this post was submitted on 29 Apr 2025
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[–] [email protected] -1 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

he is actually liked by true Liberals

:-/

he’s not senile

:-)

he has that outsider business-man status that the middle class loves

🤮 I have never actually seen a "business-man" candidate that does well on the merits above the office of mayor. Even then, "business guy" mayors tend to be some of the most shamelessly corrupt and despicable people to touch the office.

But I guess he's one-for-three, which is better than Biden.

I find it very unlikely that this minority liberal government would survive a significant economic downturn, regardless of who would be in charge of it.

The nature of liberal politics is knowing you're on a pendulum ride and making the best of whatever time you've got. Far too often, I see liberals insist they can ride the pendulum through the conservative arc by just pretending at conservative politics for a few years and then going back to being liberals again a few years later. Conservatives, by contrast, leap at the chance to inject every right-popular policy they can when they're in office and then scream about obstructionism as they lose popular support.

The consequence of these two strategies executed in cycle is a country that keeps getting ratcheted to the right by degrees. A country - like America - was broadly on board with gay rights and carbon caps and universal public health care and public university education twenty years ago. Now we're obliterating elementary schools, green-lighting coal ash dumping, and hunting transgender people for sport.

If Carney is going to waste the next few years, Canada is going to be even more fucked for his nominal victory than the UK is looking as it goes into a 28% Reform Party cycle.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago) (1 children)

Indeed. We dodged the bullet but we're still sliding downhill. The time for conservatives is coming, unfortunately. I just hope that the next time the pendulum swings back, we get some electoral reform done and more modern and sturdy guardrails to soften the next round.

Still, I daydream myself into hope and into action. No one knows what's coming long term, so I imagine progress. That's the only way I can function instead of growing apathetic out of despair. Next cycle I'll be here once more, campaigning ABC.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 hours ago

Electoral reform is one of very few things -- possibly the only thing -- that could actually avert this otherwise inevitable result. If Carney delivers on housing and pulls an economic miracle out of the hat I've never seen him wearing, we'll maybe defer payment for another election cycle, maybe two.

We probably don't have that long to stop systematically pitting left and center against each other, paving the way for a worse outcome that represents fewer Canadians than ever before.