Three days after the election and the reaction has been predictable.
First, the idea that the Liberals are weak because they are in a minority government is laughable. They are 13 seats short of a majority. That means that all of the Opposition Parties would need to vote against the Liberals to bring down the government. That is not going to happen for quite some time and when it does it might be because the Liberals want it that way.
The Conservatives are the most horny for another election because they believe, wrongly, that they would win it. However, it is going to be interesting to see what they do when the Liberals introduce the tax cut they ran on as the first order of business when the House resumes. Then the Liberals will also introduce some measures that the Conservatives would be hard pressed to vote against. Let us remember that when a government has a majority no one pays attention to votes in the House. Now that we have a minority every confidence motion is going to be hyped to the max and how the parties vote will be examined and parsed every which way you can think of. The Conservatives reflexively voting against Bills that have broad support will be noticed. Then there is a question of whether Andrew Scheer stays on as leader of the CPC. He obviously wants to but others in his party may decide otherwise.
The NDP is beyond broke. They carried a debt from 2015 into the 2019 election and spent every spare dollar they had this time. They are on a downward trajectory with regard to their vote and number of seats. It has already been said but they do not want another election for at least two years, probably longer. I do not think it happens often, for minority governments, but it is conceivable that the next election will take place on the next legally required day in the Fall of 2023.
The Bloc will want time to consolidate their gains so that this election is not one-off for them. They will not want an election any time soon either.
The Green Party is irrelevant as is JWR. Indeed, JWR is a female version of John Nunziata.
Second, the chances of the Liberals winning the next election is a shade more than 50-50 unless the Conservatives do what needs to be done to renew their party. The Conservatives are suffering the same delusions that the Liberals did after 2006. The Liberals did not renew their party until they were finally crushed in 2011. Before that they were just the Chretien/Martin party with different leaders. Mr. Trudeau does not receive enough credit for the bottom to top renewal of the Liberal Party that he oversaw after winning the leadership of the Liberals. Indeed, he was quite ruthless in turfing the old guard in the years leading up to the 2015 election. That is one reason why they went from Third to First. The Conservatives have not done this exercise yet. They are still the Harper Party, as it has been since it was formed in the early 2000s, and to believe the voters they need to win again are unaware of this is naive at best.
Then there is the fact that when the next election takes place Ontario will have witnessed up to four years of Doug Ford government. The Conservatives kept him in suspended animation somewhere for over two months but the next time we go to the polls that will not really help. The voters of Ontario will not forget 3 or 4 years of Doug Ford mismanagement just because he disappears for few weeks the next time.
Finally, one of the reasons why the Liberals won is because they have created a very well oiled election machine. That machine is intact and they will be doing what is necessary to be ready for the next campaign, whenever that may be. For example, I stated in my last post that they identified and pulled alot of Liberals in ridings, previously held by the NDP, in Quebec. They still have these databases. They will use them again. They will also be targeting the 6 ridings in Ontario held by the NDP. The relative success of the NDP in the election papers over the many structural problems that party has and Mr. Singh has done nothing to address those during his time at the helm of that party. The Liberals are going to try to take advantage of that.
Of course, something could change this dynamic, such as a serious economic downturn or some kind of Liberal scandal, manufactured or otherwise, but as long as the Conservatives do not go through the effort of renewing itself they will have difficulties.
Third, Alberta separatists are full of crap. Nuff said. My only critique is of people actually engaging these yahoos by stating the obvious facts about the impacts of such a separation. Stop giving these bozos oxygen. They are not worth it.
Fourth, it seems that after every election there is a renewed call for electoral reform. Hell, even some Conservative are talking about it because the Conservatives did win more votes than the Liberals. It is all crap as well. I have argued many times why electoral reform will solve the problems of the FPTP voting system by creating other equally serious problems. There is no method of voting that is "more democratic". They are all ways to elect democratic governments. They are all effective at doing so. They all have their problems and imperfections. In the end it is a wash.
So the next few years are going to be interesting and infuriating. It will be non-stop campaigning by all of the parties but in the end the most likely outcome will be the Liberals implementing the bulk of the agenda they outlined in their election platform. It will just be more noticeable this time, which might not be such a bad thing from their point of view.
One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors: Plato
Thursday, October 24, 2019
Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Federal Election 2019: Final Result - Liberal Minority Government
Election 2019 is in the books and the Liberals won the most seats. They did not win as many seats as they would have liked but they still won the most. Now they will govern until they decide to engineer their own defeat or until all of the Opposition Parties believe they have an opportunity.
The three historical voting patterns that I outlined in previous posts came to pass. A first term government was re-elected as they have been for the last century. Ontario voters decided to vote for opposite party to the one governing Ontario. There is a Conservative government in Ontario so Ontario voters chose a Liberal federal government. The NDP did poorly so the Conservatives did poorly as well. I have been saying since 2015 that the Liberals were the prohibitive favourate to win this election and they won. My assessment also included the idea that they would be elected to a majority government and I was wrong about that but like many others I did not expect the Bloc Quebecois to double its popular vote and triple its seat count over the course of a 6 week campaign.
After the 2015 election the Liberals knew that they would be hard pressed to achieve the same success in the West that they did during that election. They knew that they could lose more than 10 seats and maybe more, putting a future shot at a majority government in danger. However, they also saw a fading NDP in Quebec holding over 20 seats that they could target to make up for the lost seats out west.
So the Liberals undertook an effort the begin identifying every Liberals they could find in those ridings and worked very hard to get them to the polling stations on Monday night. They poured resources, effort and time into those ridings and although it may not look like it that effort paid off to a certain extent. If you look at the vote count for all of those ridings the Liberals came in second in each of them and the vote count for the Liberals in each was higher than in 2015. If the Bloc would not have taken off like it did the Liberals would have swept all of those ridings handing them a comfortable majority government.
The Liberal campaign was a success. They won the election. It obviously could have been better. It was focused and disciplined and it never made a major misstep. After the brownface incident was passed the Liberal campaign became rather boring. I found the campaign to be rather unconventional. They had the ability to spend to the limit in this election but I did not see as many TV advertizements as I would have expected. Not that I watch alot of TV but when I did I tended to see three different Conservative ads to one Liberal ad and the Liberals ad did not change often. It is probably reasonable to assume that they decided to focus on the ground game. The media was not very friendly to the Liberals during the election so not counting on the air war was probably a wise choice.
