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4 mo. ago

  • Carney said the same to Emmanuel Macron during his visit to France at the end of March. He’s referring to Canada’s French and English heritage. That doesn’t necessarily make us “European” but he definitely wants to remind both countries of our historical ties.

  • “ they could let one of the NDP members create the bill and still vote in favour.” I would SO love to see that happen. I’m still pissed that the NDP didn’t use their “supply and confidence” agreement with Trudeau to force electoral reform.

  • I don’t buy into this whole narrative. There’s a 2023 study that shows very little change in men’s political views over the past four generations. It’s women, especially white women, who have swung hard to the left, and Gen Z women are twice as likely to call themselves “liberal” as Boomer women. Young women cited the following reasons:

    “The #MeToo movement was a defining cultural moment for many young women, informing their views about the treatment of women in society. Donald Trump’s election in 2016 was another formative event for many young women, who remained uniquely opposed to him throughout his presidency. Finally, the overturn of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court ruling that established a right to abortion, was a uniquely salient issue for young women, who identified it as their most crucial concern in the months following.”

    The caveat is that this is an American study. But if we extrapolate to Canada, it’s women who are driving the gender gap between the LPC and CPC. Men are just as conservative as they’ve always been. The only difference between now and 1965 is that they’re all shouting about it on social media, whereas back then, they just bitched about it in bars.

  • “We were really disappointed to have to take this decision,” she said from her home in Vaudreuil-Dorion. “But we felt like we couldn’t betray our souls.”

    Canadians really are on the front line of the resistance.

  • Agreed. About 20 years ago in Nova Scotia, nurses were negotiating for a 17% pay increase over 3 years. The province didn’t want to pay, so they passed legislation taking away the nurses’ right to strike.

    They walked out anyway. And got their 17%.

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    U.S. limits Canadian access to border-straddling library