afransen
Senior Member
I guess I'll kick off discussion of the soon-to-be-called federal election. Apparently Harper is doubling down and saying that it's majority or bust for his government.
Do you think this is a wise strategy for Harper to take? It makes anything short of a majority a failure on his part. And the electoral map does not make a majority terribly likely for the CPC. Many of their seats in Ontario and Quebec are on shaky ground, since the spreads between the LPC and the CPC in these two provinces have shifted substantially. On election day 2008, the CPC lead the LPC 5.4 points in Ontario. According to recent polling, they now trail by 1.1. In Quebec, they trailed by 2 points on election day, and now by a whopping 21 points. Add to this reduced vote-splitting due to weaker NDP and Green polling numbers, and I would not feel too comfortable as a CPC MP in either province, which is home to about 60 of their 143 seats. They may pick up seats in the Atlantic, but not enough to overcome their impending losses in central Canada.
So, if another CPC majority is returned, how do you people feel about a coalition government?
Majority government in reach: Harper
Last Updated: Wednesday, September 9, 2009 | 10:21 PM ET
CBC News
Prime Minister Stephen Harper believes a majority government "is in reach" for the Conservative party the next time Canadians go to the polls for a federal election.
In candid remarks made last week to Conservative supporters in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., at a meeting that was closed to the media, Harper stressed the need for the party to capture a majority.
"Let me be clear about this, we need to win a majority in the next election campaign," Harper said. "I am not just saying that because we need to win a few more seats."
He said that if the Conservatives don't succeed in getting a majority he predicted the Liberals will govern in a coalition with the NDP and the Bloc Québécois.
"If they get together and force us to the polls, we have to teach them a lesson and get back there with a majority, and make sure their little coalition never happens," said Harper.
Harper's speech was videotaped by someone in the audience and a copy of the address was sent to the Liberal Party of Canada, which sent it to CBC News. The Liberals claim the tape shows that Harper doesn't want to work with the other parties in Parliament and therefore justifies Liberal Party Leader Michael Ignatieff's threat to force an election.
Publicly, the Conservatives have said it will be irresponsible of the opposition parties to bring down the government and send Canadians back to the polls.
The Liberals have said they will try to bring down the Conservative minority government at the first opportunity.
Parliament resumes Sept. 14, and the Liberals will have their first opportunity to present a no-confidence motion on Oct. 1.
Bloc Québécois Leader Gilles Duceppe said earlier this week an election appears to be inevitable.
"Mr. Ignatieff doesn't seem to look like he's going to back down, and Mr. Harper is not the kind of man who makes compromises or who achieves consensus … so I think the chances of an election are great — more than great," Duceppe said.
The Liberals and the Bloc Québécois have both released a round of election-style advertisements.
Do you think this is a wise strategy for Harper to take? It makes anything short of a majority a failure on his part. And the electoral map does not make a majority terribly likely for the CPC. Many of their seats in Ontario and Quebec are on shaky ground, since the spreads between the LPC and the CPC in these two provinces have shifted substantially. On election day 2008, the CPC lead the LPC 5.4 points in Ontario. According to recent polling, they now trail by 1.1. In Quebec, they trailed by 2 points on election day, and now by a whopping 21 points. Add to this reduced vote-splitting due to weaker NDP and Green polling numbers, and I would not feel too comfortable as a CPC MP in either province, which is home to about 60 of their 143 seats. They may pick up seats in the Atlantic, but not enough to overcome their impending losses in central Canada.
So, if another CPC majority is returned, how do you people feel about a coalition government?