Randy McDonald ([info]rfmcdpei) wrote,

[LINK] "Liberals Try to Topple Canadian Government"

I'm starting to understand why Italians feel the way that they're supposed to feel about politics.

Canada moved closer to its second federal election in less than a year on Tuesday, after the opposition leader Michael Ignatieff announced that his Liberal Party would no longer support Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Conservative government.

“Mr. Harper, your time is up,” Mr. Ignatieff told a cheering crowd of Liberal politicians at a party retreat in Sudbury, Ontario. “We will hold Stephen Harper to account and we will oppose his government in Parliament.”

The Conservatives do not control a majority of the votes in the House of Commons and rely on the support of the Liberals and two smaller opposition parties to maintain power. One of the two smaller partiers, the New Democratic Party or the Bloc Québécois, would have to join the Liberals in order to bring down the government.

Bob Rae, a prominent Liberal member of Parliament, said his party would introduce a motion of no confidence in the government at the first opportunity in the Parliamentary calendar, probably in early October.

Exactly how either of the smaller parties, which are to the left of both the Conservatives and the Liberals, will respond when that happens is unclear. Last week, however, Jack Layton, the leader of the New Democrats, said that his party “would be the least likely of the political parties to support the Conservatives.”

Since 2006, Mr. Harper has maintained two governments without a majority of Parliamentary votes partly because the opposition parties were concerned that Canadians were weary of federal elections. There have been three since June 2004.
Tags: canada, links, politics

  • Post a new comment

    Error

    Your reply will be screened

    Your IP address will be recorded 

  • 1 comments

[info]absinthe_dot_ca

September 2 2009, 01:42:44 UTC 2 years ago

Personally, I think the Liberals are making a mistake, forcing an election now. With the polls the way they are, the best they can hope for is a Liberal minority. If that happens, Harper would likely do the traditional thing and "fall on his sword", letting the Conservatives pick a new leader. The next one might actually have a larger range of expression than Data the android from Star Trek: The Next Generation, and they could then use the typical new leader popularity surge (which the Liberals already had and lost) to force a new election and gain the coveted majority.

On the other hand, the Liberals haven't really made much of an inroad into spelling out their own policies (other than "We're not the Conservatives"), so they may just be trying to get into power before the economy recovers completely and the Conservatives get all the credit.
Create an Account
Forgot your login or password?
Facebook Twitter More login options
English • Español • Deutsch • Русский…