The Conservative campaign was a mess. Canadians' opinions of Mr. Scheer actually become more negative over the course of the campaign. The campaign was designed to energize the base and count on a split in the progressive vote but very little effort was made to appeal to voters beyond the base. The results speak for themselves. I would note that some are saying that the Conservative campaign was somewhat successful because it increased their seat count. The problems with that argument is the increase came in places where the Conservatives are traditionally strong. Alberta, Saskatchewan, rural Manitoba, rural Ontario and rural Maritimes. They did not make any inroads in areas and regions where Conservatives are not traditionally strong. Indeed, they actually lost seats in Quebec and in Urban Ontario. Plus more importantly they DID NOT PREVENT THE LIBERALS FROM WINNING A MAJORITY GOVERNMENT. It was the Bloc Quebecois that achieved that feat. If the Bloc support would have been a little softer then the Conservatives would just be a larger Opposition Party facing a majority government across the aisle of the House.
The NDP achieved the objective they set out to achieve at the beginning of the election. Namely, to maintain official party status. The NDP campaign was essentially to do very little for the first four weeks and hope that Mr. Singh could perform well enough in the debates to convince enough Canadians to save the NDP. It worked but before the NDP get too excited they should remember that in 2011 the NDP won over 30% of the popular vote and over 100 seats. In 2015, they won around 19% of the vote and around 40 seats and this time they won 15% of the vote and around 20 seats. That is a trend that should make the leadership of the NDP very nervous. A piece of trivial knowledge for you. If pollsters would have been correct about their level of support in the election their residual strength in Quebec would probably have lead to a split in the non-Liberal vote in many of the NDP ridings that were targeted by the Liberals. So it was the sudden strength of the Bloc and the weakness of the NDP that denied the Liberals a majority government.
The Green Party conducted the same campaign as they have been conducting since Ms. May took over the leadership of that Party. They achieved the same result. It reminded me of that old definition of insanity.
Mr. Bernier blew it. If you are going to be a party leader act like one. He did not and he paid the price.
The Bloc proved once again that the Quebec electorate is the most fickle and unpredictable in the country. You can never count on them to do what conventional wisdom expects. Some claim it is Bill 21 was the problem and there could be something to that but I believe it was just Quebec voters being Quebec voters. The Bloc campaign was not that stellar. A good performance by their leader during the debates gave them a boost as would be expected. However, it happens a great deal that a boost as a result of a good debate performance does not translate into votes when the election occurs. This time it did.
So now the Liberals will govern and implement their agenda in a minority government situation. Fortunately for them it is a strong minority government where they only need the support of one other party to maintain the confidence of the House so they should not have an unreasonable amount of trouble pushing their agenda. Indeed, the place they may have the most trouble could be the Senate. In the House the other parties may have a whole host of reasons, at any one time, not to force an election. But the Senate, which does not have to worry about the government falling is they reject or amend a Commons Bill, could make a minority government work much harder than they may normally work to get their bills through the Senate.
It is going to be a interesting few years.
The three historical voting patterns that I outlined in previous posts came to pass. A first term government was re-elected as they have been for the last century. Ontario voters decided to vote for opposite party to the one governing Ontario. There is a Conservative government in Ontario so Ontario voters chose a Liberal federal government. The NDP did poorly so the Conservatives did poorly as well. I have been saying since 2015 that the Liberals were the prohibitive favourate to win this election and they won. My assessment also included the idea that they would be elected to a majority government and I was wrong about that but like many others I did not expect the Bloc Quebecois to double its popular vote and triple its seat count over the course of a 6 week campaign.
After the 2015 election the Liberals knew that they would be hard pressed to achieve the same success in the West that they did during that election. They knew that they could lose more than 10 seats and maybe more, putting a future shot at a majority government in danger. However, they also saw a fading NDP in Quebec holding over 20 seats that they could target to make up for the lost seats out west.
So the Liberals undertook an effort the begin identifying every Liberals they could find in those ridings and worked very hard to get them to the polling stations on Monday night. They poured resources, effort and time into those ridings and although it may not look like it that effort paid off to a certain extent. If you look at the vote count for all of those ridings the Liberals came in second in each of them and the vote count for the Liberals in each was higher than in 2015. If the Bloc would not have taken off like it did the Liberals would have swept all of those ridings handing them a comfortable majority government.
The Liberal campaign was a success. They won the election. It obviously could have been better. It was focused and disciplined and it never made a major misstep. After the brownface incident was passed the Liberal campaign became rather boring. I found the campaign to be rather unconventional. They had the ability to spend to the limit in this election but I did not see as many TV advertizements as I would have expected. Not that I watch alot of TV but when I did I tended to see three different Conservative ads to one Liberal ad and the Liberals ad did not change often. It is probably reasonable to assume that they decided to focus on the ground game. The media was not very friendly to the Liberals during the election so not counting on the air war was probably a wise choice.
The Conservative campaign was a mess. Canadians' opinions of Mr. Scheer actually become more negative over the course of the campaign. The campaign was designed to energize the base and count on a split in the progressive vote but very little effort was made to appeal to voters beyond the base. The results speak for themselves. I would note that some are saying that the Conservative campaign was somewhat successful because it increased their seat count. The problems with that argument is the increase came in places where the Conservatives are traditionally strong. Alberta, Saskatchewan, rural Manitoba, rural Ontario and rural Maritimes. They did not make any inroads in areas and regions where Conservatives are not traditionally strong. Indeed, they actually lost seats in Quebec and in Urban Ontario. Plus more importantly they DID NOT PREVENT THE LIBERALS FROM WINNING A MAJORITY GOVERNMENT. It was the Bloc Quebecois that achieved that feat. If the Bloc support would have been a little softer then the Conservatives would just be a larger Opposition Party facing a majority government across the aisle of the House.
The NDP achieved the objective they set out to achieve at the beginning of the election. Namely, to maintain official party status. The NDP campaign was essentially to do very little for the first four weeks and hope that Mr. Singh could perform well enough in the debates to convince enough Canadians to save the NDP. It worked but before the NDP get too excited they should remember that in 2011 the NDP won over 30% of the popular vote and over 100 seats. In 2015, they won around 19% of the vote and around 40 seats and this time they won 15% of the vote and around 20 seats. That is a trend that should make the leadership of the NDP very nervous. A piece of trivial knowledge for you. If pollsters would have been correct about their level of support in the election their residual strength in Quebec would probably have lead to a split in the non-Liberal vote in many of the NDP ridings that were targeted by the Liberals. So it was the sudden strength of the Bloc and the weakness of the NDP that denied the Liberals a majority government.
The Green Party conducted the same campaign as they have been conducting since Ms. May took over the leadership of that Party. They achieved the same result. It reminded me of that old definition of insanity.
Mr. Bernier blew it. If you are going to be a party leader act like one. He did not and he paid the price.
