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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #150 on: June 29, 2004, 10:42:04 AM »

Is Paul Martin the new Prime Minister?  By the way what does MP stand for?

Martin was PM before the election. He's just been re-elected. M.P stands for Member of Parliament.
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W in 2004
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« Reply #151 on: June 29, 2004, 10:43:33 AM »

Current results:

LIB:   33  
CON: 19  
BQ:     5  
NDP:   5
OTH:   0

LIB:    42.00%  
CON:  29.81%  
BQ:       3.07%  
NDP:   21.18%  
OTH:     3.94%


I never noticed it before, but the province of Ontario looks remarkably like a fish jumping out of the water.  Hmm, maybe there is a hidden meaning in it.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #152 on: June 29, 2004, 10:55:33 AM »

Interesting trend for you all to ponder: the Dippers did well out in the boondacks... even in ridings they were not targeting.
Take a look at these examples:

In Madawaska-Restigouche, NB the NDP came second with 27.5% of the vote

In Prince George-Peace River, BC they came second with 20% of the vote

These are the sort of ridings that it was assumed that "Jack wouldn't play well" and neither were targeted at all.
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Justin
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« Reply #153 on: June 29, 2004, 10:59:00 AM »

NDP/Liberal= 153 ( 154-1 seat for the Speaker)
Bloc/Conservative Opposistion 154 (153+1 Right of Center Independent)

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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #154 on: June 29, 2004, 11:01:59 AM »

NDP/Liberal= 153 ( 154-1 seat for the Speaker)
Bloc/Conservative Opposistion 154 (153+1 Right of Center Independent)



The BQ and the CPC are unlikely to co-operate in Opposition. It's not in either parties interest to do so.

It's odd to see that the leader under the most pressure now is Harper... who'd of though that 2 weeks ago?
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bullmoose88
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« Reply #155 on: June 29, 2004, 12:27:55 PM »

NDP/Liberal= 153 ( 154-1 seat for the Speaker)
Bloc/Conservative Opposistion 154 (153+1 Right of Center Independent)



The BQ and the CPC are unlikely to co-operate in Opposition. It's not in either parties interest to do so.

It's odd to see that the leader under the most pressure now is Harper... who'd of though that 2 weeks ago?

But it is in their combined interest to give the government all the headaches they can.

If the liberals try throwing a bill at the commons that deals with provincial powers or some budget that throws too much money Ontario's way...and they could be in for some trouble.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #156 on: June 29, 2004, 04:04:41 PM »

NDP/Liberal= 153 ( 154-1 seat for the Speaker)
Bloc/Conservative Opposistion 154 (153+1 Right of Center Independent)



The BQ and the CPC are unlikely to co-operate in Opposition. It's not in either parties interest to do so.

It's odd to see that the leader under the most pressure now is Harper... who'd of though that 2 weeks ago?

But it is in their combined interest to give the government all the headaches they can.

If the liberals try throwing a bill at the commons that deals with provincial powers or some budget that throws too much money Ontario's way...and they could be in for some trouble.

Yes and no. The last thing that Duceppe wants is to be linked with the CPC
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Trilobyte
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« Reply #157 on: June 29, 2004, 04:11:04 PM »

If the Liberals appoint a Tory as Speaker, then the Liberal-NDPs will hold a majority of the seats in Parliament.
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #158 on: June 29, 2004, 04:21:33 PM »

If the Liberals appoint a Tory as Speaker, then the Liberal-NDPs will hold a majority of the seats in Parliament.

Or a BQ MP Grin
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minionofmidas
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« Reply #159 on: June 30, 2004, 05:57:18 AM »

Would that work?
The Atlantic results look like a rerun of 2001...Didn't play out quite like that elsewhere...
What an admirably balanced result, though...
Glory Now, Dippers All!
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