Canada's Political Landscape - 2026

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  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    stetson wrote: »
    Caissa wrote: »

    Going by those photos, he is about the most un-Green looking Green politician I have ever seen.

    He has fundamentally implausible hair.
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    stetson wrote: »
    Caissa wrote: »

    Going by those photos, he is about the most un-Green looking Green politician I have ever seen.

    He has fundamentally implausible hair.

    Comparing the three photos, he seems to be employing the tactic of de-emphasizing the contrast between lotsa-skin and little-hair by just shaving off the latter entirely, but isn't doing it regularly enough.

    (To be fair, that's kinda my default approach to facial hair. I dislike having a beard, but sometimes appear to have one, just because I'm too lazy to shave every day.)
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    He will be 70 in October. It is kind of nice seeing male politicians receiving the scrutiny usually reserved for female politicians. ;^)
  • I was searching in the bowels of Ontario's Statutes for something else and I came across this gem:

    https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/06l21

    The Legislation. Act, 2006. It replaced the old Interpretation Act. s.12 explicitly deals with what happens when a bill is Reserved to the Governor General.

    Who said Reservation and Disallowance is a spent power? :wink:
  • MarsupialMarsupial Shipmate
    Well it doesn’t actually mention disallowance…. :wink: Though arguably it wouldn’t anyway since it is only dealing with Bills that have become effective law.

    On a more substantial note, a while back I stumbled across the City of Toronto case in the Supreme Court from 2021 where in the early days of the Ford government the province had gratuitously messed with the city’s electoral districts in the middle of an actual municipal election. The case ultimately went all the way to the SCC and the Court divided 5-4 on whether unwritten principles could be used to invalidate the provincial legislation. The majority said no, which might support SPK’s view that the continued existence of the provision that allows for disallowance should take priority over any unwritten principles (i.e., federalism) that suggests otherwise. Of course it also meant that Ford was within his constitutional powers to make a chaos of our municipal election but c’est la vie.*

    Text of the decision in case anyone is curious…

    https://canlii.ca/t/jjc3d

    (*that’s life)
  • Well, Ontario does have a long history of treating municipalities as it's playthings.

    I still remember the Flamborough Liberation Front, trying to throw off the yoke if Hamilton.
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    edited 4:07AM
    I still remember the Flamborough Liberation Front, trying to throw off the yoke if Hamilton.

    Were they just kind of a playful assertion of local identity, maybe with an eye toward community self-promotion and possibly tourism bucks?

    Edmonton annexed the city of Strathcona some time in the early C20, and the area just east of the university started gentrifying into a hip arts/bar district in the early 80s or so. Shortly thereafter, the neighbourhood boosters started promoting the idea of Old Strathcona as a separate city, with the head of the rep-theatre voted "Lady Mayor" or some such. Not sure how long that lasted for(or if it even still continues), but I don't think it ever really became part of the public consciousness.
  • No. They were committed suburbanites who fled Hamilton and its tax rates and despised now living in Hamilton and having to pay Hamiltom tax rates.

    They were serious, they wanted out and felt betrayed by the Harris Conservatives.
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    No. They were committed suburbanites who fled Hamilton and its tax rates and despised now living in Hamilton and having to pay Hamiltom tax rates.

    They were serious, they wanted out and felt betrayed by the Harris Conservatives.

    So the Hamilton region was amalgamated at the same time as the GTA?
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