It looks like our current Conservative Canadian government is worried Obama will win!

KateCanada

Inactive
Your election, so our PM is calling for an election ahead of yours!!!

Canada headed for polls

2 hours ago

OTTAWA (AFP) — Canada's prime minister will call snap elections soon, opposition leader Stephane Dion said Monday after the two failed to agree on a common agenda for the upcoming session of Parliament.

"Yes, there will be an election," the Liberal leader said after meeting with Prime Minister Stephen Harper at his official residence, citing a "gulf of differences between us and this very Conservative government."

Harper's chief spokesman Kory Teneycke said the prime minister could decide in as little as two or three days whether or not to hold a general election, citing irreconcilable differences between the parties.

"He'll have to deliberate over the next few days and make a decision in due course," Teneycke said.

Harper, who has headed a minority government since January 2006, has insisted in recent weeks that elections were inevitable to break a deadlock with opposition parties on several issues.

However, he faces criticism that doing so would break his own timetable for the next elections in October 2009 -- a date he set into law, but which allows for leeway in the case of minority governments.

In a bid to find common ground and avoid going to the polls, Harper met since Friday with the leaders of Canada's three opposition parties, including Dion, who leads the biggest faction.

But none of the opposition leaders in speaking with reporters gave any indications they would support the government going forward. To survive, the government needs the support of at least one of the three opposition parties.

Harper asked Dion "if he would give him assurances that the government would be allowed to continue until fall 2009. He provided no such assurance," Teneycke said.

"If they wanted to avoid an election, they (opposition leaders) would identify areas of common ground where the government could move forward, and without exception none of them have been able to identify areas of common ground," he said.

"We are in uncertain economic times and there are a number of things the government would like to move forward on and I think it's fair to say that the atmosphere in Parliament has become more partisan and it's more difficult to get things accomplished.

"We're simply looking for broad areas of agreement where the government could proceed with and there were no areas identified by the opposition leaders where we had any common ground."

For their part, opposition leaders said Harper was determined to set off elections, regardless of the outcome of talks with them, and accused him of concocting a "fake" deadlock for political gain.

They pointed to some 40 bills passed by the government during its nearly two years in office.

"In the past it was proved that depending on the issues, a party or another could be in agreement with the government," and prop up Harper's minority government, Bloc Quebecois leader Gilles Duceppe said Friday.

Now, "instead of making efforts to try of finding solutions in the best interests of the population, he wants an election in the best interests of his party," he opined.

"I think his plan is made. He wants an election, period."

A poll Friday put the Conservatives at 33 percent support, down from earlier polls and in a statistical dead heat with the Liberals at 35 percent.

Pundits suggested Harper needs a new mandate from voters before the economy sours and along with it any goodwill for his party.

It was also suggested Harper fears a victory in upcoming US elections by Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama, who has campaigned for change, could favor Harper's liberal rival here.

Harper's Conservatives have often been criticized at home for being too closely allied with George W. Bush's Republicans.

To wrap up elections before the US vote in November and before Canada hosts a summit of French-speaking countries in mid-October, a writ would have to be dropped by September 7.

Comments by officials point to an election being fought on the economy, taxes, leadership, arts and culture funding, food safety, and the environment.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hV-s1_C0MD61Z4Ri3GYjsHGSMHlA
 

Grantbo

Inactive
"...criticized at home for being too closely allied with George W. Bush's Republicans."

It's Bush's fault.
 

KateCanada

Inactive
Just wanted to bring this to your attention that our current government in power here seems to be very paranoid that Obama will win that they have called an election in our country. That's all.
 
Thanks

Kate. Interesting news. And yeah Grantbo, it is Bush's fault. He has alienated much of the world against the US (well ok, ALL the neo-cons).
 

Hokey

Veteran Member
Yes, looks like we're heading for an early election here and I think a large motivation IS the US elections coming up. I think its desperation, and Harper will be criticized for calling early, but I also think its smart if you look at the polls. I don't think most middle class canucks really have anything to complain about the conservative government here. I'm certainly quite happy the way government has handled the country. The polls are looking good for the conservative party at the moment but it still looks like a minority government in the making if there's an election.

What I can't understand (and I thought Canadians were more astute than this, but lefties are lefties!) is this statement of fact that Harper is Bush's right hand man and just another neo con taking his marching orders from the neocon legion of evil ones. Bush is not liked outside of your country - and only half of you tolerate him! Oh well.
 

Malleus

Inactive
It was also suggested Harper fears a victory in upcoming US elections by Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama, who has campaigned for change, could favor Harper's liberal rival here.

Why should Obama have anything to do with the "price of tea in Canada"? Don't Canadians think for themselves or are they just truly lap dogs for the U.S.?

Oh, by the way, Obama has surged about 7-8 points head of McCain in the latest polls (taken to weigh in the "Palin factor"). Bush may go ahead and attack Iran then as well (cf. Bill Kristol's comments of Fox News Sunday).

I'm telling you folks that Palin was chosen for McCain to deliberately throw the election. TPTB want Obama in there. She's turning this campaign into a soap-opera-esque joke -- very much reminiscent of the Harriet Myers fiasco.
 
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