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Choosing instead, of going to the debate, to stump in Edmonton Strathcona "isn't wrong" in your view. :rolleyes:

Hopefully that move backfires big time and the only "progressive" seat in Alberta is lost both to the Libs and NDPers. Justin's off to a terrible start, and @Jasmine18 is right, were a more likable Con leader in place this election wouldn't even be close.
 
There are rumors people behind the anyone but CPC are not Canadian now the anyone but JUstin right or wrong you can see where people are coming from they feel mislead.

The weird thing about your "there are rumors" allegations is ***that the absolute same, and even more so,*** can be said regarding those dedicated to taking down Justin and electing the Conservatives, i.e. a tributary to the Russian et al troll networks that are said to have given us Trump.

Though I can see how such skewed "the other guy" impressions can be held by those whose news/social media universe tend away from the Anglosphere: "ethnic" media and social networks like WeChat as sealed-off, hidden-in-plain-sight vehicles for propaganda and misinformation. (Which is a big reason why the Ford/Kenney forces won over the "ethnoburbans", to say nothing of anti-sex-ed protests and the like)
 
Ya. 5 years ago had you told me Conservatives would get in bed with Russians I wouldn't believe you.
 
Andrew Scheer Agreed With Controversial Anti-Gay Comments, Ex-MP Claims
“Mr. Scheer disagreed with Mr. Spencer’s comments then. He still disagrees with him now," said a spokesperson for the Tory leader.

See link.

After former Saskatchewan MP Larry Spencer was turfed from the Canadian Alliance in 2003 for making inflammatory comments about homosexuality, a young Andrew Scheer stayed on to work in his office.

Spencer had told a Vancouver Sun reporter he believed homosexuality was a conspiracy and that he would support a bill to criminalize it. Stephen Harper, who led the Canadian Alliance at the time, was on the cusp of uniting with the Progressive Conservatives.

Harper fired Spencer from his critic role the same day the article was published, calling the comments “unacceptable” and out of line with the values of the party. Spencer issued an apology and withdrew from caucus. Scheer, a new graduate at the time, didn’t quit the Regina-Lumsden-Lake Centre MP’s constituency office.

“I took it to be that he was in agreement with what I had to say,” Spencer told HuffPost Canada before clarifying, “I know he was in agreement with what we were trying to say.”

On Tuesday night, hours after this story was first published and after repeated requests for comment since Sept. 3, the Conservative Party’s director of communications, Brock Harrison, emailed a statement saying: “Mr. Scheer disagreed with Mr. Spencer’s comments then. He still disagrees with him now.”

Spencer said he first crossed paths with Scheer in Ottawa at the beginning of his term and the young man made an impression on him by gathering “the meaty things from the newspapers” for his briefing notes.

Scheer worked in Spencer’s constituency office for several months before jumping into politics himself.

In the lead-up to the 2004 election, Spencer was prevented from running under the banner of the newly formed Conservative Party. He lost his re-election bid as an Independent candidate.

Scheer, who ran under the Conservative banner, won in the nearby riding of Regina—Qu’Appelle. He was 25 and part of a wave of young Conservatives MP elected to the House of Commons.

Earlier Tuesday, the Conservative leader’s team provided a copy of an article from the 2004 election as a response to HuffPost’s queries.

The story from the Regina Leader-Post described “explosive issues” that had come up during the campaign. Scheer had accused his competitor, NDP incumbent Lorne Nystrom, of being soft on child pornography. The NDP candidate had responded by saying Scheer was lying and brought up his past as Spencer’s parliamentary assistant.

The newspaper wrote: “Scheer said he worked for Spencer but doesn’t necessarily share his political views.” It wasn’t clear from the story what views — abortion, same-sex marriage, or marijuana decriminalization for first-time offenders — Scheer didn’t share.

Conservative spokesman Simon Jefferies emailed a statement saying: “Mr. Spencer is wrong.” Scheer, Jefferies wrote, agreed to remain in Spencer’s office to “finish working on important case files for constituents.”

Little has been reported about Scheer’s work history before he won a seat in the House of Commons. He worked briefly as an insurance broker in Regina and also as a waiter at a local restaurant before running for public office.

Spencer is proud of Scheer’s accomplishments in Ottawa.

At one point during the phone interview, the former Baptist pastor filled a brief pause to inquire if he could ask a “personal question.”

“Could you get me a phone number of how to get a hold of Andrew on? I’ve been wanting to have a little chat with Andrew and congratulate him and try to encourage him.”

Scheer is currently at the helm of his first federal campaign as leader of the Conservative party.

Weeks before the campaign’s start, he was the target of Liberal attacks after the party re-circulated an edited clip of a 2005 speech Scheer delivered in the House of Commons criticizing same-sex marriage.

In 2006, Scheer voted in favour of a motion calling on the Harper government to reopen the same-sex marriage debate, as did most Tory MPs at the time.

Scheer also voted against the Liberals’ transgender rights bill in 2016. Thirty-eight Tory MPs voted for the bill, including former interim leader Rona Ambrose and Lisa Raitt, the current deputy Conservative leader.

