D, on 12 August 2015 - 05:00 AM, said:
I think you actually may have misinterpreted a bit there.
Trudeau has actually promised to do away with FPTP. His promise is to form an all party committee to design the system that follows. His stated preferred choice is called 'preferential vote', which is not a big shock as it would likely favour the liberals. But to his credit he isn't promising that system, jsut that he would do away with FPTP.
And I don't think changing the electoral system does mean changing the constitution. The debate is over whether one party can do it unilaterally and whether they should have a referendum in support. And Harper's point is that multiple provinces have had referendums on new systems (usually a FPTP/PR hybrid), and they have never gotten much support.
He was more like that when it came to the Quebec secession question, and may have had a comment like that wrt the supreme court, I don't recall.
And FWIW the constitution is not sacred, it is just very hard to change. The first Trudeau barely got it done, killed his support in his own province to do it, and still had to give them a massive charter loophole. And the mess that created led to Meech Lake and Charlottetown, and you know how that went. So its not that it shouldn't be changed, but you should be wary of any politician who makes changing it sound like no biggie.
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On C-51 that is fair comment. Trudeau made a disastrous error on C-51 and made it worse with his comments after he supported it.
I actually though he did ok in this debate at minimizing the damage, but its a pretty weak position. He had no balance of power, there was zero good reason for the liberals to support such a bill.
This post has been edited by Nevyn: 12 August 2015 - 01:18 PM