Friday, June 19, 2020

Canada Is Not Ottawa

Everyone, even those who benefit from the corruption in Ottawa, need to realise that.




Quebec isn't the answer but the Maritimes that have delivered victories to the Liberals time after time are?:
In 2011, the Conservatives capitulated from 143 to 163 seats, surpassing the 155 seats needed for a majority at that time. However, in Quebec, the Conservatives captured just five seats – a 50% decrease in seats held in Quebec in 2008. Instead, thanks to strong support in all other parts of the country, Prime Minister Stephen Harper was granted his most-sought-after majority government. 
In this break-through, the Conservatives won 14 seats in Atlantic Canada. And, if you look closely at the results, it is clear that they were competitive in many more of them. Yet today, the Conservatives hold only four seats in the region – including being shut out completely in PEI and Newfoundland and Labrador, where they collectively won five seats during periods of the Harper government.

This Atlantic Canada:

A rural Nova Scotian municipality may be the first in Canada to institute a four-day work week, after reorganizing its employee operations during the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Thursday, the municipality of the District of Guysborough, located in eastern Nova Scotia, began a nine-month long pilot project. The project will test an arrangement under which the municipality’s 60 employees will work nine hours a day, four days a week, with either Monday or Friday off.
 
Atlantic Canada relies on graft and hand-outs. I say that it should be starved as Alberta might be attempting to do with Quebec.

Bleed the east:

Premier Jason Kenney says Alberta is going ahead with a referendum on equalization payments in 2021, one of 25 recommendations made by the province’s Fair Deal Panel in its report released Wednesday.

Other suggestions include creating a provincial police force and pulling out of the Canada Pension Plan (CPP). The recommendations aim to improve the province’s economic position within Confederation and increase the province’s power over institutions and funding.

Do it, Jason!


No comments: