I guess what I would respond to that is that the more Carney can make this a battle between him and Poilievre (as opposed to Liberals vs Conservatives), the more it improves his party's chances of victory. So far that seems to be working, if the polls are anything to go by.
I agree with you about Champagne (and others like Joly), but Trud…
I guess what I would respond to that is that the more Carney can make this a battle between him and Poilievre (as opposed to Liberals vs Conservatives), the more it improves his party's chances of victory. So far that seems to be working, if the polls are anything to go by.
I agree with you about Champagne (and others like Joly), but Trudeau did much to hurt the Liberal brand and Carney himself is the "new and improved" version. If Carney starts bringing in too many members of the old guard, even in Quebec, maybe Poilievre exploits that (and the voters decide that it's just Tide after all, rather than an exciting new product). Thoughts?
I guess what I would respond to that is that the more Carney can make this a battle between him and Poilievre (as opposed to Liberals vs Conservatives), the more it improves his party's chances of victory. So far that seems to be working, if the polls are anything to go by.
I agree with you about Champagne (and others like Joly), but Trudeau did much to hurt the Liberal brand and Carney himself is the "new and improved" version. If Carney starts bringing in too many members of the old guard, even in Quebec, maybe Poilievre exploits that (and the voters decide that it's just Tide after all, rather than an exciting new product). Thoughts?