super6646
Jr. Member
Posts: 614
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« on: March 27, 2024, 02:37:20 PM » |
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« edited: March 27, 2024, 02:41:46 PM by super6646 »
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He has about as much a shot as the Tories have in Britain right now IMO.
There are too many structural factors going against him right now that are incredibly hard to shift. The immigration and cost of living crisis will not go away tomorrow, and many of the problems today are a direct result of terrible policy-making over the past decade that aren't so easy to fix. Even if Trudeau decides to magically get sensible on immigration, how many effing years does it take to get the bureaucratic apparatus to adapt to a new policy direction? It won't be tomorrow, and it certainly wont be in time for the next election. His "housing is not a federal responsibility" comment was the jumping-the-shark moment, you cannot go out to your constituents who are struggling and expect to receive anything but vitriol in the process.
Not that the Cons will help either, they're all on board for Canada 100m and turning this country into a total sh**thole in the process as well. It's a sad time to be a Canadian that is for sure, knowing that neither party will look to your best interest.
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