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Trump Is Back on the Ballot – The Atlantic

Put two things together.

The first is the surge of Republican support for Donald Trump since the FBI searched his Mar-a-Lago residence.

The second is this summers flow of good news for the Democrats as the 2022 midterms approach. Democratic candidates are leading in Senate races in Arizona, Georgia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. As Politico observes, all-party primaries in Washington State show Democratic candidates running well ahead of their performance in 2010 and 2014, the last big Republican years. Democratic standing is rising in generic polling. Across the nation, indications are gathering that Republicans could pay an immediate political price for the Supreme Courts overturning of Roe v. Wade. Above all, the August economic news has turned good: gasoline prices declining, general inflation abating, job growth surging.

The first factthe rallying to Trumpreminds us that his narrative of personal grievance still deeply moves Republican voters.

The second factthe Democrats improving congressional prospectsreminds us how little Trumps grievances resonate with the larger voting public. GOP leaders have made a lot of noise about the Democratic obsession with pronouns. But the Trump Republicans have a pronoun problem of their own: Trump demands, and they agree, to talk about me, me, me when the electorate has other, real, bread-and-butter concerns.

Big-money Republicans hoped that 2022 would be the year the GOP quietly sidelined Trump. Those hopes have been fading all year, as extreme and unstable pro-Trump candidates have triumphed in primary after primary. Their last best hope was that the reelection of Ron DeSantis as governor of Florida would painlessly shoulder Trump out of contention for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. Now that hope, too, is dying.

DeSantis ran in 2018 as a craven Trump sycophant. He had four years to become his own man. He battled culture warseven turning against his former backers at Disneyall to prove himself the snarling alpha-male bully that Republican primary voters reward. But since the Mar-a-Lago search, DeSantis has dropped back into the beta-male role, sidekick and cheering section for Trump.

Trump has reasserted dominance. DeSantis has submitted. And if Republican presidential politics in the Trump era has one rule, its that theres no recovery from submission. Roll over once, and you cannot get back on your feet again.

Trump specializes in creating dominance-and-submission rituals. His Republican base is both the audience for them and the instrument of them. But to those outside the subculture excited by these rituals, they look demeaning and ridiculous. Everybody else wants jobs, homes, cheaper prescription drugs, and bridges that do not collapsenot public performances in Trumps theater of humiliation.

Midterm elections are usually referendums on the pressing issues of the day. Voters treat them, in effect, as their answer to the implied question: Got any complaints? And because voters usually do have complaints, the presidents party tends to take losses. But this time, the loudest complaints of the out party are becoming very far removed from most peoples lives.

Historically, conservatives spoke the language of stability; progressives, the language of change. This summer, however, the Trump Republicans are speaking the language of confrontation, of threat, of violence. Five days ago, Peter Wehner described here at The Atlantic the angry shouts on right-wing message boards and websites. That language of menace is now being used by the former president himself. Allow me impunity or else face more armed violence from my supporters is the implicit Trump warning.

Thats a hell of a message to carry into a midterm election. And its a message that is incidentally amending the 2022 ballot question from Got any complaints? to How do you react to bullies making threats?

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Trump Is Back on the Ballot - The Atlantic

View from The Hill: The Liberals would be better off with Morrison out of parliament – The Conversation Indonesia

Liberal frontbencher Karen Andrews wouldnt be alone among her colleagues in believing Scott Morrison should quit parliament.

Andrews, home affairs minister in the former government, on Tuesday declared the Australian people were betrayed by Morrisons installing himself in five portfolios, including hers, in secret arrangements.

She was one of the ministers not told hed moved in. Nor, most remarkably, was treasurer Josh Frydenberg (who a few months later stayed at The Lodge) informed he had a ministerial bedfellow. Likewise finance minister Mathias Cormann.

Andrews has another reason for a heightened sensitivity to Morrisons willingness to flout conventions and propriety.

When an asylum seeker boat was intercepted on election day, Morrison was determined to try to exploit it politically. The pressure coming from his office onto Andrews office to urgently publicise the incident has been documented in a recent inquiry.

While Andrews defended her actions after the report was released, she lost skin.

Without doubt the parliamentary Liberal Party would be better off if Morrison quit.

Even before this weeks revelations, there was nothing he could contribute he sits as a failure from the past in a party that will have immense trouble adjusting to the future. Now he presents a live target for Labor. Anthony Albanese on Tuesday wouldnt rule out Labor moving a censure against him.

