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Monday, 24 May 2010
Want proof? Consider this:
Toronto Star columnist Chantal Hébert said on last week's The National's At Issue show that former prime minister Jean Chrétien and former NDP leader Ed Broadbent are having coalition discussions.
The signs are everywhere – from bloggers to journalists to commentators on television.
The example of the three British parties actually accepting that our Parliamentary conventions not only allow but expect coalitions to enable a government to actually be able to function in the House has been an eye-opener for many Canadians, whose knowledge of the place of coalitions in our governing process was unfortunately skewed by Harper's deliberate campaign of misinformation and deceit a short while ago.
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The example of the three British parties actually accepting that our Parliamentary conventions not only allow but expect coalitions to enable a government to actually be able to function in the House has been an eye-opener for many Canadians, whose knowledge of the place of coalitions in our governing process was unfortunately skewed by Harper's deliberate campaign of misinformation and deceit a short while ago.
Labels: Broadbent, Chretien, coalition, framing, Harper, Ignatieff, Jack Layton, Liberal Party, NDP, political reform, Tories, UK politics
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