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Allan Stratton's avatar

All of this seems very right.

I think there was one other thing you missed in that column (and I was surprised given your knowledge and passion on the subject): Guns. The Conservatives were headed for victory with a couple of weeks left to go and Trudeau pulled his Fear Factor wedge on guns. O'Toole, scared about losing suburban votes, went squishy which alienated everyone. Conservatives felt betrayed and centre left types wondered again about Conservatives' "hidden agendas." That's when O'Toole's numbers sank and he lost all those ridings by a hair.

If O'Toole had stood firm and called out the Liberals for their hypocrisy, things might have gone differently. The charge of hypocrisy sticks to the Liberal brand. And people value leaders who have beliefs they're prepared to defend. (You completely won me over on the gun topic. There's no reason O'Toole couldn't have done the same. Even if he hadn't, he would have projected toughness. I think that's what he lost.

Poilievre is winning, I think, because unlike Scheer and O'toole he doesn't show fear. He says what he thinks on hot button issues and doesn't get scared off because of what the "Laurentian elite" may say. This connects to what your friend said about the male vote. Most people were already sick of the Liberals' DEI intersectional moral superiority, which mainly targets men. Cultural issues aren't a top of mind voting concern, but in my view are the 90% of the iceberg under the water because they signal how parties will approach issues, prioritize and make economic decisions. Cultural positions also let people know of parties hold certain groups are held in contempt: No one will vote for a party that hates them, which is what the left gets wrong when it says (condescendingly) that the working class doesn't know its own interests. Not all interests are economic; some are about basic self respect, and what self-respecting working class voter will vote for a party that codes it as racist, misogynist, homo/transphobic and unCanadian?

I wanted O'Toole to win because I've always been on the liberal left and thought that was the best way to keep two moderate parties. Like you, a feared O'Toole's loss would mean a far right turn for the Conservatives, and inevitably power shifts to the opposition party, so I was prepared to suffer short term inconvenience for long term security. But as it's turned out, Trudeau has doubled-down on his illiberal instincts, pushing centrists further away, and people have noticed that Poilievre's bark is worse than his policy bite and that he's actually more liberal in terms of classic values like free speech, equality, due process, etcetera.

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Adam Poot's avatar

Pierre is not radical, he is a centrist.

I was a lifelong lefty, always voting red orange or green. What pushed me right? Wokeness. Since then I've also moved right on economics, discovering Milton Friedman was revelatory for me. I joined the CPC specifically to vote PP as leader, but I was too shy to "like" his page on facebook, or tell any of my prog friends (some of whom have disowned me due to my political shift). When my arch liberal baby boomer mother found out I joined and voted in Pierre, she reacted like I had just joined the SS. All this to say I think we've been conditioned to think that conservatives need to be super careful and water everything down to appeal to moderates, BUT the left/progressive orthodoxy is now so extremely off the deep end that we don't need to find a soft middle path of moderation slightly to the right of the wokes, we need Pierre Poilievre to boldly say what we're all bloody well thinking! Pierre isn't really a radical, he's a centrist - he is in the centre of *actual* political sentiment in this country, which you would never know because our cultural establishment has shamed everyone into accepting their astroturfed phony consensus. Many of my lefty friends are slowly coming over to team blue - what they're overcoming is the Jon Stewartized mental conditioning that "conservatism bad"

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