Since becoming leader in 2017, Scheer has skipped marching in Pride parades.

In November 2017, months after becoming Conservative leader, Scheer spoke in favour of the government’s apology to LGBTQ2 people for decades of discrimination, including the shameful purge of gay Canadians from the civil service and military.

Scheer said the apology should be an opportunity to recommit to defending human rights, not just in Canada but around the world, noting that “too many countries” have policies the encourage the harassment of gay and lesbian people, leading to torture and death.

“Canada is better than that. We must do more to stand up for the LGBTQ2 community in places like Iran, Russia, and other countries where it is the target of brutal violence,” he said at the time.

...
 
Luckily for the country the CPC have a strict non-likability clause in their leader selection process.

Harper wasn't "likable" either yet managed to serve three terms in office. Popularity, as Justin demonstrates, is highly overrated.
 
Harper was notably tough on Russia. Scheer on the other hand...
Thanks to the efforts of MP Chrystia Freeland and MP Borys Wrzesniewski, the Trudeau government has kept Harper's tough stance on Russia.

This is one of the shinier examples of this government's foreign policy. A change of direction from Scheer on this point won't attract my vote.
 
Latest @niknanos + Globe + CTV party tracking poll:
LIB 35.5%, CON 33.6%, NDP 14.5%, GRN 9.5%, BQ 4.7%, PPC 2.0%.

Latest @niknanos + Globe + CTV tracking poll for preferred PM:
@JustinTrudeau 34.5%, @AndrewScheer 28.2%, @theJagmeetSingh 9.3%, @ElizabethMay 7.7%, @MaximeBernier 2.5%, @yfblanchet 2.1%.
 
Harper wasn't "likable" either yet managed to serve three terms in office. Popularity, as Justin demonstrates, is highly overrated.
“it is much safer to be feared than loved because ...love is preserved by the link of
obligation which, owing to the baseness of men, is broken at every opportunity for their
advantage; but fear preserves you by a dread of punishment which never fails.”


Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince
 
Andrew Scheer Is The Only Major Leader Not Planning To Attend A Climate Protest Friday

From link.

Andrew Scheer plans to be the only major federal leader to sit out climate protests taking place at more than 140 different places across Canada Friday.

At a press conference in Montreal Thursday, the Conservative leader said the Tories will have “representation,” in the form of local candidates, at a massive climate march set to take place in that city Friday.

The event is expected to draw thousands of people, including Swedish teen climate activist Greta Thunberg. Earlier this week, Green Party Leader Elizabeth May urged leader to put their swords away and attend the Montreal rally, saying the climate crisis is “more important than partisan politics.”

But the Tory leader said that while he will be “sending my support to them,” he is booked with campaign events in Vancouver (where another climate strike will be held.)

“Our party will be supporting these types of demonstrations of a real desire for action. And I really sympathize with people who are frustrated with Justin Trudeau’s failure on the environment file,” Scheer said. “So, we will have representation there.”

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau confirmed at a campaign stop in Sudbury, Ont. Thursday that he will be in attendance at the Montreal rally.

“I look forward to marching with thousands of Canadians in Montreal, like people are marching right across the country and around the world, to fight for the environment,” he said.

Trudeau praised the “extraordinary” mobilization of young people calling for action on climate change. He also touted the actions his government has taken in the fight against global warming, from putting a price on carbon to phasing out coal. He did not mention his contentious decision to purchase the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.

Thunberg criticized the Liberal government in a June tweet for re-approving the pipeline one day after the House of Commons passed a Grit motion declaring a climate emergency.

The Liberal leader also called on Scheer to commit to banning single-use plastics, as his government pledged to do by as early as 2021.

“It is time for Conservatives to understand that the world is demanding climate leadership. We get that. They don’t,” Trudeau said. “We will continue to step up.”

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh told reporters in Campbell River, B.C. that he will participate in a climate march in Victoria.

“I’m not surprised that Mr. Scheer’s not going. He doesn’t seem to understand the severity of the problem,” Singh said when asked to weigh in on Scheer’s decision.

The NDP leader said that he is “moved” by young people who are worried about their future and who are calling for political leaders to do more.

He also threw a dig at Trudeau for attempting to seize the mantle of climate leadership despite purchasing the Trans Mountain pipeline.

‘We’re done with the pretty words of Mr. Trudeau’: Singh

“We’re done with the pretty words of Mr. Trudeau who says one thing then buys a pipeline,” he said. “The pretty words and empty promises are not sufficient. They’re not good enough. They’re wrong. They’re actually a betrayal of young people and their future.”
Climate change has been central to Liberal, NDP, and Conservative promises this week.
...
 
So, I saw something intertesting on the bus ride home. There were signs for the PPC candidate in our riding and they said "conservative" on them instead. Vote splitting attempt?
 
This is a tough election decision for me. Freeland is my MP and I think she is a quality parliamentarian who deserves my vote. On the other hand If we do not have a Liberal majority I would rather there be a Conservative minority than a Liberal one. Of the party leaders I probably dislike Trudeau the most
 

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