The Bloc proved once again that the Quebec electorate is the most fickle and unpredictable in the country. You can never count on them to do what conventional wisdom expects. Some claim it is Bill 21 was the problem and there could be something to that but I believe it was just Quebec voters being Quebec voters. The Bloc campaign was not that stellar. A good performance by their leader during the debates gave them a boost as would be expected. However, it happens a great deal that a boost as a result of a good debate performance does not translate into votes when the election occurs. This time it did.
So now the Liberals will govern and implement their agenda in a minority government situation. Fortunately for them it is a strong minority government where they only need the support of one other party to maintain the confidence of the House so they should not have an unreasonable amount of trouble pushing their agenda. Indeed, the place they may have the most trouble could be the Senate. In the House the other parties may have a whole host of reasons, at any one time, not to force an election. But the Senate, which does not have to worry about the government falling is they reject or amend a Commons Bill, could make a minority government work much harder than they may normally work to get their bills through the Senate.
It is going to be a interesting few years.
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Did the Kinsella Gambit just make Mr. Bernier relevant for the long term?
So it has been revealed that the Conservative campaign allegedly hired Warren Kinsella, a known political fixer, to work to undermine Mr. Bernier and his party by using "dirty tricks".
Mr. Scheer does not confirm or deny it and it probably will not have a really big impact on the election in the short term. However, he should know that it will not go away. There is only a day-and-a-half left in the campaign but he will be dogged with questions about this until the end. When you are running a campaign you never want to be tagged with the idea that you might have run a dirty tricks scam on one of your opponents as being the last thing discussed about your campaign.
One impact it could have is this could push the needle over just enough for Mr. Bernier to win his seat. He is in a tough fight with a Conservative and this may get him enough sympathy to swing the seat in his favour.
That would not be good news for the Conservatives in the long term because it would mean that Mr. Bernier would still be around, his party would still be around and he will be able to take the time to continue to build his party. Regardless of who leads the Conservatives after October 21 that would not be good news. A seat in the Commons and the time to use that seat to build an actual party for the next election is not something to give Conservative strategists warm and fuzzy feelings.
He still has to win the seat. If he does not he fades into obscurity. If he does then he has an opportunity to make himself more relevant in the future, provided he has the political smarts to do so.
I am certain that the Conservatives did not have that outcome in mind when they allegedly decided to hire Mr. Kinsella.
Mr. Scheer does not confirm or deny it and it probably will not have a really big impact on the election in the short term. However, he should know that it will not go away. There is only a day-and-a-half left in the campaign but he will be dogged with questions about this until the end. When you are running a campaign you never want to be tagged with the idea that you might have run a dirty tricks scam on one of your opponents as being the last thing discussed about your campaign.
One impact it could have is this could push the needle over just enough for Mr. Bernier to win his seat. He is in a tough fight with a Conservative and this may get him enough sympathy to swing the seat in his favour.
That would not be good news for the Conservatives in the long term because it would mean that Mr. Bernier would still be around, his party would still be around and he will be able to take the time to continue to build his party. Regardless of who leads the Conservatives after October 21 that would not be good news. A seat in the Commons and the time to use that seat to build an actual party for the next election is not something to give Conservative strategists warm and fuzzy feelings.
He still has to win the seat. If he does not he fades into obscurity. If he does then he has an opportunity to make himself more relevant in the future, provided he has the political smarts to do so.
I am certain that the Conservatives did not have that outcome in mind when they allegedly decided to hire Mr. Kinsella.
Monday, October 14, 2019
Federal Election 2019: Final Week - Now it is up to the swing voters
We are now exactly seven days from the election. This is the period of time when the non-aligned swing voters of the electorate will begin to make up their minds. As I have stated before these are the voters who are not partisans for any party. They tend to be disengaged most of the time, taking in politics by osmosis as opposed to actively following it. They only make up about 15% of the electorate but they always decide the final outcome of any election.
One characteristic of swing voters is they are invariably centrists. If they were ideologically inclined in either direction they would be partisans for one of the political parties. Another characteristic of swing voters is they invariably swing either to the Liberals or the Conservatives. It is true that a small number may swing to the NDP but they are not many. It was these voters swinging hard to the Conservatives that gave Mr. Harper his majority in 2011 despite the surge for the NDP. It was these voters swinging hard for the Liberals which allowed them to leap frog the NDP and go from the third party to a majority government in 2015. It was these voters swinging hard to the Progressive Conservatives of Ontario that handed Doug Ford his majority in 2018. A third characteristic of the swing voters is they tend to stick with a party over more than one election. It is not that they particularly like the party they vote for it is more like political inertia. They stuck with Mr. Harper from 2006 to 2011. It is probable that they will do the same thing this time and stick with the Liberals.
The whole point of the national election campaign is to convince this 15% of the electorate to swing towards a particular party. All of the parties have been trying hard for the last 6 months to swing them into their column.
This is one of the reasons why I ignore polls. They cannot determine how these voters will vote. So all of their polls and seat projections are done without knowing how 15% of the electorate is thinking. They are quite useless in this sense.
To this point the Liberals have hung onto their base. As well, if the crowds that come out to see the Prime Minister are any indication their base is rather enthusiastic about voting Liberal. Mr. Trudeau no longer has that rock star appeal but people still like to be seen with him. I would point out though that for this election he has not been as inspiring as he was in 2015. That could be a function of being in power for four years or it could be something else but either way it is something that was missing this time around. The Liberals built a pretty effective election machine for 2015 and they have had four years with which to build upon it. They have known for a long time that their electoral fortunes go through Ontario, Quebec and BC so they have paid particular attention to building their election organization in those provinces. It is interesting that despite the media's focus on the "threat" by the NDP and the BQ the Prime Minister has spent most of the last couple of weeks going to ridings held by NDP and Conservative candidates. It has been 10 days since the public polls detected the "surge" by the Bloc in Quebec but Mr. Trudeau has not set foot in the province, except for Gatineau for the two debates, since the day after the TVA debates. It could be that their internal data is telling them that the support for the NDP and the Bloc is a kilometre wide but a millimetre deep.
With the economy being in good shape it is not a huge worry for the swing voters. As a result they have the luxury of thinking about other issues and it has been shown a great deal that right now that issue is climate change. That particular issue is front and centre on the minds of alot of people, including those who will probably vote for the Conservatives. The Liberals have been effective in pushing their plans to address climate change, although there is still room for improvement in that effort, something they should address during this final week.
