Thoughts on Canadian Politics
Since the ruling party under Justin Trudeau took power, it's hard for me to say "Liberals" because this party has nothing to do with liberalism; instead, they implement the human rights-abusing socialist-communist agenda of the World Economic Forum or UN 2030 plans. Yes, since then, Canada has been going downhill. During the last election, Trudeau received votes from fewer than 20 percent of eligible Canadian voters, yet he managed to hold onto power thanks to the Canadian electoral system and the support of the socialist NDP.
The policies of open borders, suppression of free speech through emergency declarations and censorship laws, drug legalization, genderism, war-mongering and war support, and most notably the increasing efforts to shift child education into state hands (indoctrination from kindergarten, transgender affirmation) - coupled with a record level of debt - have taken Canada so far away from its people that over two-thirds of Canadians want change.
The NDP recognizes this too, but continues to endorse Trudeau's coalition government, which has extended the election time to secure higher pensions for many parliamentarians. Corruption and irresponsible handling of taxpayers' money have become so brazen that even caught culprits are not held accountable.
The Conservative Party (CPC) naturally profits from this development and has good approaches in specific areas like reducing taxes (carbon, food), tackling corruption, deregulating certain sectors.
However, the critical observer will unfortunately find that CPC only offers a lesser evil; they don't provide genuine solutions on the crucial issues such as ending and reversing extreme mass immigration (Canada leads globally on a percentage base in this regard), which has triggered a housing crisis, bankrupted social programs, and doubled crime rates.
Manipulation of children against their parents' wishes, neglect of children's welfare for ideological purposes, supporting foreign wars and international organizations despite severe budget deficits, and one of the world's highest tax ratios - these are just some examples where CPC lacks an authentic alternative. Their leader Pierre Poilievre even voted with half of the conservatives in favor of a censorship law.
The "Bill of Rights" apparently matters only to the CPC when it suits them. Sadly, 40% of Canadians now support CPC because they wish changing parties.
The only party consistently addressing these crucial issues is the Peoples Party (PPC), which split from CPC five years ago. Their recent convention in Montreal demonstrated clear stances and opposition to WEF agendas, but they cannot hide that with just 2-3% supporter backing, even a doubling of votes would make parliamentary entry unlikely.
Sadly, their leadership persists in permanently attacking the CPC, adopting the same level-less style as the ruling coalition. A shame indeed.
Canada will surely leave the wrong leftist path with CPC, but it will be hard to find real solutions.