I wonder if this will be cause for reflection for Wild Rose/Conservative supporters.
Is this move, and the preceding political fates of Stelmach and Redford any kind of reflection on conservative ideology in Canada?
Is this just a case, again, of forthright ideologies being misrepresented (again) by the wrong politicians, or is it deeper than that? Is the current political landscape a reflection of the conservative ideology that has had popular support for decades? You reap what you sow, right?
Does the entrenched, conservative nature of these parties and ideologies breed this sort of behaviour?
For example is it conservative resistance to efforts to pluralise voting results, most famously the SoCred decision to abolish proportional representation in favour of first past the post, or their ideological approach to regulation of natural resources that contributes to this kind of anti-democratic action?
Is conservative ideology not up for reflection when once again, two parties on the conservative side of the fence have put power above representation of their constituents?
There seems to be a plurality of posters in here that would rather not vote than vote for a party that didn't identify as conservative. Are these posters aware of their contribution the lack of representation of alberta voters?
When the time a single party has been in power is measured in decades, at what point do the political ideologies that frame the elected officials become as culpable as the officials themselves?
To put it simply: When people who eschew progress are continually rewarded, should we be surprised when precious little progress has been realized?
Stelmach, Redford, the current wild rose disaster. Are these not symptoms of 'conserving' power? Of an ideology opposed and resistant to change? Or is the facile argument of it being the politicians themselves and not the system they have created and represent going to be used again to pull the wool over peoples eyes?
How long can this charade of 'small government' and 'social conservatism' hold relevance in the face of floor crossing and power mergers in a province without political recourse or popular representation, and how long will voters in the province pretend like it has nothing to do with them?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Flash Walken
Alberta politics:
Where the only tenable political position is to go further to the right.
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