The Conservatives have hung on to their base. Although I am not certain that they are as enthusiastic as Liberals. Mr. Scheer makes his announcements to empty rooms and soccer fields and he has only had one rally where the crowd was large and enthusiastic. Their campaign has lacked any kind of buzz and Mr. Scheer has been less inspiring than Mr. Trudeau. Their election platform is a study of "political tin ear syndrome". Climate change is the issue front and centre on the minds of the electorate and their platform focuses on balancing the budget. Leaving aside that deficits are not a big deal for much of the electorate to begin with if you are going to make eliminating deficits a defining plank of your platform you have work real hard to convince voters that it is a big deal before springing it on them. The Conservatives did none of that. Announcing over $50 billion in cuts, when the economy is good and when Climate Change is a key issue for much of the electorate is not a winning proposition. I think many Conservatives know this. The little foray by Peter McKay was no accident.
The Conservative strategy is clear though. Secure your base and hope for a split of the progressive vote. It is a good strategy but in order for it to work you still need to convince those swing voters to vote for you. They have tried real hard to convince them not to vote for the Liberals but I am not certain they have done enough to convince them to swing to their party. I am not certain they have done enough to overcome the electoral inertia of the swing voters.
Kudos for the NDP for making themselves relevant in the second half of the campaign, although I am not that certain that they did it all themselves. I think the media, which likes a good horse race and of which a large portion of it has become the propaganda arm of the Conservative Party, have been hyping up the "surge" of the NDP.
The same holds true for the Bloc.
So all of the above should be a strong indicator that I believe the Liberals still hold the edge in this campaign. This does not feel like a change election. As well, I have stated here before that the Liberals have three historical voting patterns on their side. I have not seen anything yet that would seem to indicate that Canadians will break those patterns this time.
Over the next week the swing voters are going to decide who they want to lead the government. They could swing either way. However, I believe they will swing towards the Liberals this time giving them government on October 21. I believe that the probability of a Liberal majority is less than at the beginning of the campaign but it is still too high to completely dismiss the prospect of one.
All that being said I could be completely out to lunch and we will have to wait until the evening of October 21 to know for certain.
One characteristic of swing voters is they are invariably centrists. If they were ideologically inclined in either direction they would be partisans for one of the political parties. Another characteristic of swing voters is they invariably swing either to the Liberals or the Conservatives. It is true that a small number may swing to the NDP but they are not many. It was these voters swinging hard to the Conservatives that gave Mr. Harper his majority in 2011 despite the surge for the NDP. It was these voters swinging hard for the Liberals which allowed them to leap frog the NDP and go from the third party to a majority government in 2015. It was these voters swinging hard to the Progressive Conservatives of Ontario that handed Doug Ford his majority in 2018. A third characteristic of the swing voters is they tend to stick with a party over more than one election. It is not that they particularly like the party they vote for it is more like political inertia. They stuck with Mr. Harper from 2006 to 2011. It is probable that they will do the same thing this time and stick with the Liberals.
The whole point of the national election campaign is to convince this 15% of the electorate to swing towards a particular party. All of the parties have been trying hard for the last 6 months to swing them into their column.
This is one of the reasons why I ignore polls. They cannot determine how these voters will vote. So all of their polls and seat projections are done without knowing how 15% of the electorate is thinking. They are quite useless in this sense.
To this point the Liberals have hung onto their base. As well, if the crowds that come out to see the Prime Minister are any indication their base is rather enthusiastic about voting Liberal. Mr. Trudeau no longer has that rock star appeal but people still like to be seen with him. I would point out though that for this election he has not been as inspiring as he was in 2015. That could be a function of being in power for four years or it could be something else but either way it is something that was missing this time around. The Liberals built a pretty effective election machine for 2015 and they have had four years with which to build upon it. They have known for a long time that their electoral fortunes go through Ontario, Quebec and BC so they have paid particular attention to building their election organization in those provinces. It is interesting that despite the media's focus on the "threat" by the NDP and the BQ the Prime Minister has spent most of the last couple of weeks going to ridings held by NDP and Conservative candidates. It has been 10 days since the public polls detected the "surge" by the Bloc in Quebec but Mr. Trudeau has not set foot in the province, except for Gatineau for the two debates, since the day after the TVA debates. It could be that their internal data is telling them that the support for the NDP and the Bloc is a kilometre wide but a millimetre deep.
With the economy being in good shape it is not a huge worry for the swing voters. As a result they have the luxury of thinking about other issues and it has been shown a great deal that right now that issue is climate change. That particular issue is front and centre on the minds of alot of people, including those who will probably vote for the Conservatives. The Liberals have been effective in pushing their plans to address climate change, although there is still room for improvement in that effort, something they should address during this final week.
The Conservatives have hung on to their base. Although I am not certain that they are as enthusiastic as Liberals. Mr. Scheer makes his announcements to empty rooms and soccer fields and he has only had one rally where the crowd was large and enthusiastic. Their campaign has lacked any kind of buzz and Mr. Scheer has been less inspiring than Mr. Trudeau. Their election platform is a study of "political tin ear syndrome". Climate change is the issue front and centre on the minds of the electorate and their platform focuses on balancing the budget. Leaving aside that deficits are not a big deal for much of the electorate to begin with if you are going to make eliminating deficits a defining plank of your platform you have work real hard to convince voters that it is a big deal before springing it on them. The Conservatives did none of that. Announcing over $50 billion in cuts, when the economy is good and when Climate Change is a key issue for much of the electorate is not a winning proposition. I think many Conservatives know this. The little foray by Peter McKay was no accident.
The Conservative strategy is clear though. Secure your base and hope for a split of the progressive vote. It is a good strategy but in order for it to work you still need to convince those swing voters to vote for you. They have tried real hard to convince them not to vote for the Liberals but I am not certain they have done enough to convince them to swing to their party. I am not certain they have done enough to overcome the electoral inertia of the swing voters.
Kudos for the NDP for making themselves relevant in the second half of the campaign, although I am not that certain that they did it all themselves. I think the media, which likes a good horse race and of which a large portion of it has become the propaganda arm of the Conservative Party, have been hyping up the "surge" of the NDP.
The same holds true for the Bloc.
So all of the above should be a strong indicator that I believe the Liberals still hold the edge in this campaign. This does not feel like a change election. As well, I have stated here before that the Liberals have three historical voting patterns on their side. I have not seen anything yet that would seem to indicate that Canadians will break those patterns this time.
Over the next week the swing voters are going to decide who they want to lead the government. They could swing either way. However, I believe they will swing towards the Liberals this time giving them government on October 21. I believe that the probability of a Liberal majority is less than at the beginning of the campaign but it is still too high to completely dismiss the prospect of one.
All that being said I could be completely out to lunch and we will have to wait until the evening of October 21 to know for certain.
Friday, October 11, 2019
Did Andrew Scheer just blow the election?
So Andrew Scheer dropped the Conservative Party Platform today and it is not pretty. Depending on who you talk to it contains $35 to $53 billion in budget cuts for the Federal Government. That is over 5 years but anyway you slice it cutting that much money in that short amount of time cannot have any impact but a negative impact.
