Posted on 06/28/2004 2:51:25 AM PDT by conservative in nyc
The Canadian election is today. If the most recent polls are correct, the Conservative Party of Canada may win more seats in Canada's House of Commons, setting the stage for a Conservative minority government. A new day may be dawning in Canada. But the election is going to be close.
Please use this thread for any early election articles that pop-up over the course of the day, predictions and news analysis, and, of course, the actual results as they come in.
Also, please post links to Canadian elections result sites here.
Yep, I can see that happening just as easily as some of the other predictions. Let's just cross our fingers for a Harper majority so that our northern neighbors don't have to worry about another election for 4 years.
'Conservative Party' Bump!
election ping
Nothern Neighbors BUMP!
BLAME CANADA!
What is that (in #65)? Gambling odds or something?
I'm heading out to vote now for Jim Gouk - Southern Interior.
Your set of numbers looks about right, but Ontario could tip more towards Tory blue if they try. ;^)
Go, Harper! Confusion to the Liberals! God save the Queen!
We're trying, beleive me!!!
What is a 'riding?'
Less than 2 hours until the first closings BUMP.
Canada "Riding" = One of our "Congressional Districts". They're called "Constituencies" in the UK and "Electorates" in Australia.
The key is turnout. Paul Martin sounded desperate after a cross country dash yesterday. If Canadians are going to confound the pollsters, its going to be in the turnout. That means a really huge Conservative turnout. It may make a lot of difference in ridings in which there's the chance to score an upset cause Liberal voters are sitting the election out. After all, in a too close to call election such as this one, every vote literally counts.
A riding is a electoral district.
A previous poster was on the right track, a riding was originally defined as the area that could be covered in a day by a rider on horseback.
I'm following the Free Dominion turnout thread. There's signs of strong turnout and a tremor of Conservative support; quoth a political hack, "something is happening out there."
We'll start knowing with the NL results in over an hour.
Keep sending the prayers.
On their way.
I hope Stephen Harper has a VICTORY sppech ready...!
ELECTION DAY 2004
Paul Martin spent the final days of his shabby campaign attempting to argue that a vote for the NDP is a vote for the Conservatives, a vote for the Bloc is a vote for the Conservatives, a vote for the Greens is a vote for the Conservatives
Almost right, Prime Minister. In a nutshell, a vote for anybody but the Liberals is a vote for anybody but the Liberals.
And thats what matters. Todays election needs to be an act of political hygiene a repudiation of the waste and cronyism of the one-party state. If Canadians chicken out, well be colluding in the degradation of our democracy. I agree with Jack Layton on this: make a positive vote. If youre a socialist, vote socialist. If youre a separatist, vote separatist. As for the hollow man's hollow threats, the Martin argument is particularly loathsome this time round: thanks to our election laws, the votes your party receives today will determine the public money they get at the next election. I dislike the idea of state-funded parties, but, given that those are the rules, theres no reason to give the Grits yet another institutional advantage. If youre an NDPer and you cast a tactical vote for the Liberals, youre ensuring theyll have even more dough to squash your guys next time round. And next time could come pretty soon.
And, indeed, one of the advantages of the present situation is that theres no such thing as a wasted vote. If we really are in minority government territory, then every party, every riding, every member counts. Likewise, every vote the Liberals dont get is a lesson to them. In that respect, Id urge conservatives in my province of Quebec not to get stampeded into stringing along with the stale notion that the Grits are the only viable federalist party. The Bloc will have a good night, and they deserve it M Duceppe has fought an effective campaign but if youre a conservative, whether in the Liberal enclaves of Montreal or the Bloquiste heartland, cast a vote for Harpers guy and do your bit to establish the party as a credible federalist alternative.
The Liberals other line has been the one I predicted a few months back, the one borrowed from the 2002 French Presidential election: Vote for the crooks, not the Fascists. Stephen Harpers Conservatives are not exactly right-wing red meat for the likes of me, but thats okay you cant shift the assumptions of decades overnight, or even within one term. So vote for the Fascists, or the Commies, or the Traitors, or even the Eco-loonies. But not the Crooks.
Im hoping for a Conservative majority on Tuesday morning, but, if thats not possible, the temporary chaos of a splintered House of Commons is better than the remorseless decay of continued Liberal rule. Ill be up late tonight filing a late election column for The Western Standard and well be giving away tons of prizes to lucky competition winners tomorrow morning. Even if Canada's the loser, you could be a big winner.
PS You want predictions? Okay...
LIB
CON
NDP
BQ
IND
NF
4 LIB
3 CON
PE
3 LIB
1 CON
NS
3 CON
6 LIB
2 NDP
NB
4 CON
5 LIB
1 NDP
PQ
22 LIB
53 BQ
ON
62 LIB
38 CON
6 NDP
MB
3 LIB
7 CON
4 NDP
SK
2 NDP
11 CON
1 LIB
AL
28 CON
BC
3 NDP
31 CON
1 LIB
1 IND
NV
1 LIB
NW
1 LIB
YT
1 LIB
At the end of the night:
Conservatives 131
Liberals 108
Bloc 53
NDP 15
Independent 1
...and her vice-regal eminence gets her moment in the spotlight.
Check out my Mark Steyn column in Post #79. Thanks.
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