Short answer: No.
Not so short answer: Anything is possible when it comes to politics but no.
I resolved to stop commenting on the day-to-day silliness of politics in this country awhile ago but the current speculation about a Fall election is just too ridiculous for me to ignore.
The budget will be released on November 4 and the idea it will be defeated and a snap election will occur as a result is getting some media play. This is not surprising of course. Such speculation is worth more than a few eyeballs staring at screens and newsprint and a few clicks on the internet. Or to put it another way it is good for the news business.
The crux of the speculation is the media stating the government is indicating they do not have the votes to pass the budget and the opposition has not stated whether they will support it. Very serious stuff until you apply just a little critical thinking. We have a minority government so, by definition, it does not have the votes to pass the budget on its own. As well, since the budget has not yet been released the opposition parties are not going to decide how they will vote just yet. They will posture and try to maneuver for short-term political advantage but that is to be expected and nothing extraordinary.
So when the budget is released does it mean they will decide to vote against budget and trigger an election?
Well let's look at it from the perspective of all of the parties.
The honeymoon for the Liberals is over, but only by a few weeks, but the honeymoon for Mark Carney continues. He is still the most popular and trusted politicians at the federal level. In our increasingly Americanized politics, where party leaders are the main focus over party and policy, that gives the Liberals a huge advantage. To put it another way, the Liberals do not want an election but they are not afraid of having one. None of the other parties can say the same.
The Conservative Party is lead by a leader who has been severely damaged by the events of the last 6 months. That is something that Conservatives and the media just do not seem to want to admit. Pierre Poilievre lost an election everybody believed he was going to win less than a year ago, losing his own seat in the process. Yes, his party picked up seats but they were unable to prevent the Liberals from gaining seats too, almost to the point of achieving majority government status. Mr. Poilievre is going to need time to rehabilitate his image, if he can and assuming he comes through the leadership review in January, before he challenges for the PM's chair again. He will only get one more chance to do just that so he will want much more favourable conditions before taking that chance.
The NDP is in an existential crisis. They are leaderless, beyond broke and have no party identity to speak of. An election now would result in two outcomes. They would lose what remaining seats they have and be wiped out as a political force at the federal level. Or they would pick up a few more seats, maybe getting back to official party status, but they would be so deep in debt that they would need to declare bankruptcy leading to their elimination as a political force at the federal level in a year or two. Either way, an election now would lead to their destruction. They need time to choose a leader, renew their party and make some money. An election now would prevent all three.
The Bloc cannot gain anymore seats in Quebec. They are at their high water mark. However, the Spring election showed them that they can lose seats in Quebec. So they find themselves in a position where an election will not benefit them with a larger seat count and where an election right now runs the risk of them losing seats. For the Bloc the status quo is in their best interest, at least for now.
So none of the opposition parties are really in a position to fight an election. Their risk of losing more is higher than their chances of making gains. As well, if you add the displeasure voters would have with having to go to the polls less than a year after doing so in the Spring it increases the risk. The election would be fought on who triggered the election and if they vote against the budget it would be a hard sell to say anybody else besides the opposition parties would be responsible. That would provide the Liberals the opportunity to secure the majority they just missed in April.
So in the end the government will table their budget, the opposition parties will shit on it, because that is what opposition parties do, but they will find a way not to defeat the budget in the end. The budget will probably not have any poison pills. It will be different from budgets the Trudeau Liberals used to table but not egregiously so. In the end one of the other parties will say they can support it and that will be that. My guess is it will be the Bloc.
Of course, this assumes that the opposition parties have remotely competent political strategists working for them. If not, then all bets are off.
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