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mileslunn
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« Reply #750 on: May 13, 2021, 11:57:45 AM »


I don't see Kenney being premier in 2 years time.  Most likely party dumps him as he has alienated both right flank and moderates or if he does manage to stay on, voters defeat him in 2023.
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The Right Honourable Martin Brian Mulroney PC CC GOQ
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« Reply #751 on: May 13, 2021, 11:58:28 AM »

Most likely but will be interesting to see how close.  I do think there is an outside chance Liberals pull off an upset, but unlikely.

Very, very unlikely, but you're right, the margins may be the most interesting part. Of course, there could just be a general election by the time the byelection is set to happen.
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beesley
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« Reply #752 on: May 13, 2021, 11:58:52 AM »





Loewen's resignation letter is fairly scathing.
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Real Texan Politics
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« Reply #753 on: May 13, 2021, 12:02:58 PM »



This the right place to post this?
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Njall
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« Reply #754 on: May 13, 2021, 12:47:53 PM »

*snip*

Loewen's resignation letter is fairly scathing.

Another MLA, Dave Hanson (Bonnyville-Cold Lake-St. Paul), posted on social media this morning echoing Loewen’s comments. Both are former Wildrose MLAs for whatever it’s worth. They were also both signatories to the recent(ish) letter opposing more covid restrictions. And they both endorsed Brian Jean back in the UCP leadership race.
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mileslunn
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« Reply #755 on: May 13, 2021, 04:50:44 PM »

*snip*

Loewen's resignation letter is fairly scathing.

Another MLA, Dave Hanson (Bonnyville-Cold Lake-St. Paul), posted on social media this morning echoing Loewen’s comments. Both are former Wildrose MLAs for whatever it’s worth. They were also both signatories to the recent(ish) letter opposing more covid restrictions. And they both endorsed Brian Jean back in the UCP leadership race.

Anti-lockdown types very noisy in Alberta, but I don't believe they are a majority.  In some ways pandemic has been terrible for parties on right as base opposes lockdowns but key swing voters support them whereas for progressive parties they are largely united on it.  Its why I think you will at provincial level see a progressive wave sweep the country dumping conservative premiers will replacing them with progressive ones.
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Njall
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« Reply #756 on: May 13, 2021, 08:56:54 PM »

Update: After an emergency caucus meeting, the UCP caucus voted to expel MLA Loewen, as well as longtime thorn in Kenney’s side MLA Drew Barnes (who, as a fun fact, is the last MLA from the Wildrose’s 2012 wave(-ish) remaining in the Leg) from caucus. The vote was not by secret ballot; the members had to send their votes to the UCP Assistant Deputy Speaker.

To add to the hilarity, someone was leaking live updates to Derek Fildebrandt’s Western Standard throughout the meeting.
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mileslunn
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« Reply #757 on: May 13, 2021, 09:08:53 PM »

Update: After an emergency caucus meeting, the UCP caucus voted to expel MLA Loewen, as well as longtime thorn in Kenney’s side MLA Drew Barnes (who, as a fun fact, is the last MLA from the Wildrose’s 2012 wave(-ish) remaining in the Leg) from caucus. The vote was not by secret ballot; the members had to send their votes to the UCP Assistant Deputy Speaker.

To add to the hilarity, someone was leaking live updates to Derek Fildebrandt’s Western Standard throughout the meeting.

Right move, but doubt this will end the divisions.  Notley must be happy as party is imploding.  NDP despite having a very weak bench in 2015 (many were paper candidates that never expected to win) showed far better political judgement, discipline, and unity than UCP are.  And I suspect in 2023 quality of candidates since they have shown they can win will be a lot better than in 2015.

Off course things can change, but at this point I don't see any scenario where Kenney is still premier in 2 years.  One of three things happens

1.  He resigns (seems unlikely but embarrassment of losing to Notley might make him out of pride).
2.  Party dumps him - I see this as most likely.  If he is still trailing by double digits by year's end, party dumps him.

3.  He loses to Notley - I think Notley will win next election no matter who is UCP leader but it goes from favoured to heavily favoured if Kenney is UCP leader.  At least with a different leader they have a somewhat better chance of recovering. 

