Movement away from the US and support for Ukraine. Two wins.
Hopefully, this will result.in jobs fairly soon for Canadians.
WislaHD on
The simple matter is that if Europe intends to move ahead with military rearmament, then they do need help doing it because SAAB or Rheinmetal (or whomever) cannot just sextuple their production lines overnight. Either procurement will be scheduled for 2035 or they will need to engage outside partners like Korea, India, or perhaps Canada.
Canada has the industrial capacity (some of which is threatened by a trade war with the southern neighbours), the expertise, and cheap and easy access to raw materials. It seems like a no-brainer for all parties to get directly involved and bring some of these large European contracts to Canadian production lines, while building the domestic military industrial base at the same time.
Secret-Bed2549 on
I’m trying to imagine what Poilievre would have achieved in his eight months, had he won the election. There’s much to criticize Carney for, but he’s delivering international agreements that are our best hope in mitigating US economic aggression. As a country with diaspora connections to so much of the world, it’s great to see us broadening our relationships in a way that can maximize our global potential.
SlapThatAce on
Poilievre was and continues to be a complete joke. I don’t even know what he will complain about during their scrum.
Can anyone actually picture Poilievre as a PM?
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Movement away from the US and support for Ukraine. Two wins.
Hopefully, this will result.in jobs fairly soon for Canadians.
The simple matter is that if Europe intends to move ahead with military rearmament, then they do need help doing it because SAAB or Rheinmetal (or whomever) cannot just sextuple their production lines overnight. Either procurement will be scheduled for 2035 or they will need to engage outside partners like Korea, India, or perhaps Canada.
Canada has the industrial capacity (some of which is threatened by a trade war with the southern neighbours), the expertise, and cheap and easy access to raw materials. It seems like a no-brainer for all parties to get directly involved and bring some of these large European contracts to Canadian production lines, while building the domestic military industrial base at the same time.
I’m trying to imagine what Poilievre would have achieved in his eight months, had he won the election. There’s much to criticize Carney for, but he’s delivering international agreements that are our best hope in mitigating US economic aggression. As a country with diaspora connections to so much of the world, it’s great to see us broadening our relationships in a way that can maximize our global potential.
Poilievre was and continues to be a complete joke. I don’t even know what he will complain about during their scrum.
Can anyone actually picture Poilievre as a PM?