Of course, the Conservatives want to do this to "balance the budget".
When I first heard the news my gut said, "Holy crap, he just threw the election away." but then my intellect took over and I thought about it for awhile.
It is very true that a rather substantial part of the electorate do not like deficits and debt. For the most part they do not like it because they equate government debt with household debt, which is completely wrong but trying to convince them of that is like talking to a block of wood. Fortunately, they are mostly part of the Conservative base to begin with so they would vote for the Conservatives regardless of what was contained in the Platform.
However, there are a few of what I call the non-aligned swing voters that are centrist but lean to the right. Under normal circumstances these voters might decide that this is a good idea as well but for the experience in Ontario. Many of these right leaning centrists voted for Doug Ford and many of them are experiencing some buyers' remorse.
The voters of Ontario tend to choose governments of different political stripes in Ottawa and Toronto and this Platform document might just remind them of the wisdom of that practice.
So what does this do to the election?
I believe it will shake the electorate out of its apparent stupor to begin with and not just in Ontario. The Conservatives released this Platform late on Friday before a long weekend, probably to reduce the chances of anybody hearing about it but that is rather stupid considering we are in the last nine days of an election campaign. People are going to hear about it and that is for certain. The Conservatives essentially gave their chief opponent a bat with which to beat on them for the next nine days, which is plenty of time for Canadians to learn about the implications of the Conservative Platform. The Liberals will be selling investing in Canadians while the Conservatives will be selling divesting in Canadians. Most Canadians are going to choose the former.
Of course, the question then becomes whether those voters focus their votes on the one party that can actually prevent the Conservatives from implementing their proposed cuts, namely the Liberals. I believe the answer is yes.
As an aside let's understand that the Liberals knew going into this election that their victory would go through Ontario and retaining their majority would go through Quebec. As a result they have developed a strategy to target all of the winnable seats in those two provinces and they have been implementing that strategy since at least June, probably earlier. They poured resources and effort into those ridings to identify as many Liberals as they can. They will have a GOTV effort in those ridings that will reduce the number of swing voters needed to put them over the top in those ridings. That is the reason why the Liberals have only made passing comments to Quebecers about not voting for the Bloc and the reason why Mr. Trudeau has not rushed into Quebec to attempt to shore up their support. I would bet a substantial amount of money that their internal data is telling them they are still on track to win a majority government despite what the public polls and the media are saying. You always have to remember that a national election campaign is like an iceberg. The leader's tour is just the tip. It is what is happening out of sight that wins campaigns.
There is a very good probability that the Conservative Party platform will make the Liberal's implementation of that strategy easier. Left leaning voters that were dabbling with the idea of voting for some other party but the Liberals are going to look at the Platform and freak. The argument that only the Liberals can stop the Conservatives from implementing their plans will resonate with alot of left leaning voters. The argument that only the Liberals can stop the Conservative cuts will probably also resonate with many of those Quebecers that are dabbling with the idea of voting for the Bloc. The Liberals argue that Quebecers would be better served by a large contingent of Quebec MPs on the government benches instead of the Opposition benches. That message probably would have resonated with the ever so pragmatic Quebec electorate before October 21 anyway but the Conservative Platform may just cause it to resonate more.
I have stated before, in this space, that the ballot question is going to be "Do Canadians want a change of government?" I do not believe so. There is no "throw the bums out" vibe this time around. The radical change from the status quo that the Conservative Party Platform represents may reinforce that.
So to answer the question in the title of this post. I believe the answer is No and yes. No because he was a long shot to win to begin with and yes because this could very reduce his chances to near zero but we will know for certain in nine days.
Of course, the Conservatives want to do this to "balance the budget".
When I first heard the news my gut said, "Holy crap, he just threw the election away." but then my intellect took over and I thought about it for awhile.
It is very true that a rather substantial part of the electorate do not like deficits and debt. For the most part they do not like it because they equate government debt with household debt, which is completely wrong but trying to convince them of that is like talking to a block of wood. Fortunately, they are mostly part of the Conservative base to begin with so they would vote for the Conservatives regardless of what was contained in the Platform.
However, there are a few of what I call the non-aligned swing voters that are centrist but lean to the right. Under normal circumstances these voters might decide that this is a good idea as well but for the experience in Ontario. Many of these right leaning centrists voted for Doug Ford and many of them are experiencing some buyers' remorse.
The voters of Ontario tend to choose governments of different political stripes in Ottawa and Toronto and this Platform document might just remind them of the wisdom of that practice.
So what does this do to the election?
I believe it will shake the electorate out of its apparent stupor to begin with and not just in Ontario. The Conservatives released this Platform late on Friday before a long weekend, probably to reduce the chances of anybody hearing about it but that is rather stupid considering we are in the last nine days of an election campaign. People are going to hear about it and that is for certain. The Conservatives essentially gave their chief opponent a bat with which to beat on them for the next nine days, which is plenty of time for Canadians to learn about the implications of the Conservative Platform. The Liberals will be selling investing in Canadians while the Conservatives will be selling divesting in Canadians. Most Canadians are going to choose the former.
Of course, the question then becomes whether those voters focus their votes on the one party that can actually prevent the Conservatives from implementing their proposed cuts, namely the Liberals. I believe the answer is yes.
As an aside let's understand that the Liberals knew going into this election that their victory would go through Ontario and retaining their majority would go through Quebec. As a result they have developed a strategy to target all of the winnable seats in those two provinces and they have been implementing that strategy since at least June, probably earlier. They poured resources and effort into those ridings to identify as many Liberals as they can. They will have a GOTV effort in those ridings that will reduce the number of swing voters needed to put them over the top in those ridings. That is the reason why the Liberals have only made passing comments to Quebecers about not voting for the Bloc and the reason why Mr. Trudeau has not rushed into Quebec to attempt to shore up their support. I would bet a substantial amount of money that their internal data is telling them they are still on track to win a majority government despite what the public polls and the media are saying. You always have to remember that a national election campaign is like an iceberg. The leader's tour is just the tip. It is what is happening out of sight that wins campaigns.
There is a very good probability that the Conservative Party platform will make the Liberal's implementation of that strategy easier. Left leaning voters that were dabbling with the idea of voting for some other party but the Liberals are going to look at the Platform and freak. The argument that only the Liberals can stop the Conservatives from implementing their plans will resonate with alot of left leaning voters. The argument that only the Liberals can stop the Conservative cuts will probably also resonate with many of those Quebecers that are dabbling with the idea of voting for the Bloc. The Liberals argue that Quebecers would be better served by a large contingent of Quebec MPs on the government benches instead of the Opposition benches. That message probably would have resonated with the ever so pragmatic Quebec electorate before October 21 anyway but the Conservative Platform may just cause it to resonate more.