He enjoys minimal respect among his colleagues. As long as he hangs around, hell be a distraction.

Former prime minister John Howard advanced the one pragmatic argument against Morrison quitting it would create an unwanted and expensive by-election for the Liberals.

Apart from anything else it is not in the interests of the Liberal Party to have a by-election at the moment in a very safe seat, particularly as in the state of New South Wales we will face a state election in the early part of next year, Howard said bluntly, interviewed on the ABC on Tuesday night.

Some would add that in these volatile political times no seat is absolutely safe.

Morrison hasnt been expected to see out the parliamentary term. But presumably he needs a job to go to. This weeks stories will have done nothing for his employability.

The disclosure of Morrisons behaviour has put heat on Governor-General David Hurley.

Hurley was quick to issue a Monday statement setting out how he had acted in accordance with the Constitution. He said it was up to the government whether the arrangements were made public.

To suggest Hurley should not have done what he was asked totally misunderstands his role. He must act according to government advice, assuming what it proposes is legal. (It might be added, however, that a wise governor-general also questions and counsels when circumstances require.)

University of NSW law professor and constitutional specialist George Williams suggests the convention should be put into law that all ministerial appointments be announced to parliament.

On Tuesday Morrison made a belated effort to explain himself. He began on 2GB his favourite radio roost but it was a fiasco. He didnt recall any portfolios other than those initially mentioned (health, finance, resources) into which hed inserted himself.

It fell to Albanese to add home affairs and treasury. To have apparently forgotten you have made yourself treasurer is really something.

Later Morrison issued a long Facebook post, in which he invoked the extraordinary times of COVID that required extraordinary measures to justify his actions.

I took the precaution of being given authority to administer various departments of state should the need arise due to incapacity of a minister or in the national interest. This was where ministers had specific powers under legislation not subject to cabinet oversight. Health was the major example.

Morrison said treasury and home affairs were added as a belts and braces precaution in May 2021.

He explained his lack of memory of key portfolios by saying there was a lot going on at the time and the powers hadnt had to be used.

Why not inform all the relevant ministers, the cabinet, the public? (Health Minister Greg Hunt knew and Morrison did think Cormann had been told, but there was some glitch.) Morrison said he didnt want ministers second guessing themselves, or for their authority to be diminished.

The one area where Morrison used the power hed acquired was in the resources portfolio, and this had nothing to do with COVID and everything to do with votes. There he became minister so he could overrule the publicly designated minister, Keith Pitt, on the issue of gas exploration off the NSW coast.

Once having been given the authority to consider this matter I advised the minister of my intention to do so, Morrison said. This was the only matter I involved myself directly with in this or any other department.

Morrison ended his post with an apology for any offence to my colleagues. But he showed little sign he comprehended why they would be so deeply offended by his lack of respect, represented by his unwillingness to take them into his confidence.

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View from The Hill: The Liberals would be better off with Morrison out of parliament - The Conversation Indonesia

The prescient Victorian document that foretold the Liberal Partys crisis – The Age

Search for talent

On Mirabellas analysis, social media is near the core of the problem. It wasnt that MPs needed necessarily to create TikTok accounts. Rather, he posited that social media and its creation of information silos had accelerated the pace of attitudinal changes more quickly than the Liberal Party could adapt to them.

The ALP and Liberal parties posting the same joke format on Facebook at the Federal election.Credit:Facebook

It had allowed progressive movements to harness new platforms to mobilise support and sway opinion, while the Liberals used [social media] as a tool to try and win elections, in a reactive fashion, without really dealing with the strategic dimension.

The major public issues being enculturated by social media are finding no policy solutions in the Liberal Party, he wrote.

Presciently, another problem foreshadowed in the Mirabella document before Zali Stegall or Monique Ryan became national figures was the threat of independents.

This process has been happening for a while, Mirabella says. His wife, Sophie Mirabella, lost to the mother of the community independents movement, Cathy McGowan, in 2013.

The Mirabella family in 2016.Credit:Meredith OShea

Elections are largely publicly funded in Victoria. And with a strong flow of funds from the Cormack Foundation, a Liberal-affiliated investment company permitted to transfer cash to the party, it means its problems centre around personnel rather than money.

Victorias last Liberal premier, Denis Napthine, who spent 27 years in Parliament, believes Australians are unfairly discouraged and abused for supporting major parties. These days you wouldnt dare say you were a member of a political party, he said, adding that, as a consequence, the partys membership base has been narrowed, making it more difficult to represent its diverse voter base.

