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Stefan Klietsch's avatar

Funnily enough, this kind of loser talk reminds me of the NDP and the Greens. Think of how Jagmeet Singh now claims that he made a conscious decision to sacrifice the success of his party to stop Poilievre - which comes across as an attempt to retroactively justify his poor leadership performance. I have also seen Green Party members in the past make points along the line of, "We would rather be principled in influencing government from the sidelines, than form governments ourselves."

If your political party's intellectual well is drying so rapidly that the government can "steal" a few of your ideas and you have virtually nothing novel left - or you are reduced to a petty debate on how "they're not implementing our policies with x degree of perfect calibration" - then there really is no one to blame for your party's misfortunes except yourselves!

Akshay's avatar

Can we please do away with this blind, unqualified narrative that the CPC blew a 25 point lead? At their peak, the CPC was polling at about 43% while the LPC was at 18%. There is no realistic chance that the CPC could ever get anything meaningfully more than that 43% anyway. And in the election, they ended with about 41% of the vote - hardly a blown lead. The fact that the NDP collapsed completely and the Libs have a far more efficient voter distribution than the CPC can and should factor into any "blown lead" evaluation. Which is why I question the blind reduction of the entire election to "CPC blew a 25% lead".

In fact, the bigger question is how can the LPC, with ~44% of the votes in a favorable distribution actually fail to achieve a majority? That is, objectively speaking, a bigger failure.

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