I think many are misreading Alberta electorate.  While different in many ways, Alberta is seeing similar shift to what Colorado is seeing which is once reliably conservative, now reliably progressive and I see Alberta going that way.  I don't see Trudeau winning many seats here and especially not Singh, but in 2025 if Chrystia Freeland is Liberal leader, I would not be shocked if she wins a whole bunch of urban seats in Alberta.  I could even see her running there as a way to reach out (she was born in Alberta).
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DC Al Fine
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« Reply #758 on: May 14, 2021, 05:24:01 AM »
« Edited: May 14, 2021, 05:27:50 AM by DC Al Fine »

A Federal Court judge has dismissed the CBC's lawsuit against the Tories which alleged 'copyright violation' for using the broadcaster's news footage in an election ad.

Not a great look for CBC upper management. That lawsuit was ridiculous on its face and served to bolster Tory allegations of media bias. Meanwhile, literally every other party routinely makes use of CBC footage in their comms without worrying about being dragged into court.
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beesley
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« Reply #759 on: May 14, 2021, 06:22:07 AM »

I was surprised in 2019 at how Calgary-heavy the cabinet was, but I guess it makes all the more sense now - Kenney didn't want to be surrounded by them - he only kept them as critics for unity's sake which was no longer necessary after he won his own mandate. Regardless, these are not the developments you'd see from a strong leader.
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Geoffrey Howe
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« Reply #760 on: May 14, 2021, 02:20:14 PM »

This is slightly off topic, but are the BC Liberals the centre right party there? And do they get Tory support?

(On a side note, what is the name of the ultra-safe Liberal riding in west Vancouver? It looks like it went NDP in the recent provincial election.)
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mileslunn
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« Reply #761 on: May 14, 2021, 03:43:58 PM »

This is slightly off topic, but are the BC Liberals the centre right party there? And do they get Tory support?

(On a side note, what is the name of the ultra-safe Liberal riding in west Vancouver? It looks like it went NDP in the recent provincial election.)

BC Liberals are more like Tories than federal Liberals.  Up until 2020, it was a mix, but more of their supporters Conservatives than Liberals although by 2020 most federal Liberal support had swung over to NDP.  West Vancouver-Capilano is the ultra safe one you are talking about and it stayed BC Liberal.  NDP did win the two North Vancouver ones and there North Vancouver-Lonsdale is a swing while North Vancouver-Seymour normally a safe BC Liberal one, but not as lopsided as West Vancouver-Capilano.
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Geoffrey Howe
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« Reply #762 on: May 14, 2021, 03:55:33 PM »

This is slightly off topic, but are the BC Liberals the centre right party there? And do they get Tory support?

(On a side note, what is the name of the ultra-safe Liberal riding in west Vancouver? It looks like it went NDP in the recent provincial election.)

BC Liberals are more like Tories than federal Liberals.  Up until 2020, it was a mix, but more of their supporters Conservatives than Liberals although by 2020 most federal Liberal support had swung over to NDP.  West Vancouver-Capilano is the ultra safe one you are talking about and it stayed BC Liberal.  NDP did win the two North Vancouver ones and there North Vancouver-Lonsdale is a swing while North Vancouver-Seymour normally a safe BC Liberal one, but not as lopsided as West Vancouver-Capilano.

I was thinking ultra-Liberal federally (it might be Vancouver Quadra?).
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mileslunn
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« Reply #763 on: May 14, 2021, 04:05:13 PM »

This is slightly off topic, but are the BC Liberals the centre right party there? And do they get Tory support?

(On a side note, what is the name of the ultra-safe Liberal riding in west Vancouver? It looks like it went NDP in the recent provincial election.)

BC Liberals are more like Tories than federal Liberals.  Up until 2020, it was a mix, but more of their supporters Conservatives than Liberals although by 2020 most federal Liberal support had swung over to NDP.  West Vancouver-Capilano is the ultra safe one you are talking about and it stayed BC Liberal.  NDP did win the two North Vancouver ones and there North Vancouver-Lonsdale is a swing while North Vancouver-Seymour normally a safe BC Liberal one, but not as lopsided as West Vancouver-Capilano.

I was thinking ultra-Liberal federally (it might be Vancouver Quadra?).


Vancouver-Quadra federally is split in two provincial ridings.  Yes Vancouver-Quadra is a super safe Liberal and stayed Liberal even in 2011 disaster.  Provincially split between Vancouver-Point Grey which used to go BC Liberal but now solidly NDP and Vancouver-Quilchena which is still solidly BC Liberal.
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Estrella
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« Reply #764 on: May 14, 2021, 05:34:26 PM »

This is slightly off topic, but are the BC Liberals the centre right party there? And do they get Tory support?

