In perhaps his most disappointing policy announcement thus far, Carney has indicated he will scrap the Liberal’s plan to increase the capital gains inclusion rate. This mildly progressive measure was directed squarely at the passive incomes of the wealthiest sliver of Canadians and would have served as a healthy revenue generator. Instead, it’s destined for the scrapheap.
The move towards a two-party system is inevitable under first-past-the-post voting systems. This is why I considered Trudeau’s betrayal of electoral reform to be a generational stab-in-the-back and swore I would never vote Liberal again.
And first-past-the-post is also why I am breaking that vow and voting Liberal in the upcoming election. My riding happens to be a “tossup” between Conservative and Liberal, and in this particular election I can’t afford to “vote my conscience”. The existence of Canada is at stake. And so I hold my nose really hard and recognize the reality of the facts before me.
Some people may be fortunate enough to be in ridings where a vote for NDP wouldn’t literally help put Poilievre in power, but I am not. I must do what I can to actually help. I recommend everyone check your riding’s polling numbers to confirm whether you have that luxury.
I don’t think that’s actually true. I detest FPTP but Westminster systems all around have all sorts of smaller parties that work because they have concentrated power bases. The NDP, the Bloc, etc have been electing MPs for decades. If what you’re saying is true, they would have been disappeared by now.
It’s good that we have that but we can still yearn for more.