Except even with a Government that massively defrauds the taxpayers, it seems most Canadians are ambivalent about politics.
http://www.hilltimes.com/html/index.php ... tives/&c=1
Conservative Party Leader Stephen Harper plans to spend more time with party members and he's feeling more comfortable now that Belinda Stronach has left his party.
Conservatives will likely hold their fire between now and the summer break, say top Conservative sources.
One top Conservative source, who did not want to be identified, told The Hill Times that there's definitely no possibility of any election until early next year for the "simple reason that we don't have the numbers."
"Look at the numbers in the House. It all depends on how the Independents will vote next time if there's another vote. At this time, I don't have any reason to believe that they will vote any different than they did two weeks ago. So, unless something really dramatic happens in these two weeks that we don't know of, there's no election until next year. It will be after the Gomery report comes out and Martin has said that he'll call an election after that," said the top Conservative source.
The source said that the Conservatives intend to use their time between now and the next election trying to shore up and strengthen their political support across the country, especially in the key battleground of Ontario.
As well, the top Conservative said that during the summer break, Conservative Party Leader Stephen Harper (Calgary Southwest, Alta.) will travel extensively in Ontario.
"You saw Harper in Ontario last week. You'll see him campaigning more actively in the coming weeks and months especially in Ontario and in other provinces. Our party will increase its visibility in the 905 area. We need to win a lot more seats in Ontario than we did last time if we want to form the next government."
Another top Conservative source, who also did not want to be identified, told The Hill Times that the Conservatives won't defeat the government between now and the summer break.
The source said after the sudden departure of Conservative-turned-Liberal-Cabinet Minister Belinda Stronach (Newmarket-Aurora, Ont.), Mr. Harper now feels more comfortable with his caucus and plans to spend more time talking to Conservative Party members and to Canadians over the summer months.
Mr. Harper is expected to play a much more visible role over the summer months, especially in Ontario, and has a number of key policy initiatives under consideration, said the source.
Meanwhile, last week, one top Liberal insider told The Hill Times that the next election would likely be next March. Under that scenario, and if the Liberals get through the first two weeks of June, the Prime Minister will announce in mid January that the next election would be held in March, launching a longer than usual 36-day campaign. The thinking is that the opposition parties wouldn't push for a fall election because the country would want to wait for the Gomery Inquiry report in December; that is, if the inquiry sticks to its schedule.
"The aversion to an election is going to ring more and more true over the next week or two or three. ...They figure they've had this vote, it's time to move on and I think that will resonate and pushing to get an election call and then having an election in the middle of July is going to royally frost people's gonads here. They're not going to go there," said the Liberal source.
Yet, despite the Conservative Party's defeat two weeks ago in the high-profile showdown in the House on the budget vote, some Tories are not ruling out the possibility that their party may still try to topple the government in the next two weeks before the summer recess.
"That's a possibility, that is a possibility, every day, that this Parliament sits and that is one of the options open to us," said Conservative Whip Rob Nicholson (Niagara Falls, Ont.) in a telephone interview from his riding office with The Hill Times. "We've been pushing for an election and there's a possibility we still may have a spring election. We're just keeping our options open."
Although the Liberals won one more seat in the House in the byelection in Labrador, Nfld., on May 24, and former Conservative MP Belinda Stronach defected to the Liberals two days before the critical vote, Mr. Nicholson nonetheless argued that the deciding factor will be the three Independent MPs.
Two of then, Carolyn Parrish (Mississauga-Erindale, Ont.) and Chuck Cadman (Surrey North, B.C.), voted with the government while David Kilgour (Edmonton-Beaumont, Alta.) sided with the Conservatives on the crucial budget votes in the House of Commons on May 19, forcing the House Speaker to cast a tie-breaking 152-152 vote in favour of the government and maintaining the status quo.
With the election of Todd Russell in the byelection in Labrador, Nfld. riding last week, the Liberals now have 133 seats in the House, excluding Peter Milliken's (Kingston and the Islands, Ont.) vote since the Speaker of the House votes only in the case of a tie. The Conservatives, meanwhile, have 98 seats in the House, the NDP 19 and the Bloc 54. Mr. Russell, however, will not be able to attend the House session before June 6 when he is officially sworn in as an MP, according to Elections Canada.
In the confidence vote two weeks ago, the NDP supported the Liberals in return for a deal according to which Liberals agreed to add $4.6-billion in the budget to be spent on social programs. The Conservatives in that vote were backed by the Bloc.
Last week, The Canadian Press reported that the NDP "could seek a long-term agreement to prop up the Liberal government" in exchange for support from the Liberals on issues such as electoral reform, the environment and protection for pensioners. The party will make a final decision this week in its weekly caucus meeting.
"It's possible that one scenario would be one agreement that would keep [the Liberals] in place," Jamey Heath NDP caucus director of communications and research told The Canadian Press last week.
"It's equally possible that it would be one step at a time..."
"In return for three or four items it is possible that we could certainly find an arrangement that would keep Parliament working."
Meanwhile, Mr. Nicholson blamed the Liberals for raucous Question Period sessions in the House. He said that the chief reason for the Conservatives' frustration in the House was that the Liberals
"stonewalled" and failed to answer questions. He warned that if the Liberals maintained their strategy of "not answering" questions in Question Period sessions, then "they're the authors of their own misfortune."
"What the government has to do is start answering questions. If they start answering the questions in a reasonable way then I think the Question Period may be a lot quieter and quite frankly more productive but if you get stonewalled on questions then they're the authors of their own misfortune," he said.
http://www.angus-reid.com/polls/index.c ... temID=7412
The opposition Conservative party would get roughly the same support if either of two politicians took over from current leader Stephen Harper, according to a poll by Leger Marketing published in the Globe and Mail.
In a regular voting intention survey, the Tories are in second place with 27 per cent, 11 points behind the governing Liberal party. With either New Brunswick premier Bernard Lord or deputy leader Peter MacKay leading the Conservatives, 26 per cent of respondents would support the Conservatives.
Harper became the Conservative party’s first leader in March 2004. The political organization was established after a merger between the Canadian Reform Conservative Alliance and the Progressive Conservative party.
On Apr. 27, Harper criticized an agreement on the federal budget reached by prime minister Paul Martin and New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton, saying, "I will be asking our caucus to put this government out of its misery at the earliest possible opportunity." On May 19, the House of Commons accepted the $3.6 billion U.S. amendment to the federal budget. The motion passed after speaker Peter Milliken broke a 152-152 tie by supporting the government.
Lord has acted as New Brunswick’s premier since 1999. MacKay was the last leader of the Progressive Conservatives before the merger took place.