I have stated before, in this space, that the ballot question is going to be "Do Canadians want a change of government?" I do not believe so. There is no "throw the bums out" vibe this time around. The radical change from the status quo that the Conservative Party Platform represents may reinforce that.
So to answer the question in the title of this post. I believe the answer is No and yes. No because he was a long shot to win to begin with and yes because this could very reduce his chances to near zero but we will know for certain in nine days.
Thursday, October 10, 2019
Federal Election 2019: 10 Days to Election Day - The final sprint to the finish
As a write this the final French language leaders debate is ongoing. These debates are organized by the media for the media and they rarely have the impact the media would have us believe but the last one is usually the starting line for the final sprint to the finish in every election. After tonight the parties will step up their efforts until it reaches a frenetic pace during the final weekend of the election.
One thing about this period is polls become even more unreliable than usual. For the most part public opinion begins to change fast and that rate of change increases as we get closer to election day. As a result, polls which often take at least a day or two to collect, process and publish cannot keep up. Remember that the last polls of 2015, published about 48 hours before the polls closed were "predicting" a Liberal minority government.
So if you want to see how the election is shaping up over the next 10 days watch the parties. The two main parties and maybe the NDP have pollsters and data analysis experts on retainer during elections. They conduct polls, although for gaining useful information instead of advancing a media narrative plus all of the parties have central databases that are fed nightly by the local campaigns. They take that data plus some other data, such as social media metrics, and model the probable results of the election down to the riding level. They are similar to the seat projection models used by the media but the parties have much better quality data than the media has so their models are much better quality as a result.
Of course, the parties do not make any of their data public. They keep it to themselves and they use it to refine their message and to determine where they need to focus their efforts. However, one can gain some insight into what they are seeing by watching the parties in general and the party leaders in particular.
At this stage of the campaign those managing it are going to put the leader where they believe they can do the most good. That is where the leader can either save a seat from falling to the other parties or where there is a possibility of picking up a seat currently held by another party. So for the next 10 days watch where the party leaders campaign. As well, watching what they say can also be a good indicator.
An example would be the fact that Mr. Trudeau campaigned in the Carleton Riding today, a riding that has been held by Pierre Poilievre since 2004. I found that interesting. That has been a safe Conservative riding for 15 years. It is true that it is very close to Gatineau, where the debates are occuring but that can be said of over a dozen ridings around Ottawa. He could have gone to Glengarry-Prescott-Russel, which according to the media seat projections is a Liberal Riding that could change hands this time or there are other ridings in Quebec where the media is saying the Bloc could defeat a Liberal incumbent. He did not do that. Instead he campaigned in what has been a safe Conservative seat. Either he really wanted to buy that pumpkin from a farm near Manotick or maybe their data is indicating that the ridings the media say are vulnerable are not so vulnerable and that the Carleton riding could be a candidate to change hands this time. It is true the local Liberal candidate is running a particularly strong campaign and we have not seen anything of Pierre Poilievre during the whole election. This is not to say that the Carleton riding will switch. It is just to say that there are plenty of places to buy pumpkins in the National Capital Region and it is curious that Mr. Trudeau's handlers had him buy one there.
Oh yes, remember the media is stating that the Bloc is on the rise in Quebec threatening the Liberals. So what is Mr. Trudeau's play. Go to British Columbia tomorrow morning. I bet the Bloc never saw that coming.
It is harder to find out where Mr. Scheer was because finding his itinerary on the Conservative Party website is much harder but it should be noted that Mr. Scheer blew the dog whistle very loudly yesterday in Quebec while the various Proud websites brought up the fear of Sharia Law again. It is curious that they have decided to do this at this stage of the game and a clue as to why might be the news that Mr. MacKay appears to be gearing up for a leadership race for the Conservative Party after the election.
This was stated by a senior Conservative "friend" of Mr. MacKay's, who apologized soon after. However, it should be noted that he apologized. He did not retract the statement. Make no mistake. This was not a error on the part of the source. If the person is a senior Conservative he would have had the media sense not to make those kinds of statements to a reporter. This was a deliberate act designed to do what? I am not certain right now but it does seem that at least some of the Conservative Party do not believe Mr. Scheer will pull out a victory in 10 days.
Over the next 10 days you should be able to discern how the election is going to turn out by watching what the parties and the party leaders are doing. They will be a much better indicator than anything the media will tell us.
One thing about this period is polls become even more unreliable than usual. For the most part public opinion begins to change fast and that rate of change increases as we get closer to election day. As a result, polls which often take at least a day or two to collect, process and publish cannot keep up. Remember that the last polls of 2015, published about 48 hours before the polls closed were "predicting" a Liberal minority government.
So if you want to see how the election is shaping up over the next 10 days watch the parties. The two main parties and maybe the NDP have pollsters and data analysis experts on retainer during elections. They conduct polls, although for gaining useful information instead of advancing a media narrative plus all of the parties have central databases that are fed nightly by the local campaigns. They take that data plus some other data, such as social media metrics, and model the probable results of the election down to the riding level. They are similar to the seat projection models used by the media but the parties have much better quality data than the media has so their models are much better quality as a result.
Of course, the parties do not make any of their data public. They keep it to themselves and they use it to refine their message and to determine where they need to focus their efforts. However, one can gain some insight into what they are seeing by watching the parties in general and the party leaders in particular.
At this stage of the campaign those managing it are going to put the leader where they believe they can do the most good. That is where the leader can either save a seat from falling to the other parties or where there is a possibility of picking up a seat currently held by another party. So for the next 10 days watch where the party leaders campaign. As well, watching what they say can also be a good indicator.
An example would be the fact that Mr. Trudeau campaigned in the Carleton Riding today, a riding that has been held by Pierre Poilievre since 2004. I found that interesting. That has been a safe Conservative riding for 15 years. It is true that it is very close to Gatineau, where the debates are occuring but that can be said of over a dozen ridings around Ottawa. He could have gone to Glengarry-Prescott-Russel, which according to the media seat projections is a Liberal Riding that could change hands this time or there are other ridings in Quebec where the media is saying the Bloc could defeat a Liberal incumbent. He did not do that. Instead he campaigned in what has been a safe Conservative seat. Either he really wanted to buy that pumpkin from a farm near Manotick or maybe their data is indicating that the ridings the media say are vulnerable are not so vulnerable and that the Carleton riding could be a candidate to change hands this time. It is true the local Liberal candidate is running a particularly strong campaign and we have not seen anything of Pierre Poilievre during the whole election. This is not to say that the Carleton riding will switch. It is just to say that there are plenty of places to buy pumpkins in the National Capital Region and it is curious that Mr. Trudeau's handlers had him buy one there.