(On a side note, what is the name of the ultra-safe Liberal riding in west Vancouver? It looks like it went NDP in the recent provincial election.)

BC Liberals are more like Tories than federal Liberals.  Up until 2020, it was a mix, but more of their supporters Conservatives than Liberals although by 2020 most federal Liberal support had swung over to NDP.  West Vancouver-Capilano is the ultra safe one you are talking about and it stayed BC Liberal.  NDP did win the two North Vancouver ones and there North Vancouver-Lonsdale is a swing while North Vancouver-Seymour normally a safe BC Liberal one, but not as lopsided as West Vancouver-Capilano.

I was thinking ultra-Liberal federally (it might be Vancouver Quadra?).

Vancouver Quadra has a pretty interesting history. It was won by PCs in 1980 when Liberals won a majority nationally but got absolutely pasted in Western Canada (two seats and something like 25% of the vote west of Ontario). In 1984, the Liberal candidate was, of all people, the incumbent PM John Turner and his prestige carried him to victory by quite a margin, despite Liberals' landslide defeat nationally and even worse results in the West (only 16% of the vote in BC!).
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mileslunn
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« Reply #765 on: May 14, 2021, 06:03:52 PM »

For people's thoughts on direction of country wondering what people think on following below:

1.  Notley wins in Alberta even against a united right.
2.  Liberals in 2025 under Freeland make a big breakthrough in Alberta (she is originally from there)
3.  NDP beats Tories in votes in next election.
4.  Tories get under 25% of the popular vote
5.  Liberals remain in government continuously past 2030

Any thoughts on these?  I think each has a reasonable chance at happening although #1 probably most likely, others more questionable but still possible.
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King of Kensington
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« Reply #766 on: May 14, 2021, 06:41:45 PM »

BC Liberals are like the Australian Liberals. 
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LabourJersey
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« Reply #767 on: May 14, 2021, 07:49:38 PM »

BC Liberals are like the Australian Liberals. 

why is this the case though? And why are BC liberals such an anomaly--it doesn't seem like any provincial Tory or provincial Liberal party in other provinces are as out-of-sync with their national counterparts as the BC liberals
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mileslunn
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« Reply #768 on: May 14, 2021, 07:57:16 PM »

BC Liberals are like the Australian Liberals. 

Many liberal parties in Europe are similar to BC Liberals like VVD in Netherlands, Venstre in Denmark and several others.  In many ways liberalism in North America is more an anomaly as they are watered down social democrats.  Believe in same ideas of social democrats, but a lot more cautious and willing to accept much less.
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mileslunn
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« Reply #769 on: May 14, 2021, 08:00:49 PM »

BC Liberals are like the Australian Liberals. 

why is this the case though? And why are BC liberals such an anomaly--it doesn't seem like any provincial Tory or provincial Liberal party in other provinces are as out-of-sync with their national counterparts as the BC liberals

It is more due to history.  Up until 1991, you had NDP on left while Social Credit was the pro free enterprise coalition like BC Liberals today.  By 1991 people were tired of the scandal plagued Social Credit, but many of their voters weren't comfortable going over to NDP.  Gordon Wilson after his one liner in the debate led to surge in support for Liberals who then were like federal Liberals.  In that election BC Liberals pulled ahead of the Social Credit.  Many Social Credit members quit the party after this seeing it was dead and moved over to BC Liberals.  Gordon Wilson was dumped as leader in 1993 and Gordon Campbell took over and it more or less took the same position former Social Credit did.  Had networks not let Gordon Wilson into debate as original plan, Social Credit probably would have formed official opposition and eventually come back so it was more a sequence of events that led to this unique arrangement.  Sask Liberals wanted to do same, but in end not all on board so the right of centre ones joined with the PCs to form Saskatchewan Party.
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King of Kensington
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« Reply #770 on: May 14, 2021, 09:20:19 PM »

Vancouver-Quadra federally is split in two provincial ridings.  Yes Vancouver-Quadra is a super safe Liberal and stayed Liberal even in 2011 disaster.  Provincially split between Vancouver-Point Grey which used to go BC Liberal but now solidly NDP and Vancouver-Quilchena which is still solidly BC Liberal.

Van Quadra is very much a "Brahmin Liberal" riding, like Don Valley West, St. Paul's, University-Rosedale and Westmount.
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Geoffrey Howe
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« Reply #771 on: May 15, 2021, 02:41:29 AM »

This is slightly off topic, but are the BC Liberals the centre right party there? And do they get Tory support?