Part of the advantage the teals had was being able to choose the most impressive people from the community to become candidates. Conversely, major parties are picking from a shrinking pool of party members, where factional skulduggery is rewarded ahead of experience and achievement outside politics.

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As a solution, Napthine believes the Liberal Partys administrative committee should consider supplementing preselections with high achievers in circumstances where there is a narrow field. In recent weeks the party has picked three religious conservatives to top Victorian Liberal Party upper house tickets.

Unless there is 200 to 500 members selected, it becomes too easy for narrow interest groups and factions to pick candidates that are less effective at representing broad interests, he says.

Mirabella explains that many membership-based organisations, such as Rotary clubs and even the Labor Party, are struggling for members in the digital age. Movements that still attract followers tend to be focussed on climate and social justice. The Greens and Labor at least have the support of environmental groups and unions respectively, while the Liberal Party does not. According to Mirabella, it therefore needs to be malleable and find new causes to attract members and voters.

We are the everyman party, he says. The Liberal brand isnt travelling very well because it isnt clear what we are selling.

Mirabella grasps the talent problem and says all parties are struggling to lure talented people with life experience to run. The incoming president wants more women in parliament and thinks the party must assess options that make it more likely a woman would be preselected.

Matthew Guy with his supporters when he took the leadership of the Liberal Party last September.Credit:Justin McManus

Internally, some senior Liberal MPs and officials who have long opposed quotas as a way of boosting female representation are now open to new ways to manipulate the preselection process to improve the chances of women winning.

We have driven women out of the party and we need to do something drastic to fix it, one former Liberal MP said.

A senior party source who spoke anonymously to discuss internal party matters describes the Liberal Partys lack of talent at a state level as a human resources problem borne of perennial opposition.

Being in opposition between 1999 and 2010 meant the party was not attracting top-level staffers and MPs. At the same time, junior MPs and staffers including Daniel Andrews and Tim Pallas went on to be key players in the Andrews government. The period of opposition since 2014 has only compounded the problem.

For years, the source said, standout young Liberals chose to become staffers in Canberra and then took up jobs in the corporate sector. When he was opposition leader, Michael OBrien hoped gun advisers would come back to Spring Street should the Morrison government lose. This migration never occurred.

We havent had transformational leadership since the Kennett cabinet. Our leaders and frontbenchers are not people who resonate with Victorians, one Victorian MP said.

The Victorian Liberal Party is something regarded as not to be touched with a 10-foot barge pole. Also, Labor people tend to be more interested in social policy rather than national security or economics, so state politics is a more natural home for them.

Tim Wilson, a self-styled modern Liberal who lost the Brighton-based seat of Goldstein to teal independent and former journalist Zoe Daniel, argues Australian Liberals are confronting the same deep-seated quandaries as counterparts in New Zealand, Britain and other comparable nations.

Centre-right parties, he explains, spent much of the last century acting as a counterbalance to authoritarianism and communism. This instinct spurred last centurys centre-right parties, and the market-driven Hawke-Keating government, to pursue free market reforms. But the mission has failed to shift in response to the problems of contemporary politics, Wilson argues, leaving the Liberal Party fighting yesterdays battle and unable to find the field for todays.

Liberal Tim Wilson conceding defeat to Zoe Daniel in May.Credit:Penny Stephens

The partys attachment to the aspirational class of voters is almost hackneyed, but Wilson says the modern Liberal party has forgotten who fits into this group.

We are the party of aspiration, but that means your policy has to be geared toward those aspiring young people, new Australians are aspiring not just older Australians that are after security, he says. Instead we are putting forward policies that entrench power.

Menzies was talking about forgotten people, not forgotten ideas.

Wilson, whose book The New Social Contract outlines his ideas for the future foundations of the Liberal Party, says conservatives need to embrace policies that decentralise power and give people control over their financial and familial security. He cites the proposal to allow people to use superannuation to buy a house an idea he championed that was eventually pledged by Morrison during the election campaign.

Conservative writer and commentator Gray Connolly agrees. The biggest problem facing centre-right parties is that younger voters, and those not yet of voting age, hold conservatives responsible for the absolutely dismal sense that they will never own a home, delaying their path to family life and financial security.

The barrister says too many Coalition MPs are attached to Reagan-era and Thatcherite economic policies.

You cant hope to get anywhere until you break the boomer death grip, he says. No one on the right gives the impression to people under 50 that they actually care about improving their circumstances.

