好,从你投保守党,和你说点。啥是大局?保守党未来几年纲领你知道么?他们告诉你了么?要实现什么?怎么实现?你清楚么?没有人,移民,怎么保障退休金?谁创造财富,保守党告诉你具体方案了么
管他有啥纲领呢,好钢也罢,屁钢也行,上不了台都是废纸,浪费碳排放,哈哈哈。
好,从你投保守党,和你说点。啥是大局?保守党未来几年纲领你知道么?他们告诉你了么?要实现什么?怎么实现?你清楚么?没有人,移民,怎么保障退休金?谁创造财富,保守党告诉你具体方案了么
在告诉你一遍,pp和保守党的支持率没有下降,席位也比上次的多,是ndp和愧瓜的选民转投自由党,你不蠢,你相信那些左比会去投pp吗?归根结底还是拿大韭菜蠢,左逼选民超过了一半,想赢真得靠运气。嘿嘿嘿,似乎你和屁屁一路货,朽木不可雕。
选举就是为了赢,上台了才有话语权。 至于美加贸易战怎么打,你坐上台子才有动手的资格。
选举就是韭菜投票,既然屁屁和你都觉得是韭菜蠢而不是自己蠢,那就赶紧滚蛋,不然保守党永远上不了台面。
呵呵,说的好像你很懂一样。那来说说换谁呢?上次保守党魁选举,你又中意哪个?成王败寇不假,但拿大韭菜很愚蠢是事实。pp在年轻选民的支持率大幅领先卡泥,这是从没有过的,这个国家的老韭菜确实是有大问题的。掩耳遮目没有用,上次大选被自由党翻盘是铁一样是事实。 选举就是一人一票,没本事忽悠韭菜就说韭菜蠢,根本就是拉不出屎觉得地球没有吸引力。
保守党可能需要大换血。
下次大选,博励治将在哪个选区竞选?
这也是个问题吗?我觉得放在泥拼就很不错。
估计去多伦多于仁村,挑战麦克.马!![]()
Conservative national council confirms Kurek as candidate in Battle River-Crowfoot, Poilievre to run in a different riding in next election
The Conservative Party’s national council chose to pass a motion formally declaring that the riding's former MP would return even though Damien Kurek had publicly stated that he planned to run in his home riding in the next federal election.www.hilltimes.com
Conservative national council confirms Kurek as candidate in Battle River-Crowfoot, Poilievre to run in a different riding in next election
The Conservative Party’s national council chose to pass a motion formally declaring that the riding's former MP would return even though Damien Kurek had publicly stated that he planned to run in his home riding in the next federal election.
BY ABBAS RANA | January 18, 2026
In an unusual move, the Conservative Party’s powerful national council passed a motion at its December quarterly meeting confirming former MP Damien Kurek will be the party’s next candidate in Battle River-Crowfoot, Alta.
Kurek resigned his seat last June to allow Pierre Poilievre to run in the safest riding after the Conservative leader lost his seat Carleton, Ont., in last April’s general election. The party, however, has declined to say where Poilievre would run in the next election.
The unanimously adopted motion was moved by Alberta national councillors Amber Ruddy and Heather Feldbusch. The motion also waived the nomination process for Kurek, effectively appointing him as the party’s candidate for the next election, which is also an unusual move from the party’s highest-elected governing body.
“It was moved by A. Ruddy and seconded by H. Feldbusch that Council waive the nomination process and welcome former MP Damien Kurek as the Party’s future candidate in Battle River-Crowfoot in the next general election,” reads the motion passed on Dec. 5, 2025, and obtained by The Hill Times.
If the national council had not exempted Kurek from the nomination process, anyone could have challenged him for the party’s nomination in the safe rural Alberta riding. Poilievre won the byelection there last August with 80.9 per cent of the vote, and with 41,308 votes. Kurek won the same riding in the federal election in April with 82.8 per cent of the vote, and with 53,684 votes.
Alberta is the bedrock of the Conservative Party base, and winning a nomination race almost guarantees a seat in the House. Because of this, when the party allows an open nomination in any Alberta riding, it often attracts a lot of interested candidates and the process usually becomes divisive.
Kurek represented the Battle River-Crowfoot riding from 2019 until June 2025. He won both elections by a whopping margin of 62 per cent and 80 per cent of the votes.
He resigned from the House of Commons after Poilievre’s surprising loss of his long-held Ottawa-area riding to Liberal MP Bruce Fanjoy (Carleton, Ont.) on April 28, 2025. Fanjoy won the riding with 50.9 per cent of the vote, and with 43,846 votes. Poilievre came in second with 45.7 per cent of the vote, and with 39,333 votes. When Kurek voluntarily stepped down to allow Poilievre to run in a byelection, he posted on social media that he would run again in that Alberta riding in the next election.
In a statement last May, Kurek said that it would be hard for him to leave the role in the region that he loves, but “the mandate given to me is one that clearly states that change is needed. Offering this seat to our party leader is an important step in that process. I started my political career talking about the need for government to be held to account and to ensure that rural Canada wasn’t forgotten about, this is a key way to ensure that happens.”
“The people of Battle River-Crowfoot will be represented well by Pierre for the remainder of this parliamentary session, and I will keep working with our incredible local team to do everything I can to remain the strong voice for you as I support him in the process, and then run again here in Battle River-Crowfoot in the next general election,” he added.
