Trudeau resigning is 'fairly' normal for your political process? It's **nothing** like Nixon resigning, right?
Fairly. Doesn’t happen often. No Nixon involved.
Usually happens when a Prime Minister looks at the polls and realizes he (or she) is going to lose.
And why not just wait until that point? Minimize lame duck period/not belabor the issue?
edit: The point of actually getting voted out that is.
-- Edited by Cathy on Tuesday 7th of January 2025 08:56:18 PM
Gives his party a chance to rebuild before election.
Merci, for the crash course in 1.03% of the Canadian political process.
In Canada we don't vote for a Prime Minister, we vote for someone in our riding who if they win their riding become a member of parliament. Each riding will generally have one representative from one of each political party. The party leader who wins the most seats, becomes PM. Sometime with a majority and sometimes with a minority, so need colaboration with another party to govern.
Quebec has their own party who only run in that province, but also have the Liberals, Conservatives, Green, NDP parties.
Omg 😱- how can you keep up with all that?
Our politics are really inconsequential compared to the utter chaos your buffoon is about the release on the world.
Stop it❗️ i’m hoping that the idiot doesnt do that
Trudeau resigning is 'fairly' normal for your political process? It's **nothing** like Nixon resigning, right?
Fairly. Doesn’t happen often. No Nixon involved.
Usually happens when a Prime Minister looks at the polls and realizes he (or she) is going to lose.
And why not just wait until that point? Minimize lame duck period/not belabor the issue?
edit: The point of actually getting voted out that is.
-- Edited by Cathy on Tuesday 7th of January 2025 08:56:18 PM
Gives his party a chance to rebuild before election.
Merci, for the crash course in 1.03% of the Canadian political process.
In Canada we don't vote for a Prime Minister, we vote for someone in our riding who if they win their riding become a member of parliament. Each riding will generally have one representative from one of each political party. The party leader who wins the most seats, becomes PM. Sometime with a majority and sometimes with a minority, so need colaboration with another party to govern.
Quebec has their own party who only run in that province, but also have the Liberals, Conservatives, Green, NDP parties.
I realize I'm in the Crystal Cathedral tossing boulders but…that seems like a crazy process.
Trudeau resigning is 'fairly' normal for your political process? It's **nothing** like Nixon resigning, right?
Fairly. Doesn’t happen often. No Nixon involved.
Usually happens when a Prime Minister looks at the polls and realizes he (or she) is going to lose.
And why not just wait until that point? Minimize lame duck period/not belabor the issue?
edit: The point of actually getting voted out that is.
-- Edited by Cathy on Tuesday 7th of January 2025 08:56:18 PM
Gives his party a chance to rebuild before election.
Merci, for the crash course in 1.03% of the Canadian political process.
In Canada we don't vote for a Prime Minister, we vote for someone in our riding who if they win their riding become a member of parliament. Each riding will generally have one representative from one of each political party. The party leader who wins the most seats, becomes PM. Sometime with a majority and sometimes with a minority, so need colaboration with another party to govern.
Quebec has their own party who only run in that province, but also have the Liberals, Conservatives, Green, NDP parties.
Omg 😱- how can you keep up with all that?
Once an election is called, we go to the polls about 5 weeks later.
Trudeau resigning is 'fairly' normal for your political process? It's **nothing** like Nixon resigning, right?
Fairly. Doesn’t happen often. No Nixon involved.
Usually happens when a Prime Minister looks at the polls and realizes he (or she) is going to lose.
And why not just wait until that point? Minimize lame duck period/not belabor the issue?
edit: The point of actually getting voted out that is.
-- Edited by Cathy on Tuesday 7th of January 2025 08:56:18 PM
Gives his party a chance to rebuild before election.
Merci, for the crash course in 1.03% of the Canadian political process.
In Canada we don't vote for a Prime Minister, we vote for someone in our riding who if they win their riding become a member of parliament. Each riding will generally have one representative from one of each political party. The party leader who wins the most seats, becomes PM. Sometime with a majority and sometimes with a minority, so need colaboration with another party to govern.
Quebec has their own party who only run in that province, but also have the Liberals, Conservatives, Green, NDP parties.
Omg 😱- how can you keep up with all that?
Our politics are really inconsequential compared to the utter chaos your buffoon is about the release on the world.
Stop it❗️ i’m hoping that the idiot doesnt do that
Trudeau resigning is 'fairly' normal for your political process? It's **nothing** like Nixon resigning, right?
Fairly. Doesn’t happen often. No Nixon involved.
Usually happens when a Prime Minister looks at the polls and realizes he (or she) is going to lose.
And why not just wait until that point? Minimize lame duck period/not belabor the issue?
edit: The point of actually getting voted out that is.
-- Edited by Cathy on Tuesday 7th of January 2025 08:56:18 PM
Gives his party a chance to rebuild before election.
Merci, for the crash course in 1.03% of the Canadian political process.
In Canada we don't vote for a Prime Minister, we vote for someone in our riding who if they win their riding become a member of parliament. Each riding will generally have one representative from one of each political party. The party leader who wins the most seats, becomes PM. Sometime with a majority and sometimes with a minority, so need colaboration with another party to govern.
Quebec has their own party who only run in that province, but also have the Liberals, Conservatives, Green, NDP parties.
Omg 😱- how can you keep up with all that?
Once an election is called, we go to the polls about 5 weeks later.