Oh yes, remember the media is stating that the Bloc is on the rise in Quebec threatening the Liberals. So what is Mr. Trudeau's play. Go to British Columbia tomorrow morning. I bet the Bloc never saw that coming.
It is harder to find out where Mr. Scheer was because finding his itinerary on the Conservative Party website is much harder but it should be noted that Mr. Scheer blew the dog whistle very loudly yesterday in Quebec while the various Proud websites brought up the fear of Sharia Law again. It is curious that they have decided to do this at this stage of the game and a clue as to why might be the news that Mr. MacKay appears to be gearing up for a leadership race for the Conservative Party after the election.
This was stated by a senior Conservative "friend" of Mr. MacKay's, who apologized soon after. However, it should be noted that he apologized. He did not retract the statement. Make no mistake. This was not a error on the part of the source. If the person is a senior Conservative he would have had the media sense not to make those kinds of statements to a reporter. This was a deliberate act designed to do what? I am not certain right now but it does seem that at least some of the Conservative Party do not believe Mr. Scheer will pull out a victory in 10 days.
Over the next 10 days you should be able to discern how the election is going to turn out by watching what the parties and the party leaders are doing. They will be a much better indicator than anything the media will tell us.
Tuesday, October 08, 2019
Federal Election 2019: Week Four - Now the real election begins
Well with week four now in the books the real election begins. The week of the debates are usually when non-partisan voters begin to pay attention to the election. So, all of the partisans for each of the parties are going to be joined, more and more, by the non-aligned swing voters in watching this election. Many will not make a final decision until the final week and days of the campaign but they will now begin to pay much closer attention as the days go on. They will be the ones who decide this election.
The Liberal campaign has been rather boring really. That is not a bad thing, by the way, during an election. Usually the things that excite during election campaigns are things political parties would like to avoid during them. So the fact the last couple of weeks have been largely uneventful for the Liberal campaign should make them very happy. As well, the Liberal campaign has been the most relaxed. I check the itinerary of each leader each day to see where they will be campaigning. One thing I noticed was that after the TVA debate Mr. Trudeau essentially took the next day off. He hung around Montreal, went to one event early in the morning and then called it a day. I thought it was because he would be traveling for the rest of the day but his itinerary for the next day was for a couple of events in Quebec City and in the Rimouski area of Quebec. I found that interesting because that is the middle of Conservative country in Quebec. All of the talking heads indicated that the BQ performance during the TVA debates made them a threat to the Liberals but they went to a Conservative area instead of trying to fend off the Bloc and they are still not trying to fend off the Bloc even now. After Quebec City Mr. Trudeau took the next day off. No events were planned. Contrast that to his opponents who ran around the country for all three of those days. They campaigned like crazy. I keep hearing that the Liberals are threatened by the Bloc, the NDP and the Greens. I keep hearing that their majority, maybe even their grip on power, is threatened. If so they seem to have a very lackadaisical reaction to this "fact". Maybe the public polls and the pundits that use them to make their prognostications are missing something.
The Conservatives had a brutal week in what can only be described as an increasingly brutal campaign. Last week ended with revelations that Mr. Scheer lied about his work history. Ok, that is silly and bush league but it should not be too big of a deal. Then it was revealed that he lied about his education and then it was revealed that he has been hiding that he is an American citizen for 15 years. Holy crap! Any one of those would make for a bad day on the campaign trail but it would only be one or two bad days. Having these revelations come out over the course of a single week during an election campaign has the potential of being fatal to that campaign. One is a lapse. Three is a pattern and if Conservatives and their allies believe said pattern will do no harm to Mr. Scheer they could be in for some profound disappointment. I do not know how much this will impact the campaign in the end but is was a lousy way for Mr. Scheer to spend week four of the campaign. Now going into week five it would appear he is getting questions about Trump operatives who may be working on his campaign. If those questions persist that could very well be it for him and the Conservatives.
The other parties are no longer relevant. This has always been a two party race and the last four weeks have proven that. The other parties might play spoiler in some local races but their impact will probably not be as profound as the talking head are currently pushing.
A short word on the debates. I do not watch them because they are pointless. They are organized by the media for the media. They do not have as much of an impact on the outcome of the election as the media would have us believe. I always like to remind people that Mr. Harper never won a single debate during his victorious election campaigns. He came in second to Mr. Martin in 2006 and Mr. Dion in 2008. He was trounced by Mr. Layton on 2011. Despite that he won all three campaigns and very convincingly in 2011.
So with 12 days until the election the non-partisan swing voters in the country will be deciding whether they want a change in government or not. That is the real ballot question. All of the other stuff the media talks about is only there to inform the answer to that question.
There is no certain way to determine which way they will jump. We will just have to wait until October 21 but my intellect and my gut are still telling me that they will jump to the Liberals in a big way, electing them to a majority government.
The Liberal campaign has been rather boring really. That is not a bad thing, by the way, during an election. Usually the things that excite during election campaigns are things political parties would like to avoid during them. So the fact the last couple of weeks have been largely uneventful for the Liberal campaign should make them very happy. As well, the Liberal campaign has been the most relaxed. I check the itinerary of each leader each day to see where they will be campaigning. One thing I noticed was that after the TVA debate Mr. Trudeau essentially took the next day off. He hung around Montreal, went to one event early in the morning and then called it a day. I thought it was because he would be traveling for the rest of the day but his itinerary for the next day was for a couple of events in Quebec City and in the Rimouski area of Quebec. I found that interesting because that is the middle of Conservative country in Quebec. All of the talking heads indicated that the BQ performance during the TVA debates made them a threat to the Liberals but they went to a Conservative area instead of trying to fend off the Bloc and they are still not trying to fend off the Bloc even now. After Quebec City Mr. Trudeau took the next day off. No events were planned. Contrast that to his opponents who ran around the country for all three of those days. They campaigned like crazy. I keep hearing that the Liberals are threatened by the Bloc, the NDP and the Greens. I keep hearing that their majority, maybe even their grip on power, is threatened. If so they seem to have a very lackadaisical reaction to this "fact". Maybe the public polls and the pundits that use them to make their prognostications are missing something.
The Conservatives had a brutal week in what can only be described as an increasingly brutal campaign. Last week ended with revelations that Mr. Scheer lied about his work history. Ok, that is silly and bush league but it should not be too big of a deal. Then it was revealed that he lied about his education and then it was revealed that he has been hiding that he is an American citizen for 15 years. Holy crap! Any one of those would make for a bad day on the campaign trail but it would only be one or two bad days. Having these revelations come out over the course of a single week during an election campaign has the potential of being fatal to that campaign. One is a lapse. Three is a pattern and if Conservatives and their allies believe said pattern will do no harm to Mr. Scheer they could be in for some profound disappointment. I do not know how much this will impact the campaign in the end but is was a lousy way for Mr. Scheer to spend week four of the campaign. Now going into week five it would appear he is getting questions about Trump operatives who may be working on his campaign. If those questions persist that could very well be it for him and the Conservatives.