Party insiders say they found it curious that the national council passed a motion cementing Kurek’s status as the riding’s next candidate despite it being well-known that Kurek planned to run again in the area.
Since stepping down as an MP, Kurek has been working for Upstream Strategy Group.
Sarah Fischer, the Conservative Party’s director of communications, did not say why the national council passed this motion, or in which riding Poilievre would run in the next election campaign.
“Both Damien Kurek and Pierre Poilievre have publicly confirmed that Mr. Kurek will seek the CPC nomination for Battle River-Crowfoot in the next general election,” wrote Fischer in an email to The Hill Times.
In a text message to The Hill Times last week, Kurek echoed the same view: “Since the day my wife Danielle and I offered to resign my seat so the leader could run in a byelection, both Pierre and I have publicly shared with the folks here that I will seek the nomination in Battle River-Crowfoot. I look forward to running with Pierre Poilievre as our leader, as he is the prime minister Canada needs.”
Nomination rule changes aim to promote transparency
In addition to the successful motion about Kurek’s return, the party also approved nomination rules for ridings currently represented by 142 Conservative MPs, and the ridings that party candidates failed to win in the last election.
According to the new nomination rules, the party has authorized the leader to officially appoint candidates in only eight ridings. This exception was created after numerous complaints during the last election cycle that the party’s appointments in dozens of ridings across the country undermined grassroots party members’ morale, which was cited as a key factor contributing to the party’s defeat.
With the leader having the authority to appoint candidates in only eight ridings, it’s hoped that the nomination process in other ridings will be transparent and open.
In all Conservative-held ridings, according to new rules, incumbent MPs will be required to raise $15,000 annually until the next election, ensure outreach to at least one per cent of voters, ensure their riding’s electoral district association remains in good standing with Elections Canada, and donate the annual maximum of $1,750 to the party or local riding association, either personally or by their spouse.
Nomination rules, however, will change after the next election. If the next election results in a majority government, all ridings would be open to a nomination contest, while under a minority government, a nomination contest in a Conservative-held riding would be triggered if 51 per cent of riding association members call for one.
Meanwhile, at the party’s upcoming Jan. 29-31 biennial policy convention in Calgary, Poilievre will face a mandatory leadership review after failing to form government last spring. Since 2015, the party has changed leaders three times, though Poilievre is widely expected to receive more than 80 per cent support from members. The leader has been travelling across the country to attend fundraisers, to meet rank-and-file members, and Conservative sources say he remains very popular with the base, despite failing to form government after the last election. They said that events often draw more than twice the expected crowd.
However, concerns remain about delegate turnout at the convention, which coincides with the Ontario Progressive Conservative convention. The fee to attend the Ontario convention is one-third the cost of the federal party fee. Because of this, fewer Ontario delegates may choose to attend the Calgary convention.
The delegate fee to attend the Conservative Party convention in Calgary is $999. Youth delegates will have to pay $450. This means if someone is travelling from Ontario or Quebec to Calgary, it could cost them $2,000-$3,000 in travel, lodging and the convention fee. The riding associations, however, can subsidize most of these costs. The fee to attend the Ontario convention is $299 and the youth delegate fee is $99.
For the federal Conservative Party convention, each of the 343 ridings across the country can send up to 12 delegates. Of these, two are the incumbent MP or candidate of record, and the EDA president. The remaining 10 have to be chosen through a secret ballot election. All 20 elected national councillors, former party leaders, and members of the national policy and constitution committees are also eligible to attend. If an elected delegate cannot attend the convention, or if an electoral district association cannot fill all delegate positions, additional party members may be appointed to fill the vacancies.
Poilievre and his team have been preparing for the leadership review since the April 28 election loss. During the delegate election meetings, the party’s head office has kept a close eye on who’s being elected to represent their EDA at the upcoming convention. Some riding association presidents have told The Hill Times that they have been receiving calls from party staff to gauge how delegates are planning to vote at the convention, and to understand the important issues in their respective ridings.
The Conservative Party’s constitution does not specify a number that a leader has to get in a leadership review.
Following a leadership review vote, party leaders typically decide themselves if they received adequate support to remain in their position, or step down and trigger a leadership election.
In 2022, then-United Conservative Party leader Jason Kenney resigned from his role as premier of Alberta after receiving just 51.4-per-cent support in his leadership review. In 2016, then-federal NDP leader Tom Mulcair stepped down after receiving only 48 per cent. In 1983, then-Progressive Conservative leader Joe Clark triggered a leadership election after securing 66.9 per cent of the vote. And last September, then-Ontario Liberal leader Bonnie Crombie announced she would resign after receiving 57 per cent support in her leadership review even though the provincial Liberals’ constitution required Crombie to receive 50-per-cent support. Crombie officially stepped down on Jan. 14.
估计去多伦多于仁村,挑战麦克.马!
谁来主持大换血呢?卡尼?还是PP?掩耳遮目没有用,上次大选被自由党翻盘是铁一样是事实。 选举就是一人一票,没本事忽悠韭菜就说韭菜蠢,根本就是拉不出屎觉得地球没有吸引力。
保守党可能需要大换血。
pp已经绑架了现在的保守党,需要外部力量介入卡尼管不了保守党事物
估计去多伦多于仁村,挑战麦克.马!