In Ontario, municipal govt has no parties...you elect individuals.Taking Canada's capital as an example, it elected a mayor who made no bones about being NDP. If people won't vote for a "socialist" party, why in blazes would they vote for a "socialist" mayor? Or for all the "socialist" municipal councillors they have voted for over the years? I mean, you don't actually think that Jack Layton first came out of the NDP closet when he became leader of the NDP, do you?
People elect Parliaments in exactly the same way they elect city councillors and mayors --
by voting for individual representatives. And one hell of a lot of Canadians have voted for NDP candidates for Parliament, and
elected NDP members of Parliament, over the years.
I don't know what you have invested in this, um, theory of yours, but it just don't fly. There is no "Canadian" way to vote. Some Canadians vote one way, more Canadians may vote a different way in any given riding, or nationally. This "Canadians do" and "Canadians don't" crud is about as meaningful as any other dumb and/or obnoxious stereotype anyone might come up with about any other group.
Ontario overshot the mark on strategic voting one time, and got stuck with an NDP govt.I don't think I've ever actually heard that theory in explanation of the NDP provincial government in Ontario. Seriously. Whose is it?
The outgoing government was Liberal. Are we suggesting that Conservatives voted NDP to get rid of Liberals? I don't quite see how *that* would fit into your worldview.
Ah, here we are; the CTV's Paula Newton said it:
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1087065957630_74/?hub=TopStoriesCTV's Paula Newton said one of the most concrete examples of strategic voting gone wrong was when a provincial NDP goverment was elected in Ontario in 1990.
"Afterwards, Ontarians confessed, 'we didn't really want to elect Bob Rae (the NDP leader); we wanted to punish Liberal Premier David Peterson.'"
Uh ... that is not "strategic voting".
The voters voted for the NDP and not for the Liberals -- but hardly because they were trying to keep the Conservatives out of power, I think. *That* would have been strategic voting. All they had to do to keep the Conservatives out of power was to vote Liberal, duh.
But again ... "Ontarians confessed ...". Well, I sure as hell didn't. And I'm an Ontarian through and through.
I've been around a long time...and no 'leftwing' policies have not become middle of the road. Neither has rightwing policy.I dunno. The words I type are right there in front of you. How come you figure you can just ignore them and act like you're responding to something completely different?
Was universal health care "middle of the road" in 1960? Were universal old age pensions? Them were the questions on the table. Let me help you: no, they were not "middle of the road". They were NDP policy ... you know, that stuff way off in the ditch on the left side of the road.
And lookie now. They're so middle of the road that nobody even talks about old age pensions, and no politician dares tamper with health care.
Oh, and don't forget same-sex marriage. Suddenly it's Liberal policy to support it, so it's
by definition middle of the road, eh? And yet imagine, a decade ago, trying to even get it onto the road.
The road veers left, Liberals veer left. But the road veers right, the Liberals veer right, too. Such leadership we get from them!
Don't be daft enough to drag Hitler and Stalin into this, since both were considered socialist, and they are hardly the kind of examples you'd want to promote.Aha, I was right. Ya don't have a clue what "socialist" means. But I guess we may as well come right out and say it, eh? The NDP is a bunch of closet Nazis.
"I don't believe in right wing dogmatism. I don't believe that trickle down economics works, or that rising levels of inequality speak to a healthy society. I don't believe in left wing dogmatism. I don't believe you can run a government with bankers pounding at the door. I don't believe you should borrow from your children or grandchildren."And anybody who believes a word that comes out of his mouth needs his/her head examined.
Me, I'll just scratch mine and wonder why someone who doesn't believe in trickle-down economics, or think that rising levels of inequality are a good thing, would have handed out all those juicy tax cuts to all those upper-income folks back when he was Finance Minister. ... Nope, I'm stumped. You do know that
rising levels of inequality are the main reason for our steady slide down the list of best places to live in the world in the last few years, right? And that his influence as Finance Minister has quite a bit to do with that?
Why ask your mother? Can't you figure things out by yourself?
Or is it that you just vote like your family always has, and never worked out what you yourself think?
Isn't it time?See, I
told you you were cute!
My parents began voting NDP around the time I began running as an NDP candidate. Funny how things sometimes work, ain't it?