If the basic campaign strategy of the liberals is to transfer Justin Trudeau’s politics to a new, offensive host – not too offensive to some, anyway – they can only say they knocked it down the park.
There was nothing noticeable change in headquarters about their communication strategies: Trump, abortion, gun control, all the biggest hits were on the seat. Carney’s nonsense is somewhat different from Justin Trudeau, but nonsense is just and quick: people he met in the past, about the name of the Montreal school, where 14 women were massacred in December 1989, tells the story of his involvement with Brookfield, when it moved its headquarters to the United States.
On Sunday, the CBC reported that the free agents distributed the “stop steal” button, a debate over some Trump supporters that their men did not actually lose the 2020 presidential election to Joe Biden in Canada’s strong and free online conference, which is better to blame the Conservative Party for the terrifying Trump. CBC journalist Kate McKenna eavesdropping on liberal staff bragging in local watering holes. It’s almost as old-fashioned greasy as Ottawa politics.
Of course, there are some significant changes. The carbon tax is gone. But even there, there is consistency: like the liberals, the second Carney abandoned taxes, members of Congress and candidates, who defended this tax, if not the case where the survival of the earth is crucial,
moment
Especially boasting about all the money they saved us. Abacus data survey shows that liberals are actually getting Credit Do this among voters.
Still, the promise of liberals to the old ways is indeed significant given the Trudeau gang’s loss of party forgetting. Of course I never thought I would see the stupidest movement of recent years again: a lakeside park in Sudbury, Ontario. On September 26, 2019, I witnessed Justin Trudeau arrive at the canoe press conference and announced that “a travel bursary of up to $2,000 (to help Canadians) experience all over the country from Killarney, Banfer, Banfer Gros Morne and Cape Breton Highlands, while getting these opportunities through rail.”
Via Rail is in Newfoundland, Cape Breton is not in Newfoundland or heading to Banff. It will take you from Toronto to Sudbury, which is about 90 minutes’ drive from Killarney Provincial Park…twice a week, if you’re lucky, it takes seven hours, and from Midtown Toronto to Killarney to Killarney (and more to Sudbury), so who would do that?
This is delusional and weird at every level, showing a complete misunderstanding of the real people’s lives, or how Canada actually works, or both. Aside from the railroad delusion, the basic element of my time was: imagine a family struggling to make ends meet, and you have $2,000 to help them…but (they (they) have to spend the campground in a government-run camp.
Needless to say, camping bursaries never come. But now I’m back, kind of like Carney. His Canadian Strong Pass announced during Carney’s ongoing “election pause” will “free access to Canada’s incredible National Gallery and Museums for children and teenagers under the age of 18 and free seats on the railroad when traveling with parents,” summer 2025.
The campaign has promised free access to national parks and historic sites this summer – “free”, meaning we naturally pay for it rather than just those using the facilities. Although no “camping grants” are offered this time, Carney promises to “reduce camping prices in all Canadian National Parks from June to August”.
Introduction, Canada’s strong pass. pic.twitter.com/exm855oxnl0
— Mark Carney (@markJcarney) April 12, 2025
Now, I can lag behind museums and national historic sites. (The Carney team says this is willing to help provinces offer the same spots for their own attractions.) Canadians know nothing about their history, and I don’t think we’re promoting some of these sites enough: I yelled at the National Historic Site of Alexander Graham Bell a few years ago, and I’ve never heard of it a few years ago and blown away completely. Camping in a national park, I’m not sure. one
a lot of
Anyway, these campgrounds have been booked this summer, especially since they are fairly reasonable from the start.
But it does put my mind in a dilemma, suggesting a fundamental lack of understanding of what this country really means and how it works. It’s like a Canadian vision based on stamps or passport illustrations. On the best days, passing the railroad is a relatively practical and effective way to get between Windsor and Toronto, Toronto and Ottawa, or Ottawa and Montreal, or Montreal and Quebec City. Beyond that, this is useless for someone who actually needs to be on time or who needs to go somewhere completely (including vacation or camping trips) – unless you have a few days to kill, and then most people are different from politicians.
Indeed, the author of the Canadian Powerhouse is almost implicitly embedded in Via’s irrelevant reality when insisting on traveling with his parents to enjoy free fares. Why do they do this? Seventeen-year-old child goes to college. Children aged 16 and 17 are fully capable of traveling together – heading to cities, national parks, and going to campgrounds.
Alas, they don’t vote.
State Post
cselley@postmedia.com