The other parties are no longer relevant. This has always been a two party race and the last four weeks have proven that. The other parties might play spoiler in some local races but their impact will probably not be as profound as the talking head are currently pushing.
A short word on the debates. I do not watch them because they are pointless. They are organized by the media for the media. They do not have as much of an impact on the outcome of the election as the media would have us believe. I always like to remind people that Mr. Harper never won a single debate during his victorious election campaigns. He came in second to Mr. Martin in 2006 and Mr. Dion in 2008. He was trounced by Mr. Layton on 2011. Despite that he won all three campaigns and very convincingly in 2011.
So with 12 days until the election the non-partisan swing voters in the country will be deciding whether they want a change in government or not. That is the real ballot question. All of the other stuff the media talks about is only there to inform the answer to that question.
There is no certain way to determine which way they will jump. We will just have to wait until October 21 but my intellect and my gut are still telling me that they will jump to the Liberals in a big way, electing them to a majority government.
Tuesday, October 01, 2019
Federal Election 2019 - Week Three Done - These are the dog days
Well, week three is pretty much in the books and not much has changed from when the election was called. The election campaign is pretty much unfolding as I stated it would here.
So far the Liberal campaign has been focused and disciplined. They have not made a misstep since it began. The brown face pictures was not a misstep it was a grenade thrown into the election by someone with an agenda. I am certain many in the Conservative camp would have liked it to do damage but Mr. Trudeau's handling of the situation made certain that would not happen. The Liberals have released their full platform so the next few days will be them hammering at its main themes, followed by debate preparation and the debates, followed by hammering on its main themes again for the final sprint home.
This week saw the Conservative campaign hit a bit of a pothole when it was revealed that Mr. Scheer is not a licenced insurance broker after all. Talk about bush league. A man who would be Prime Minister misrepresenting his credentials and work experience. Did he not think that someone would discover that and report on it before October 21? That is just stupid. The media is not focusing too much on it but it is getting out there and this late in the campaign the impression it might create may stick. Mr. Scheer still does not look like he is enjoying himself and there is still no rhyme or reason to the policy announcements he has been making. One thing I did notice was he made some announcements about reducing foreign aid and reopening the Religious Freedom Office in the last couple of days. These are two measures that would appeal only to his base. Why is he bringing them up now? The time for doing so would have been at the beginning, with this period being the time to pivot to appealing to more centrist voters. For this election he has done the opposite. He did not throw any read meat at his base at the beginning, instead coming out with vaguely centrist policy announcements. Then out of the blue, three weeks in, he massages his base a bit. I am not going to read too much into this now but it bears watching.
The other parties are irrelevant and I will not bother talking about their campaign. Although I will say that Mr. Bernier probably missed an opportunity by pursuing the campaign he is pursuing. His natural audience is Conservative supporters, he has some charisma and he is up against a guy who has less charisma than a turnip. There is a reason why he is called "Mr. Blandy". If he would have went hard after Conservative supporters in Ontario and Quebec he might have made himself relevant. As it is, he will probably win his own seat and that is it.
So what will the next three weeks bring? Both of the main parties have managed to hang on to their bases up to now so the next three weeks will be the time of the undecideds. No one can know how they will jump but I have to say that this election does not feel like a change election. In all of the elections where we have seen a change in government you can see that change coming long before this stage in the campaign. We are not seeing it. The undecideds could surprise us still but it is not as likely as them deciding to stick to the government they have. By the way, that may be why Mr. Scheer looks so miserable. He has spent a great deal of time and effort to convince Canadians to change their government and so far he has not seen any reward for that effort.
Three weeks in I have not seen any reason to change my assessment of how this election will end, as outlined in the post I linked to at the beginning of this one. The next three weeks may change that so we will have to wait and see.
So far the Liberal campaign has been focused and disciplined. They have not made a misstep since it began. The brown face pictures was not a misstep it was a grenade thrown into the election by someone with an agenda. I am certain many in the Conservative camp would have liked it to do damage but Mr. Trudeau's handling of the situation made certain that would not happen. The Liberals have released their full platform so the next few days will be them hammering at its main themes, followed by debate preparation and the debates, followed by hammering on its main themes again for the final sprint home.
This week saw the Conservative campaign hit a bit of a pothole when it was revealed that Mr. Scheer is not a licenced insurance broker after all. Talk about bush league. A man who would be Prime Minister misrepresenting his credentials and work experience. Did he not think that someone would discover that and report on it before October 21? That is just stupid. The media is not focusing too much on it but it is getting out there and this late in the campaign the impression it might create may stick. Mr. Scheer still does not look like he is enjoying himself and there is still no rhyme or reason to the policy announcements he has been making. One thing I did notice was he made some announcements about reducing foreign aid and reopening the Religious Freedom Office in the last couple of days. These are two measures that would appeal only to his base. Why is he bringing them up now? The time for doing so would have been at the beginning, with this period being the time to pivot to appealing to more centrist voters. For this election he has done the opposite. He did not throw any read meat at his base at the beginning, instead coming out with vaguely centrist policy announcements. Then out of the blue, three weeks in, he massages his base a bit. I am not going to read too much into this now but it bears watching.
The other parties are irrelevant and I will not bother talking about their campaign. Although I will say that Mr. Bernier probably missed an opportunity by pursuing the campaign he is pursuing. His natural audience is Conservative supporters, he has some charisma and he is up against a guy who has less charisma than a turnip. There is a reason why he is called "Mr. Blandy". If he would have went hard after Conservative supporters in Ontario and Quebec he might have made himself relevant. As it is, he will probably win his own seat and that is it.
So what will the next three weeks bring? Both of the main parties have managed to hang on to their bases up to now so the next three weeks will be the time of the undecideds. No one can know how they will jump but I have to say that this election does not feel like a change election. In all of the elections where we have seen a change in government you can see that change coming long before this stage in the campaign. We are not seeing it. The undecideds could surprise us still but it is not as likely as them deciding to stick to the government they have. By the way, that may be why Mr. Scheer looks so miserable. He has spent a great deal of time and effort to convince Canadians to change their government and so far he has not seen any reward for that effort.
Three weeks in I have not seen any reason to change my assessment of how this election will end, as outlined in the post I linked to at the beginning of this one. The next three weeks may change that so we will have to wait and see.
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