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Inscrit le: 27 Sep 2011 Messages: 7915 Localisation: England
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Posté le: Mer Sep 18, 2013 7:53 am Sujet du message: Coyne: From now on the game gets serious |
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{Coyne: From now on the game gets serious}
Nobody pays any attention to politics in the summer. Nothing that happened in the last two months will matter at the next federal election, two years hence, nor are the parties' present standings in the polls precursors of anything.Yes, indeed. Unless, of course,[url=http://www.longchamp-handbags-outlet.net]longchamp le pliage[/url], people have been paying attention, enough to form lasting impressions of the parties and their leaders that will shape how they vote on election day.It is even possible for both interpretations to hold at the same time. All sorts of events could intervene between now and the next election that would make hash of current trends. But these are inherently unknowable. The best guess at where we're going is where we're at.Where are we, then? About where we were at the beginning of the summer, if you look at the polls, with the Liberals several points in front of the governing Tories, the NDP several points behind. But that does not mean nothing has happened in the meantime.The Liberals continued to draft in the jet stream of their leader, Justin Trudeau, who demonstrated at several points his effortless ability to command the media's attention, as few opposition leaders can. Yes, in part this is mere celebrity fascination - dynastic politics at its shallowest - but in part it is owing to the personal qualities that a life in the public eye seem to have instilled in Trudeau.It is, by now, well-established that Trudeau is unusually given to speaking his mind, in a way that other politicians shrink from - and that often gets him into trouble. Sometimes these look a lot like gaffes: offhand remarks, to which he appears to have given little thought.At other times, they are clearly planned, as in his unequivocal denunciation of the Quebec "values" charter.But what the public seems to be taking away from these repeated episodes is that he is unafraid: unafraid to be candid with them, unafraid to let people see who he is. Polls show him leading his rivals in the "trust" category, an advantage that would seem only to have been strengthened by his late-summer admission that he smoked marijuana as an MP.On a practical level, it puts his personal misconduct (and hypocrisy, having voted for continued criminalization of the same substance) on the public record, well ahead of the election, much as he has been booking other potential electoral liabilities: though this, too,[url=http://www.longchamp-handbags-outlet.net]longchamp sale[/url], will inform people's impressions of him, it will be in something close to proportion, rather than in the hysteria of mid-campaign.But more broadly, it confirms his reputation for candour. Are people going to vote for him for that reason? No - any more than (most) people are likely to vote for him because of his stance on marijuana legalization. Of far greater importance, certainly, will be his positions on meatand-potato issues like the economy. But will people be more inclined to listen to what he has to say then, and to believe his promises, because of the trust he is building now? Quite possibly. What a contrast has been the performance of Tom Mulcair as leader of the NDP. Both face the burden, as opposition leaders, of resolving doubts about themselves and their parties: but where Trudeau is unguarded and transparent, Mulcair has been cautious, often to the point of inertia. _________________ People watching the forthcoming beginning of the German half of the inhabitants of Berlin are no interested in co-optation |
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