This is Why I'm Not Voting for Mr. Harper and the Conservative Party of Canada
This is Why I'm Not Voting for Mr. Harper and the Conservative Party of Canada
- Because they're no longer "Progressive" Conservatives. This is the Reform Party disguised as the old PC party. This party is
as regressive as anything we've seen in Canadian politics in my lifetime (since
1958).
- .
Because Mr. Harper unilaterally decided he
didn't like the long-form census and thus, killed it.
- .
Because Mr. Harper likes climate change and
global warming. He thinks it's a joke
because Canada will benefit from a melting Arctic and from a longer growing
season and from warmer winters in Calgary, his home town. And since he thinks it'll advantage Canada
over the rest of the world, he thinks it's a game that Canada will win, in the
short term, and because he doesn't care about the rest of the planet.
- Because Mr. Harper is a control freak and a
bully who doesn't tolerate dissent within his own cabinet, his party, and
within the federal civil service.
- .
Because Mr. Harper favours the wealthy. That's evidenced by tax cuts that favour the
wealthy and the higher income earners in Canada; all, at the expense of the
middle class and the poor.
- .
Because Mr. Harper has overtly taken the side of
Israel over the Palestinians. Because Mr.
Harper thinks Arabs may be terrorists.
- .
Because Mr. Harper will not help Ontario
administer its Ontario Retirement Pension Plan, even though it will not cost the
federal government a penny to do so. And
just because he disagrees with Kathleen Wynne about it, ideologically. So, like a child, he's not going to help her
because he didn't get his way. He didn't
get her to back down. Well, get out of
the way, Mr. Harper. Kathleen is going
show you how it's done, with or without you.
- .
Because Mr. Harper refused to take consultation
from Chief Justice of the land, Beverley McLachlin, in 2013, during the
consultation period on the potential appointment of Quebec justice Marc Nadon
to the Supreme Court. Because Mr. Harper
went on to appoint Nadon, anyway.
Because the Supreme Court itself ruled that Nadon's appointment was
unconstitutional because Nadon was not a sitting judge in Quebec and therefore
ineligible to serve on the Supreme Court and had to suffer the indignity of
being fired from the Supreme Court (or, rather, had to pretend that he had
never been hired in the first place). In
other words, because Harper tried to stack the Court in his favour with judges
that favoured Mr. Harper's ideology and, in the process, tried to hijack the
Constitution.
- .
Because Mr. Harper is making a mockery of
democracy in Canada by using his 2011 majority win to stuff through legislation
in a hurry, without debate, that is clearly against the wishes of the majority
of Canadians, in some cases, via what is called "omnibus" bills,
bills that are hundreds of pages long, that require lots of time for opposition
parties to read and comprehend, and that contain all kinds of rule changes; but
that get precious little time in Parliament and just get rammed through by the
Conservatives.
- . Because Harper's Bill C-51 put into law power
that allows Mr. Harper to eavesdrop on any Canadian he wants, in the name of
fighting terrorism, and to jail any Canadian he wants, in the name of
terrorism, and to arrest any journalist he wants, in the name of
terrorism. It seems to me the one
terrorizing Canadians with laws like this one is Mr. Harper, himself.1
- Because Mr. Harper wants to ban travel by
Canadians to foreign countries that Mr. Harper thinks are terrorist
havens. And because Mr. Harper won't say
which countries those are, or when he will name them. Meanwhile, businessmen, family members,
journalists, anyone with a legitimate reason to travel abroad, all are left
wondering how much further Mr. Harper will restrict and/or violate their human
and constitutional rights under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Canada.
- . Because Mr. Harper has bet this country's future
on the Alberta oil sands and because that bet is going badly, all of a sudden,
and because there is no Plan B. Because
Mr. Harper said himself that, like any good financial adviser worth his salt,
we don't alter course suddenly during times of market volatility and because
Mr. Harper forgot another saying of financial advisers, namely, that one ought not to
put one's eggs in one basket, in this case, oil.
- Because Mr. Harper has shamed Canada on the
world stage, by not living up to his commitments to cut greenhouse gas
emissions like he said he would.
- . Because Mr. Harper refuses to take in Syrian refugees.
- . Because Mr. Harper has, in his nearly ten years
as Prime Minister of Canada, refused to sit down with all ten premiers all but
once.
- Because Mr. Harper is better suited perhaps to a
time long past, and because Canada deserves better than this to lead it and the
world in this 21st Century.
- 7. Because Mr. Harper is using wedge issues like the niqab and women's rights to wear such coverings (or not) during citizenship ceremonies to divide Canadians and rally his supporters so that he can win the October 19 federal election. Shame on you, Mr. Harper!
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