Northern Light
Superstar
That's my experience as well. None of the NDPers I know voted Liberal last time around. If anything, many of my NDP friends seemed to be in a state of panic the week before the election and were all signing up for get-out-the-vote efforts. The entreaties on Facebook in support of people like Jennifer Hollett, Paul Dewar, Peggy Nash, etc. reached a fever pitch.
But the NDP base is not enough to win elections. As we saw, it's not even enough to hold onto downtown Toronto ridings. The base needs to convince Canadians of its views, and it failed.
But the base, and/or factions of it, can dictate the future of the party. Watch what's happening with Labour in the U.K.
It does need to be said that any party trying to achieve government will have to put some 'water in its wine'.
That said, appealing to your base, in some way, is important, not simply for the fact of motivating volunteers and turnout, but for the sense of 'authenticity' that it gives the broader voter.
The idea that you (as a a party) stand for something more than winning.
Finding that balance and the way to communicate it is not easy feat.