PSPP est beaucoup trop populiste pour voter pour lui
riko77can on
Yeah, I’ve seen more than one interview where even a Québécois separatist concedes that now is not the time to push for sovereignty.
ouatedephoque on
That was predictable. Initially the PQ was an attractive alternative to the CAQ but now that people are finally clueing in that the PQ and their leader insist on running a referendum that a huge chunk of people absolutely don’t want, they are turning to the Liberals again.
Had the PQ stated that they would not hold a referendum they would have easily won.
The leader, PSPP is very much like PP. Always angry at something and can’t read the room if his life depended on it.
rando_dud on
„A fanatic is someone who can’t change his mind and won’t change the subject“
PSPP is a hard-core separatists. He’s running on a single issue.
theryanc on
Not the moment. Hopefully it never will be.
Je t’aime mes amis.
Wait I think I even remember fucking grammar cahiers… nous amerons? No that’s wrong. Nous vous aimons? That feels wrong but it’s all I can remember for plural. Tbh I’ve been garbage at it even when I was learning it in school.
Anyways what we’re talking about?
UnicornHunt1274 on
Thank fuck.
brittleboyy on
It’s also important to note that, in Quebec, support the PQ does not necessarily equate to support for sovereignty. The PQ is the only viable left of centre party, and hasn’t held a referendum in a generation, so there’s a decent portion of PQ voters who vote for them because of policies other than independence.
Edit: Just want to add the I was a very Federalist left-of-centre voter in Quebec for the 2008, 2012, 2014 and 2018 elections. I always had to hold my nose and compromise on my policy beliefs, or vote for a party that was never going to form government (like the PVQ). I know lots of people whose federalism wasn’t threatened by the PQ and voted for the social democrat style policies
TheOtherUprising on
Wow. Last I heard the PQ had a big lead, that’s a big reversal.
Infamous-Mixture-605 on
„No“ sitting at 71% is a bigger margin than 1980. That would be an absolutely crushing defeat.
Acrobatic-Cap-135 on
Sovereignty aside, which is definitely crushing the PQ, Milliard just giving out a lot better energy than sour grapes PSPP. Is he going to fulfill the prophecy of PPing himself?
Electricalthis on
We really need to put a bow on these sovereignty crowd. Start creating law around it.
It. Will. Never. Happen.
And with that should be jail time for even bringing it up in a parliament level
Aromatic_Opposite100 on
This really creates a question, what % should a referendum for separation actually get for separation to occur.
It seems insane that support to stay in the nation has to at all times stay above 50% for decades and decades while it only takes a year or two or negative polling to get a referendum and completely dismantle Canada.
Nitramite on
I’m a born french quebecois. I’ve had my own period of wanting sovereignty. I don’t think now is the time and I don’t believe it will ever be the time anymore.
The idea made sense before the internet and globalization. Now the world has opened up and we can see globally what is going on. Of all countries, Canada is a wonderful one to be associated with. Separating from it would be an even worse Brexit. We’d be isolated, in language, business, trade and much more.
We can’t even handle our debt, our issues with education, healthcare, self-sustainance. When we are able to handle these, maybe we can talk about separatism, but for now, it’s way better to work together with countries similar to us.
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PSPP est beaucoup trop populiste pour voter pour lui
Yeah, I’ve seen more than one interview where even a Québécois separatist concedes that now is not the time to push for sovereignty.
That was predictable. Initially the PQ was an attractive alternative to the CAQ but now that people are finally clueing in that the PQ and their leader insist on running a referendum that a huge chunk of people absolutely don’t want, they are turning to the Liberals again.
Had the PQ stated that they would not hold a referendum they would have easily won.
The leader, PSPP is very much like PP. Always angry at something and can’t read the room if his life depended on it.
„A fanatic is someone who can’t change his mind and won’t change the subject“
PSPP is a hard-core separatists. He’s running on a single issue.
Not the moment. Hopefully it never will be.
Je t’aime mes amis.
Wait I think I even remember fucking grammar cahiers… nous amerons? No that’s wrong. Nous vous aimons? That feels wrong but it’s all I can remember for plural. Tbh I’ve been garbage at it even when I was learning it in school.
Anyways what we’re talking about?
Thank fuck.
It’s also important to note that, in Quebec, support the PQ does not necessarily equate to support for sovereignty. The PQ is the only viable left of centre party, and hasn’t held a referendum in a generation, so there’s a decent portion of PQ voters who vote for them because of policies other than independence.
Edit: Just want to add the I was a very Federalist left-of-centre voter in Quebec for the 2008, 2012, 2014 and 2018 elections. I always had to hold my nose and compromise on my policy beliefs, or vote for a party that was never going to form government (like the PVQ). I know lots of people whose federalism wasn’t threatened by the PQ and voted for the social democrat style policies
Wow. Last I heard the PQ had a big lead, that’s a big reversal.
„No“ sitting at 71% is a bigger margin than 1980. That would be an absolutely crushing defeat.
Sovereignty aside, which is definitely crushing the PQ, Milliard just giving out a lot better energy than sour grapes PSPP. Is he going to fulfill the prophecy of PPing himself?
We really need to put a bow on these sovereignty crowd. Start creating law around it.
It. Will. Never. Happen.
And with that should be jail time for even bringing it up in a parliament level
This really creates a question, what % should a referendum for separation actually get for separation to occur.
It seems insane that support to stay in the nation has to at all times stay above 50% for decades and decades while it only takes a year or two or negative polling to get a referendum and completely dismantle Canada.
I’m a born french quebecois. I’ve had my own period of wanting sovereignty. I don’t think now is the time and I don’t believe it will ever be the time anymore.
The idea made sense before the internet and globalization. Now the world has opened up and we can see globally what is going on. Of all countries, Canada is a wonderful one to be associated with. Separating from it would be an even worse Brexit. We’d be isolated, in language, business, trade and much more.
We can’t even handle our debt, our issues with education, healthcare, self-sustainance. When we are able to handle these, maybe we can talk about separatism, but for now, it’s way better to work together with countries similar to us.