Poilievre’s Conservatives end 2024 hitting long-term high in the polls amid Trudeau resignation calls: Nanos

Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives are closing out 2024 hitting a new long-term high in ballot support, with a 26 point advantage over the Liberals amid calls for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to resign.

According to Nanos Research’s latest weekly ballot tracking, the federal Conservatives currently hold 47 per cent of support, over the Liberals’ 21 per cent. Jagmeet Singh’s NDP are not far behind, sitting at 17 per cent support.

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Preston Manning: With nationalism in decline, who will stand on guard for Canada?

Most Canadians are familiar with the words of Canada’s national anthem, most often sung publicly at the beginning of sporting events, in particular, hockey games. It describes Canada as “the true north” and “our home and native land” — a northern homeland so “glorious and free” that it inspires “true patriot love,” a prayer that God will keep it free and a pledge on our part to “stand on guard” for its preservation.


It sure as Hell won’t be for the Canada of so called multiculturalism and diversity.

No one will stand for a Canada overrun by incompatible 3rd world cultures or for a Canada that demonizes White people simply for existing. 

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Joe Oliver: Where do Trudeau and the Liberals go from here?

Now that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is a spent political force, the Liberal party will soon have fateful decisions to make about its future. Almost 70 per cent of Canadians want Trudeau to leave, while the Conservatives are between 22 and 29 points ahead in the polls, which could consign the Liberals to fourth place in the House of Commons. As the hoof beats of the four horses of the apocalypse thunder ever louder, the Liberal caucus is entering open revolt. Everyone seems to agree the PM’s exit is a foregone conclusion, with only timing and method in doubt.

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What’s really behind Donald Trump’s tariff threats and ’51st state’ posts about Canada

Donald Trump’s threat of whopping tariffs on Canadian exports and his trolling of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are key tactics in a negotiating strategy to extract the best trade terms for the U.S., according to people who have worked with or closely observed him over the years.

Trump is promising to slap a 25 per cent tariff on all goods entering the U.S. from Canada and Mexico on Jan. 20, his first day in office, unless the countries curb the flow of drugs and migrants across their borders.

The president-elect has since followed up that threat by taunting Trudeau by calling him “governor” and referring to Canada as the “51st state” in a succession of social media posts.

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John Robson: Canadian Military’s Plan to Boost Ranks Is Woefully Inadequate

The latest pseudo-news from Ottawa, increasingly fantasy island, isn’t Chrystia Freeland “resigning” immediately after being fired. It’s the Canadian military going to recruit in Neverland and defeat the pirates by make-believe.

Or, in bubble-speak, “The Canadian military has an ambitious plan to increase its regular force ranks to 86,000, according to a briefing for senior leaders.” Care to clutch at that straw? Ha ha. Not there.


The video starts at the 25:44 mark at which point Victor Davis Hanson speaks to the current recruitment failure of the US Military to attract white males. I suspect it applies to our own military as well.

It’s a good chat period.

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A Wish List for a Safe and Secure Canada in 2025

At the end of one year and the beginning of another it is customary to look back at what happened and speculate on what is to come. With that in mind, here is an overview of national security as we enter 2025, a year in which we may (very?) likely have a new government. If the polls are to be believed (although if U.S. polls tell us anything, it is to treat these numbers very carefully), odds are that the Trudeau Liberals will be replaced by the Conservatives under Pierre Poilievre.

There’s a good number of security risks that the new government will inherit and will have to tackle…

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WAGNER: Pierre Trudeau rules Canada from the grave

How do you fundamentally transform a nation? If you don’t like your country as it is, how can you reshape it into something more to your liking?

Perhaps the simplest way to change a country peacefully is to change its constitution. The constitution is the foundational document that essentially establishes a country by formulating the structure of its government and listing the rights and responsibilities of its citizens.

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NDP MP Charlie Angus A Real Asshole & Proud Of It!

NDP MP says he won’t play Poilievre’s ‘procedural games’ to bring down Trudeau

OTTAWA — At least one NDP MP is reluctant to bring down Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government and force a federal election if it means putting Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre in power.

“I have a long and consistent record of opposing Mr. Poilievre’s tactics. I do not believe he is fit for leadership and will not support his procedural games,” said NDP MP Charlie Angus, in an email to National Post, in a reference to a Conservative ploy to use the public accounts committee to quickly bring down the government in January.

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Norad paying ‘full attention’ to Chinese-Russian air co-operation

The head of the North American Aerospace Defence Command says Chinese and Russian air co-operation in the Arctic has Norad’s “full attention.”

Those two countries for the first time staged a joint patrol in the Arctic near the coast of Alaska last July.

U.S. Gen. Gregory Guillot told The Canadian Press in a year interview that it potentially takes decades for two nations’ militaries to reach “full integration” at a level like the U.S. and Canada.

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Canada’s backlog of asylum claims could climb higher when Trump returns to White House, experts say

A backlog of 267,000 cases at the tribunal that hears asylum claims in Canada risks rising even further if a predicted influx of asylum claimants crosses the border from the U.S. after president-elect Donald Trump returns to the White House, immigration experts say.

The Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) has a backlog four times higher than it was two years ago as a flood of claims has left it unable to keep up.

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Governor General Intervention in Current Deadlock Would Set Non-Democratic Precedent

While polls are indicating a significant majority of Canadians feel it’s time for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to move on, citizens are discovering it’s quite difficult to remove an unwilling prime minister from office.

The Bloc Quebecois, the Conservative Party of Canada, and the NDP have now all committed to bringing down the minority Liberal government if given the opportunity to. While not eager for an election, many Liberal MPs are openly calling for Trudeau’s resignation. Despite a collapse of support from all directions, Trudeau has so far not announced a decision, and could conceivably remain there until October 2025.

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PARKER: What’s next for Canada’s Christians, as church and state collide?

It’s the end of the Christmas season, and at first glance something wonderful seems to have taken place. Canadians have rediscovered their nation’s Christian roots.

Or have they?

Cheerful evidence that they have can be found in the 40 or so cities and provinces, including Toronto, Saskatoon, Calgary, and Saskatchewan, that for the first time have officially declared December to be Christian Heritage Month.

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