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letztalk's avatar

Yes the Reform Party and the flowing Harper era was a time of positive policy highlighting many of the views of Albertans & the West. But that was then & this is now.

Canada has morphed into more of a socialist/progressive framework and unfortunately we may not see anything resembling common sense center/center right thinking for many years. Canadians have clearly shown over the last number of election this not the path they want to travel.

The Liberal machine has done an exemplary job of convincing most of Central Canada that the Conservative Parties policies & its leaders are not suited for the modern day Canada and the prospects for change at the federal level is slim.

So while your submission is factual and highlights it has happened in the past I cannot seeing anything on the horizon that shows something similar is coming - unfortunately.

Pat's avatar

I agree with the premise of Lead not Leave, however what canada REALLY needs is constitutional reform, which Quebec and Atlantic Canada will NEVER agree to. An elected senate with half the current number of seats is crucial to our country. If we cannot get an elected senate abolishing it is the next best option. There is NO reason for needing 338 seats in our HOC when we no longer use pony express, rail, snail mail, dial up telephones or even in person meetings to communicate. No EDA country wide should be under 120,000 constituents, Atlantic Canada should be considered a region and some EDAs should cross provincial borders if necessary to equalize the votes across the country. I am not opposed to all regions having seats that cross provincial borders. Finally each region/province of the country should have a voice in Judge selection at every level of the courts.

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