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|    Message 89,419 of 90,757    |
|    §eraphim@hvn.com to M.I.Wakefield    |
|    Re: The Budget's winners and losers . .     |
|    23 Apr 15 10:25:42    |
   
   XPost: can.politics, tor.general   
      
   On 22/04/2015 7:29 PM, M.I.Wakefield wrote:   
   > Losers: Mulcair & Trudeau - not a lot to run against, and since there aren't   
   > piles of cash left lying around, it will be difficult to explain how they'll   
   > fund their big ticket promises without taxes or deficits.   
      
      
   I'd be betting that Mulcair would find billions just by pulling our military   
   the hell out of Iraq, Syria and the Ukraine.   
   Trudeau no one is sure about {>_<}   
      
      
   > Bonus for Trudeau: federal Liberal numbers are already taking a hit in   
   Ontario   
   > because of Wynne's negatives, and that's before an electricity price hike   
   > that's 5 times inflation, upcoming public sector labour unrest, and another   
   > massively unbalanced provincial budget to be delivered tomorrow. Could Wynne   
   do   
   > for Trudeau in 2015 what Bob Rae did for Audrey McLaughlin in 1993?   
      
   Knews for you, stupid . . . the "Liberal numbers" are taking a hit in some   
   parts of the country -   
   but certainly *not* in Ontario.   
    ______________________   
      
   April 13, 2015 - Globe and Mail   
      
   Federal Liberals poised to make great election gains in Ontario, poll finds   
      
   Survey finds Liberals with 39-per-cent support among decided voters; still not   
   enough to win government   
      
   One of the most ambitious public polls taken in Ontario in the runup to the   
   federal election suggests Justin Trudeau's Liberals are ascendant in the   
   country's largest province – but not yet enough to give them a good shot at   
   winning government.   
      
   Surveying 3,000 Ontarians through a combination of land lines and cellphones,   
   from late February through the end of March, Innovative Research Group found   
   the Liberals with 39-per-cent support among decided voters. The Conservatives   
   were at 37 per cent, the NDP at 17 per cent and the Green Party at 7 per cent.   
      
   Those numbers would represent a major turnaround for the Liberals after   
   bottoming out in the 2011 election, when they received 25 per cent of Ontario's   
   popular vote and won just 11 of its 106 seats. By the estimate of Greg Lyle,   
   Innovative Research's managing director, the Liberals would be on pace for   
   between 49 and 62 of the 121 Ontario seats on the new federal map that will be   
   used for this year's vote.   
      
    __________________________________   
      
   Try another lie?   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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