Justin Trudeau asked to Form Liberal Party of BC, to get Majority
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West Village NY
16 March, 2022
11:58 AM
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Toronto, Vancouver, New York. Recent Controversies in BC Liberal Party, which has no association with Liberal Party of Canada, has the Think Tank, of Liberals in Toronto and Vancouver, suggest to Justin Trudeau, to form Liberal Party of Canada, in British Columbia to obtain a Majority in the next coming Federal Elections in 2023, said Vikram Bajwa, Harry Sandhu, Jim Booker, during a meeting with Nova Scotia Liberals. "Just like NDP, has both Federal and Provincial Structure, we need Liberal Party of Canada to function in both Ottawa and Victoria, with the same constitution, to avoid Conservatives, to rum Liberal Agenda in a Camoflauge in British Columbia" said Jennifer Straw UBC Student of Political Science. This confusion on Liberal Agenda is the reason of losses of Liberals in Federal Election , in BC. It's always dangerous to assume that what has happened in politics will continue to happen. But with the results of the 2021 federal election now in (or nearly so), it seems reasonable to assume at least one thing: minority Parliaments are now the rule, not the exception. If so, political parties are going to have to get a lot better at working with each other. Or Canadians are going to get very tired of voting in elections. There have now been seven federal elections since the Progressive Conservative and Reform parties came together to become a united Conservative party in 2003. Only two of those elections ended with a party winning a majority of seats in the House of Commons. The Conservatives did it under Stephen Harper in 2011. In 2015, the Liberals did it with Justin Trudeau. Let the bargaining begin: Trudeau knows our priorities, Singh saysANALYSISTrudeau made pushing his agenda more complicated with failed bid for majorityCanadians have re-elected a Liberal minority governmentMinority governments used to be relatively rare; only 10 of the 37 elections between 1867 and 2000 produced minorities. And most of those governments emerged during specific eras (there were three minorities in the 1920s and then a run of four between 1957 and 1965). The argument for electoral reform With six parties capable of getting a significant share of the vote — and with one of them concentrated in Canada's second-most populous province — the chances of any one party winning enough to form a majority become remote. Fans of proportional representation might see an opportunity now to renew their calls for electoral reform. They might argue that if the current first-past-the-post system is going to produce minority governments anyway, we might as well adopt a system that is more naturally inclined to facilitating multi-party Parliaments. But electoral reform's loss in the 2018 referendum in British Columbia severely undercut the ability of PR's proponents to push for change. And unless the Conservative Party — traditionally an opponent of PR — suddenly shows an interest in reform, the status quo is likely to prevail for the foreseeable future. But that doesn't mean the parties don't need to change the way they approach Parliament. There is no tradition at the federal level of coalition governments, where two or more parties share the responsibility of governing and sit in cabinet together. Today's parties might be reluctant to go that far. But there must be some middle ground between that kind of relatively stable, predictable governance and the acrimonious and prolonged game of chicken that has typified recent minority Parliaments. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives at Rideau Hall with wife Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau on Sunday, Aug 15, 2021 before announcing the launch of the federal election campaign. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)However necessary or unnecessary the election was, the last Parliament's lifespan was not dramatically shorter than those of other recent minorities. Between the 2019 and 2021 elections there was a gap of 700 days. A mere 575 days elapsed between the 2004 and 2006 elections. There was a gap of 996 days between the 2006 and 2008 elections and then 931 days between the 2008 and 2011 votes. Two of those elections were precipitated by the opposition and two were triggered by the incumbent government. The instigators might insist that they were justified. nformation about cookies
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