(On a side note, what is the name of the ultra-safe Liberal riding in west Vancouver? It looks like it went NDP in the recent provincial election.)

BC Liberals are more like Tories than federal Liberals.  Up until 2020, it was a mix, but more of their supporters Conservatives than Liberals although by 2020 most federal Liberal support had swung over to NDP.  West Vancouver-Capilano is the ultra safe one you are talking about and it stayed BC Liberal.  NDP did win the two North Vancouver ones and there North Vancouver-Lonsdale is a swing while North Vancouver-Seymour normally a safe BC Liberal one, but not as lopsided as West Vancouver-Capilano.

I was thinking ultra-Liberal federally (it might be Vancouver Quadra?).


Vancouver-Quadra federally is split in two provincial ridings.  Yes Vancouver-Quadra is a super safe Liberal and stayed Liberal even in 2011 disaster.  Provincially split between Vancouver-Point Grey which used to go BC Liberal but now solidly NDP and Vancouver-Quilchena which is still solidly BC Liberal.

Right, so I assume Quilchena is wealthier?
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mileslunn
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« Reply #772 on: May 15, 2021, 02:58:36 AM »

This is slightly off topic, but are the BC Liberals the centre right party there? And do they get Tory support?

(On a side note, what is the name of the ultra-safe Liberal riding in west Vancouver? It looks like it went NDP in the recent provincial election.)

BC Liberals are more like Tories than federal Liberals.  Up until 2020, it was a mix, but more of their supporters Conservatives than Liberals although by 2020 most federal Liberal support had swung over to NDP.  West Vancouver-Capilano is the ultra safe one you are talking about and it stayed BC Liberal.  NDP did win the two North Vancouver ones and there North Vancouver-Lonsdale is a swing while North Vancouver-Seymour normally a safe BC Liberal one, but not as lopsided as West Vancouver-Capilano.

I was thinking ultra-Liberal federally (it might be Vancouver Quadra?).


Vancouver-Quadra federally is split in two provincial ridings.  Yes Vancouver-Quadra is a super safe Liberal and stayed Liberal even in 2011 disaster.  Provincially split between Vancouver-Point Grey which used to go BC Liberal but now solidly NDP and Vancouver-Quilchena which is still solidly BC Liberal.

Right, so I assume Quilchena is wealthier?


Yes and also older.  Mostly boomers while Point Grey has more rentals, but also a lot more millennials and Gen Xers.  Boomers remember 90s quite well so tend to have a strong reluctance to vote NDP while millennials don't but at same time most likely negatively impacted by high cost of living that happened under BC Liberals.
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CumbrianLefty
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« Reply #773 on: May 15, 2021, 10:11:33 AM »

Social Credit, then Liberals - why have the Tories not been the main rightist force in BC at state level?
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MaxQue
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« Reply #774 on: May 15, 2021, 12:59:17 PM »

Social Credit, then Liberals - why have the Tories not been the main rightist force in BC at state level?

The party was utterly destroyed in the Great Depression. They were so divided on how to react to it that they did absolutely nothing while in power and the party executive decided to not choose any candidate and let every riding do their own things. Some riding associations ran candidates as Independents, others as Conservatives, some created an Unionist Party supporting current Conservative Premier and finally others created the Non-Partisan Independent Group who suppored a WW1-era former Conservative Premier (who died during the electoral campaign).

End results, they went from 35 seats (out of 48) to 2 for NPIG, 1 unionist, and 1 pro-Tory Independent.

After that, they made an anti-socialist deal with the Liberals and made a Australia-style Coalition (even appearing on ballot as Coalition). The Tories were clearly the junior partner and they still were bitterly divided between 3 factions (merging into Liberals, status quo and breaking away). Finally, the  Liberals dropped them and changed the voting method to STV.

Come the first election under that system, Social Credit wins (being the 2nd favorite party of CCF, PC and Liberals). Social Credit returns to FPTP and becomes the main opposition to the left. Lost all their seats in 1956 and only won 3 seats since then (2 in 1972 and 1 in 1975).

Unlike the Liberals, it fell in disarray, usually struggling to run more than 10 candidates and failing often to even reach 1%. In the SC collapse election in 1991, they only had 4 candidates and got an amazing 426 votes province-wide.
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