Another former senior federal MP, who didnt wish to be named, said the party had failed to explain its philosophy to an entire generation of voters who view the Liberals as simply social conservatives and not championing classic liberal ideas such as free enterprise, individual freedoms, freedom of speech and smaller government.

The teal independents ravaged the Liberal Party in their most traditional seats.Credit:Joe Armao

The so-called teal candidates, who ended the career of Josh Frydenberg and other Liberals, pitched themselves as fiscally responsible, socially liberal professionals the very people the Liberal Party used to attract. While there are Liberals who question whether some teals truly held these values, it is clear it must win back these voters if it is ever to regain its old seats.

While some Liberals, including outgoing Kew MP Tim Smith, have called on the Liberal Party to abandon inner-city voters, describing them as loud, entitled and privileged, Napthine argues that Victoria often considered the most progressive state needs to represent these people.

Napthine, who has never called himself a conservative, believes that the Victorian branch has always been a broader church [than] other jurisdictions.

Guy agrees, refusing to concede state seats such as Kew, Caulfield and Brighton to teals. Where we hold seats, I expect to hold all of those and go forward, thats our aim, thats our goal, he said on Friday.

With fewer than 100 days until the state election, polls indicate the Coalition is currently facing its third consecutive election loss against the backdrop of rampant factionalism, low membership and a damaged brand. Sources across the party say infighting leads to poor decision-making and generates a toxic atmosphere that turns talented people away.

Connolly calls for US-style open preselection contests, where anyone can run to be a Liberal Party candidate and locals who are not members of the party get a vote.

Instead it is hush-hush and you end up with a quite incestuous and strange party room and the political ranks dont really represent the base of your party, he says.

Mirabella is a pragmatic farmer who doesnt spend Friday afternoons in the Melbourne or Australian clubs, where many members of Victorias Liberal elite mingle. He thinks he can build bridges and rebuild trust within a branch that, for the best part of this century, has been characterised by rolling factional warfare.

If we spent as much time campaigning and fighting our opponents as we do fighting each other, wed be doing a lot better, Mirabella says.

Matthew Guy at the 100 Days to Change the Government State Campaign Lunch on Friday.Credit:Eddie Jim

Off the back of a disastrous fortnight which saw Guy lose his chief of staff to a donor scandal, the Coalition has had its best week in months thanks to a policy announcement: a promise to shelve the Suburban Rail Loop, which the independent budget office revealed would probably cost far more than anticipated.

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Instead, Guy wants to invest the money in the states overburdened health system. Labor, which has lost grip on its narrative around the mega project and the health system looked rattled.

The opposition has flirted with scrapping or amending the project since before the last election, party sources said. These same sources said Guy who has rebranded as Matt and his new chief of staff, Nick McGowan, reached for the rail loop policy to get the opposition out of the rut caused by a donor saga revealed in this newspaper.

But with the Coalition needing 18 seats to govern in its own right, few Liberal MPs deny the grim state of the broader party and the monumental task Guy faces to win.

Guy declared health will be the key issue of the campaign, but he will also deliver new policies on cost of living, which pollsters in both parties believe to be voters top priority with interest rates rising and real wages falling. To turn these concerns into seats, Guy probably needs to win them in the western and outer south-eastern suburbs, where his party has little presence or history.

In inner-eastern Malvern, the Liberal Partys state branch has about 500 members. In the western suburb of Werribee, it has about 60. The average age of members is in the 60s. Thats a measure of the challenge that confronts it.

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The prescient Victorian document that foretold the Liberal Partys crisis - The Age

"A double-edged sword: Trump’s thrilled to be back in the spotlight but is it already backfiring? – Salon

There are dozens of outstanding questions about Donald Trump's bizarre decision to abscond with boxes of unauthorized and classified documents when he left the White House and we don't have any idea why he refused to return many of them when the National Archives and the FBI asked for them back. All we do know is that the FBI was forced to issue a subpoena, which Trump defied, and finally had to get a search warrant to retrieve the documents.

The speculation about his motives run from the former president just wanting to take classified material as a souvenirto show offto his friendsor sell as memorabiliato possible blackmail offoreign leaders.(Apparently, presidents get highly classified intelligence on allies and adversaries alike.) The most alarming reporting suggested that the documents contained nuclear secrets. This seemed unlikely untilthis pieceby Josh Kovensky at Talking Points Memo reminded me that Trump has a "special interest" in nuclear weapons, believing himself to be an expert because his uncle taught at MIT. Now it doesn't seem so outlandish. Trump was bragging in his final year that the U.S. had developed some secret new nuclear program at his direction which he couldn't reveal. So, who knows? He may have actually stolen something truly dangerous.

