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Repeal Bill C-21. For other specifics the party convention is this weekend. Feel free to follow along: https://cpc23.ca
I think you're missing the point. Why should anyone believe that at the end of the day this will pan out any better than what the UK conservatives did (or didn't), or the Itallian "fascist" lady that ramped up immigration?
I don't understand what your issue is with this. The goal of the party is to pass a few laws, enact what their voters want, create some jobs, etc. This is what happened under Harper. If "The party will do things their voters want" isn't enough for you then perhaps electoral politics isn't for you. Do you want me to point to some zeitgeist I think will occur that lines up with someone's wonkish substack because a different party won a majority for 4 or 6 years? That is unlikely.
My problem is that progressives pass sweeping societal reforms, and conservatives, when they finally get into power, just might rollback one or two of the most egregious excesses. They never seem to think of sweeping societal reforms of their own, or of setting up defensive measures their constituents might use when they're out of power, but worst of all they seem to be absolutely happy to enforce progressive policies that would have been called "uncharitable strawmen" a mere few years ago. I don't see a way any of this could be explained by anything other than establishment conservatives playing for the progressive team, and acting as the heel in the political theater.
Which sweeping societal reforms do you believe the LPC passed? Mostly they are just corrupt with ineffective or misguided tax policy and virtue-signalling feminism.
Major societal reforms or positions the LPC has passed/taken:
Now I dont oppose all of those things, but they are major public policy changes or stances taken on the future direction of our culture. I would say that a conservatism worth its salt in Canada should, at minimum, do the following:
I would not characterize things like changing the retirement age to 67 instead of 65 as a sweeping reform, or changing the makeup of certain tax benefits or models, or giving a comment about church burning. Almost everything else listed were explicitly in the last platform. The listed bills, MAID, immigration, families. Expect them to be there going forward as well.
My point is: wake me up when they make it out of the platform and into law. Establishment conservatives are much more likely to fortify progressive gains then to work against them.
I think it would violate the forum's rules to explain to you that a party has to win the election to enact it's platform. The next Canadian election will be next year or the year after.
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To what end? Organize a revolution? Go down in a blaze of glory screaming 'I hate the antichrist!'?
Despite all the pessimism in this thread, I feel it's only scratching the surface of just how 'gone' things really are.
So that Canadians can continue to freely own guns.
Why like or care about that? I mean, I'm not saying that's bad or that you shouldn't. But I had imagined, given the context of the conversation, that this was being presented as some motive to vote for the conservatives in the face of the political 'problems' facing Canada.
Why do I care about voters of the party having their preferences expressed through the party they elect? That is the entire point of the system we've agreed upon. Someone asked what will happen if they win, I pointed to something, and let him know we're figuring it out at the convention this weekend.
You are reframing the question and missing the point of it. To remind us of its original context:
If the distinguishing feature of the Canadian right vs the left is that it will not ban guns, there's not much point in celebrating their victory, is there? Does any element of the Canadian right represent any radical divergence from the mainstream of leftist politics?
I strongly disagree with the assertion that it's a re-framing of issues for me to say "The party will achieve these goals" in spite of your insistence that 'Some other arbitrarily-chosen goals are more important'. But fortunately for us the aforementioned convention is now over. It's also wrong to assume that the preferences of single-issue voters for example don't matter, and that a political change is only worthwhile if it's sweeping (Good the enemy of perfect etc etc). If literally the only difference between 2 major parties was the guns, that still represents the loss of lifestyle, tens of thousands of (Canadian) dollars, food procurement, etc. If only difference between the GOP and the Democrats in the USA was that the Democrats wanted to ban all cars, would you have a pithy expression for people who rejoice when they are allowed to keep them?
Anyways based on your tone I'm presuming you are preoccupied with culture war issues. In that case the CPC affirmed their intent to ban trans medical procedures for all children. Getting rid of diversity hiring practices, keeping freedom of speech. Pretty much all of the main culture war threads.
It's not my insistence. It's the context the question was in. I very purposefully made that distinction clear and cited that context. If you don't want to engage with the question within that context I am very correct in stating that you are reframing the question. Insisting that you are not doing exactly what you are doing is very dishonest and transparent.
And without radical change none of these things will happen since these things are long embedded in the institutions themselves. It's rather tiresome to have to explain this to people when the example of this happening has already been given and you refuse to acknowledge it.
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