party leaders Scott Moe, Carla Beck stick to core platform issues in provincial election debate | CBC News
NDP Leader Carla Beck and Saskatchewan Party Leader Scott Moe faced off in a debate in advance of the Oct. 28 provincial election. Check out what you missed.
CBC (www.cbc.ca)
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M. Grégoirereplied to Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸 last edited by
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@hamishb @chris And neither the Mulroney nor the Chrétien/Martin gov'ts were brought down by *boredom*.
Mulroney's strategy for maintaining his coalition wound up heightening regional tensions, which splintered his party's base.
Chrétien let control of the party machinery get away from him, and Martin pulled off a coup... But was unprepared for the national stage, and marred by scandals caused by his own fondness for backroom knife fights.
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Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸replied to Nick Pilon last edited by
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Júbilo MXreplied to Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸 last edited by
@chris I just wish red and orange joined against blue... maybe without Trudeau
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Nick Pilonreplied to Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸 last edited by
@chris @hamishb Your whole thesis was "governments fall because voters get bored of them after about 10y".
That's simply not true; modern UK gov'ts last 50% longer than that, while Canadian gov'ts fall for all kinds of reasons. There's almost no evidence of Canadian gov'ts *ever* falling because voters are bored.
The idea that Canadians are "bored" of Trudeau is 100% a media invention, and left-wing recycling the idea that it's a modern, universal effect just shows how effective it's been.
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@mpjgregoire @chris Maybe they need to work harder to persuade their constituents they are worthy of re-election, rather than just ride on the coattails of the (awful) party system.
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Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸replied to Júbilo MX last edited by
@jubiloMX I'd be up for that.
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Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸replied to Nick Pilon last edited by
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Nick Pilonreplied to Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸 last edited by
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@chris
The Federal Liberals are looking like they're going to be in a similar position to the Liberal Party of Ontario. Under Wynne's leadership they fell to 7 seats and a new leader didn't help them. In the election after they chose a new leader they still only won 8 seats, 1 more than had before. -
Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸replied to Nick Pilon last edited by
@npilon @hamishb Frankly, I don't really feel like delving that deeply right now… it's missing my point in the original post, which is that polling is very clearly showing, and the panicking of Liberal MPs is making it obviously true, that the electorate is looking for a change. I hope Trudeau relents.
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Dan Neumanreplied to Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸 last edited by
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Nick Pilonreplied to Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸 last edited by
@chris @hamishb @dan613 And I'm saying that amplifying a media narrative hands power to those that constructed it, particularly if it's presented as objective observation rather than constructed narrative.
The Canadian left is never going to be able to win if we keep playing roles that are written for us because they look immediately convenient.
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Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸replied to Dan Neuman last edited by
@dan613 @npilon @hamishb as I said before, I truly believe that as a *whole* the electorate gets bored, for lack of a better term. I think it is just what happens. Enough people get fed up or disaffected, or whatever, with whatever individual policy they might be attached to. Rarely is it "one thing” (like the GST with Mulroney)... it's an accumulation.
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Chris Alemany🇺🇦🇨🇦🇪🇸replied to Nick Pilon last edited by
@npilon @hamishb @dan613 I think blaming a ‘media narrative' is lazy. I've talked to enough people, on all sides of the spectrum, to come to the conclusion that a change is wanted, and thus needed. Lashing out at that and blaming the media is counter production when there could be some introspection and figuring out what needs to be done to reverse the trajectory.