Message from @WARCORP™
Discord ID: 409494909758865428
The Progressive Conservatives in Canada were essentially replaced by their Ross Perot supporting counterparts in Canada, due to the fact that electing the Reform Party of Canada required electing a Reform legislature.
In other words, Ross Perot lost because he could never control Congress. Reform Canada won because precisely the opposite was true--Commons elects the Prime Minister.
But if Ross Perot became President in 1992 or 1996, would we have a Justin Trudeau like monster today?
The Canadian Tories, formed by the merger of the Reform/CA party with the Prog. Cons., have been failing to outlaw abortion and gay marriage pretty much continuously for decades.
And they can actually just suspend human rights and ban those things in Canada, as their Supreme Court is weak.
And they didn't even disclose Canadian immigration stats until they were leaked by dissidents under Trudeau
So no one even knew it was an issue.
And on top of that, they ratified NAFTA--the treaty they were founded to oppose--and joined the WTO.
That said, they didn't even get into office until Stephen Harper. So they basically had to repeal all of that.
This is interesting Nuke. I had read Alberta is very Conservative. How do they feel about being in such a Liberal mess? Is there any talk of session?
Alberta is already under a left-wing Socialist government because the right-wing parties were too busy infighting with their 60+% majority
It's actually a big part of why Trudeau was elected: Conservatives were extremely demoralized by being defeated by a landslide in Alberta.
The right-wing party was able to defeat the moderate "Progressive Conservatives," but the right lost over 20 points overall from all of the infighting, leaving them with a feeble simple majority between both parties--and because Canada's electoral system is a two-party-optimized FPTP system like the USA has...that meant the most united party, the New Democrats, won.
The New Democrats won 40% of the Alberta vote too, which gave them a huge amount of momentum until the CBC--Canada's equivalent of PBS or the BBC--actually began encouraging NDP voters to vote Liberal to stop the Tories from being reelected.
if only Canada had a two-party system
I wish the US actually got involved in foreign internal affairs so we could condemn the CBC for that, or do many things really.
And yeah, Alberta's feuding right-wing parties actually merged in 2017 to prevent another election like that.
Alberta 2019 could be a majority vote for the United Conservatives, which might be the first in recent Canadian history.
Ah, nope, Manitoba has a right-wing majority government as it is.
And so does Saskatchewan.
Alright, I think the best say to determine which party's gonna win which state, we'll have to look at Voter proportions
Number of Self Described & Registered Indepnendents, Democrats, Republicans, etc.
So we can determine which states we can win
where can we find that data
here, I guess
I don't think we've gone in depth of party financials yet
DNC has 6.5 million dollars on hand and are 6.1 million dollars in debt
400k away from insolvency
The RNC has 38 million dollars without a single cent of debt
there could be something to this
In a state this purple with the national consensus (even if it is shrinking) still leaning towards the Dems, I think this is a great sign of things to come.
What state are you referring to?
FL
Oh. I thought Florida had been slowly trending Red
it's referring to the senate election we have which most likely will be current Governor Rick Scott and Senator Bill Nelson
It did in 2016, but that's tricky