保守党党领说上台后会保持大麻合法化,支持特赦持有大麻犯罪者

谷歌大侠

知名会员
注册
2014-11-17
消息
1,073
荣誉分数
383
声望点数
193
Scheer says a Conservative government would keep pot legal, support pot pardons
https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/sch...-keep-pot-legal-support-pot-pardons-1.4485836

OTTAWA - Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, who previously opposed the proposed legalization of cannabis, now says a Conservative government would not only keep cannabis legal but would also stay the course with its support of pardons for Canadians convicted of pot possession.
 
大妈合法化是单行线,一旦开始,没有回头路。除非世界大战。

这个必须明白。政府根本承担不起回头的成本。除非战时。
 
支持合法,就是买不起
 
看来保守党的华裔支持者的钱是扔进水里了,大麻事件不可挡,还有什么办法可以反对大麻?
华裔哪里得罪你了?你就算是加拿大人,你就不是华裔?你去把你的皮肤洗白眼珠子抠了换蓝色的?
 
话说大麻合法化这么重大的事情不应该搞个公投吗?如果搞公投这事儿肯定成不了。这事儿对整个社会今后的影响可能会越来越厉害。极有可能就会变成那种“大错误”
 
土豆竞选新策略: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/pol...tion-looms-liberals-tout-a-tough-guy-trudeau/

The Liberal Party’s new French-language ads feature the Prime Minister looking straight into a camera saying “We stand up – for you” – in NAFTA negotiations, in expanding child benefits, in requiring all provinces to put a price on pollution, or against Conservative austerity, and so on.

The point isn’t so much the examples as the image. It’s about Mr. Trudeau having a backbone.

They’re out to frame Mr. Trudeau as the strong leader, and Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer as the weak one.

That’s particularly true when it comes to dealing with the provinces, especially with Conservative premiers such as Ontario’s Doug Ford and Alberta’s Jason Kenney. The sunny ways of federal-provincial relations in 2015 are giving way to a tougher approach to premiers reminiscent of his father, Pierre.


Two weeks ago, when five right-of-centre provincial premiers wrote to complain that Liberal environmental bills would harm the resource industry, Mr. Trudeau fired back that conservative premiers were threatening national unity “if they don’t get their way.” He suggested Mr. Scheer should condemn that, too.

Mr. Trudeau has often been portrayed as a leader with softer empathetic qualities even if some who worked with him described him as insistent on getting his way. Voters see him as sure of himself.

“Strong leadership, confident – those kinds of words [are used] to describe Trudeau. And that’s important,” said pollster Greg Lyle, owner of Innovative Research Group. Even in the weeks after the SNC-Lavalin affair, when his brand took a beating, polls showed he still had the edge on those measures, Mr. Lyle said.

That may also be why Engage Canada, a left-of-centre third-party political-marketing organization, has attacked the Conservatives with ads portraying Mr. Scheer as “weak.” It highlights a comparison that favours Mr. Trudeau.

But there’s another thing at play. Many voters – presumably left-of-centre voters – want the federal government to counter Mr. Ford and Mr. Kenney. Mr. Lyle’s firm asked that question in an internet poll in April, and a solid majority said they want Ottawa to counter their “negative influence.”

No wonder Mr. Trudeau is portraying himself as a leader who stands up. And stands up to premiers. It also explains why Engage Canada’s TV commercials sought to combine the idea that Mr. Scheer is weak with the notion that Mr. Ford is scary; it’s a way of suggesting that Mr. Scheer would let Mr. Ford have his way with the country.

Mr. Lyle noted that the Liberals aren’t targeting seats in Alberta when they talk about Mr. Kenney, and making Mr. Ford into a bogeyman isn’t just a tactic for Ontario. It’s an effort to convince progressive voters that Mr. Trudeau would stand up to perceived trends they don’t like, and Mr. Lyle said that if they can hint that that also includes U.S. President Donald Trump, that would help, too. Those new French-language ads, remember, include Mr. Trudeau boasting about “standing up” in NAFTA talks.
 
后退
顶部
首页 论坛
消息
我的