There is a strong case for the Conservative Party of Canada to add Kevin Vuong to the caucus and grant him the opportunity to run for a Conservative nomination in a riding where he can be competitive.
So while I believe Justin Trudeau could battle back much of his support base and survive the 2025 federal election, at this point, I don’t think Trudeau has the character to win. His ego is far too big to admit to and fix his past mistakes and mend fences with Canadians he has dragged for the last 8 years.
Canadians aren’t moving away from the Liberals because they forgot all the “great” stuff the Liberals have been doing and how “scary” the more socially conservative Conservatives are; they are moving away because their lives have gotten noticeably worse in spite of everything the Liberals are doing.
Last week, Statistics Canada released the numbers from the 2022 Unified Crime Reporting survey and found that crime has risen from 2020 to 2022 by 5.3 percent, with violent crime specifically going up 9 percent nationwide.
Despite Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre leading the party to a 9-10% lead over Justin Trudeau’s Liberals, the Toronto Sun’s editorial board is here to beg Poilievre to stop being so interesting and effective.
As a sign of how unpopular Trudeau and the Liberals have become, especially over the last week that rumours of a major cabinet shuffle were spreading through the media, the Conservative Party under Pierre Poilievre has taken a 10-point lead over the Liberals.
Trudeau is doing some governmental blood-letting now, so he doesn’t have poor-performing ministers weighing him down in 2025, assuming the Liberals still have any hope of winning in 2025.
The Conservatives need to take a long hard look at the parental rights issue ahead of the 2025 election. Avoiding the risk of standing up for parental rights will signal to many voters that a Conservative government isn’t willing to fully reverse the rot of Justin Trudeau’s radical agenda.
Simply put, passion wins elections, not focus group-tested corporate messaging. Will the Red Tories strategists learn this? Probably not, but they wouldn’t continue to be Red Tories if they learned from their mistakes.
The media’s sudden fascination with scrutinizing Poilievre’s personal appeal to voters has little to do with believing it’s actually worth analyzing. The “neutral” commentators in the legacy media just don’t want to have to focus on the real popularity issue, that being the failing agenda and public trust in Trudeau and the Liberal government.
[…] National Telegraph […]