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   mtl.general      Ahh Montreal, home of good strip joints      39,416 messages   

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   Message 38,679 of 39,416   
   " (ಠ_ಠ)Раиса" <" (_ to All   
   Early election for Canada?   
   22 Jun 14 18:13:21   
   
   XPost: can.politics, bc.politics, ont.politics   
   XPost: ab.politics, sk.politics, man.politics   
   From: "@nyet.ca   
      
   Yes!  Yes!  Yes!   Let's get this over with and bury the Conservatives   
   once and for a long, long time.   
   ____________________________________   
   CBC News Posted: Jun 20, 2014   
      
   Conservative nominations raise odds of early 2015 election   
   NDP lags Liberals, Tories in party nominations in advance of next election   
      
      
   The Conservatives have already quietly nominated roughly a third of the   
   party's slate of candidates for the next federal election, a sign that   
   Stephen Harper could be readying to call an election before the fixed   
   date in October, 2015.   
      
   While Canadians are expected to go to the polls on the fixed election   
   date of Oct. 19, 2015, general elections are called at the prime   
   minister's discretion.   
      
   The Conservatives say they have nominated more than 100 of the party's   
   candidates for 2015, while the New Democrats have nominated just three   
   candidates, lagging behind the Liberals, who have nominated 50.   
      
   "That's probably the best signal that the Conservatives, at least   
   internally, have a sense of urgency to try and nominate as many   
   candidates as possible," says pollster and research expert Nik Nanos of   
   Nanos Research.   
      
   "It's probably so that they have the flexibility to call the election as   
   planned or to potentially fight an election at an earlier date.   
      
   "I would expect the New Democrats, in short order, to catch up —   
   especially with the Liberals in order to focus on swing ridings," Nanos   
   said.   
      
   Nanos believes there's "a high likelihood" that the next federal   
   election will be held before the set date.   
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   Nanos, who tracks public opinion weekly, said the numbers show "it's a   
   fairly tight race" between Stephen Harper's Conservatives and Justin   
   Trudeau's Liberals.   
      
   "If they see, for example, that if somehow the brand of Justin Trudeau   
   becomes tarnished, or there's a significant misstep, you might see the   
   Conservatives try to pursue a smash and grab victory," Nanos said.   
      
      
   2015 slate unclear   
      
   The Conservatives, who have not updated their numbers since mid-May,   
   would not say who the 100 or so candidates confirmed are.   
      
   "We are about a third of the way through and will have a list up on our   
   website at some point this summer," said Cory Hann, director of   
   communications for the Conservative Party.   
      
   George Soule, a spokesperson for the New Democrats, told CBC News that   
   three candidates have been nominated to run for the NDP in 2015:   
   Burnaby-Douglas MP Kennedy Stewart in Burnaby South, and newcomers   
   Cheryl Meheden in Lethbridge, and Janis Irwin in Edmonton-Griesbach.   
      
   Trudeau showed off some of his newly nominated Liberal candidates before   
   his party's weekly caucus meeting last week.   
      
   Liberal candidates in 2015 will include some familiar names, such as   
   former Quebec MPs Alexandra Mendes and Pablo Rodriguez, as well as   
   former Ontario MPs Omar Alghabra, Navdeep Bains and Anthony Rota.   
      
   Trudeau said his party is committed to nominating candidates "in the   
   fairest way possible."   
      
   "We have advanced real democratic reform by ending the naming of   
   candidates and by replacing this practice with open nominations," he said.   
      
      
   Open nominations   
      
   While the three parties have pledged to hold open nominations, the   
   Liberals and Conservatives have faced some complaints within party ranks.   
      
   The New Democrats, with 335 candidates left to nominate, argue they are   
   the only party running truly open nominations with their local electoral   
   district associations responsible for recruiting and organizing   
   nomination meetings.   
      
   "Handpicking candidates and pretending to be open is a quick way to get   
   candidates, but a genuinely open and member-driven process takes time,"   
   Soule said.   
      
   Alice Funke, the publisher of punditsguide.ca., a website dedicated to   
   election statistics, has written extensively about the nomination   
   processes of the three major political parties.   
      
   Funke said while the parties are conducting candidate nominations in   
   different ways, open nominations are not devoid of involvement by party   
   leaders.   
      
   "The central party on behalf of all the other riding associations must   
   get involved and must vet candidates ... and that's not necessarily   
   contrary to open nominations."   
      
   Funke argues that while the process varies among parties, all of them   
   exercise some level of control at different stages in the process.   
      
   Debra Eindiguer, chief of staff to Green Party Leader Elizabeth May,   
   said the Greens have yet to confirm any candidates but plan to run a   
   full slate in 2015.   
      
   "The organizers will be encouraging Electoral District Associations to   
   get their candidates nominated this fall ideally, so we are ready for an   
   early election," Eindiguer said.   
   June 30 byelections   
      
   With the Ontario and Quebec byelections behind them, the federal parties   
   will quickly shift gears and focus their attention on confirming a full   
   slate of candidates for 2015.   
      
   On June 30, Canadians in two provinces will go to the polls in four   
   federal byelections: Fort McMurray-Athabasca and Macleod in Alberta, as   
   well as Scarborough-Agincourt and Trinity-Spadina in Ontario.   
      
   Advanced voting starts today and continues through to Monday, June 23.   
      
   The Conservatives, in a bid to win Scarborough-Agincourt, previously   
   held by the Liberals, put out flyers this week claiming "Trudeau wants   
   marijuana in local stores, just like alcohol and cigarettes."   
      
   Trudeau called the attack "misleading and quite frankly disgusting."   
      
   The Liberal leader has said that legalizing, regulating and taxing pot   
   would help keep it out of the hands of children and take a lucrative   
   black market product out of the hands of organized crime.   
      
   Despite a slow start, the New Democrats say they know there's a lot at   
   stake in the next federal election.   
      
   "To keep things in perspective," Anne McGrath, the national director for   
   the New Democrats, said she starts every meeting with an election countdown.   
      
   "Anyone working in Canadian politics right now can tell you we've got   
   more work than time," McGrath said in a letter to supporters.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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