It remains to be seen if the law will catch up to Trump this time. It's coming down on him from several directions but according to news reports Trump is thrilled about the whole thing because it's raising lots of money and it has his supporters up in arms and fired up to fight for him. It also has him at the forefront of the political news which always makes Trump happy.According to NBC News, it's all made him rethink his need to announce his presidential campaign before the midterm elections. As of now, he remains inclined to wait.

The biggest reason for celebration in Trumpworld no doubt is the fact that the search has necessitated that his would-be rivals all back off their plans to challenge him, at least for the moment. Once Trump activated the MAGA cult they had little choice, proving once again that Trump still has a stranglehold on the GOP. Everyone from former vice president Mike Pence to South DakotaGov. Kristi NoemandVirginia Gov. Glenn Younkinissued shrill denunciations of the FBI after the documents were siezed.

Trump's top rival, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis who, in another political world would have jumped on the news to condemn Trump as damaged goods, immediatelywent to bat for himcalling the FBI search "another escalation in the weaponization of federal agencies against the regime's political opponents." (If anyone knows about weaponizing agencies against enemies, it's Ron DeSantis.)Polls showedthat Trump got a 10 point bounce over DeSantis with GOP primary voters after the FBI search.

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The pressure to back up the Dear Leader is so intense that notorious podcaster Alex Jones, clearly out of the loop, rapidly backed down from his ill-timed endorsement of DeSantis over Trump:

It's easy to see why Trump is feeling relieved. Over the summer it appeared that his followers were getting restive and his potential opponents were starting to make their moves. The Mar-a-Lago "raid" changed that dynamic.

Democracy is on the ballot and that's not good news for Donald Trump.

Others, however, aren't so sure this is the big winner Trump thinks it is. One worried friend ofTrumptold NBC:

"He may get closer to the prize but in reality, he's slipping...It seems like the net is surrounding him more and more, and his ability to dance around these things is going to get more challenging," this ally said. "It's a double-edged sword."

That net is not just the legal problems. Trump believes that it's always better when he's in the news, no matter what the reason, but he never seems to understand that while he may thrill his following, he also motivates the opposition.A new pollreleased this past weekend shows that the GOP is facing some unexpected headwinds going into the fall election largely because of the January 6 hearings:

It's certainly possible that the numbers include some Republicans who see the Big Lie about the 2020 election as a "threat to democracy" but the changes in enthusiasm argue that this is primarily attributable to Democrats:

According to the survey, 68% of Republicans express a high level of interest in the upcoming election registering either a "9" or "10" on a 10-point scale versus 66% for Democrats.

That 2-point GOP advantage is down from 17 points in March and 8 points in May.

The pollsters consider that to be the result of the Supreme Court'sdecision to overrule the landmark Roe v. Wade decisionin June. But since abortion shows up as the top issue for only 8% of respondents, it's clear that it's not the only reason for the surge in interest. "Threats to democracy" coming in as the most important issue isthe big change.Democracy is on the ballot and that's not good news for Donald Trump.

Just as important, with all the "fundamentals" about the economy, President Biden's approval rating etc., Trump's constant attention-grabbing, his legal troubles, his rallies, his endorsements, the drumbeat of Trump, Trump, Trump, has turned the midterm election from a standard referendum on the president to a choice between the undisputed leader of the Republican Party and the leader of the Democratic Party. And while it's true that Biden's popularity numbers are low, Trump's are even worse:

As I've said before, Trump is the gift that keeps on giving for Democrats. If he'd kept a low profile, cooperated with the FBI and shut his mouth, this election might have been the cakewalk they all expected it to be. But with the hearings andDobbsand Trump endorsing a crop of fascist weirdos, it looks like it's going to be a real race. If Democrats actually save their majority this fall they should send Trump a case of Diet Coke and a very nice thank-you card.

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"A double-edged sword: Trump's thrilled to be back in the spotlight but is it already backfiring? - Salon

FIRST READING: Why Tories (and not Liberals) are way better at putting women in high office – National Post

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Five of Canada's nine women premiers have been conservatives, as well as its only woman prime minister

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First Reading is a daily newsletter keeping you posted on the travails of Canadian politicos, all curated by the National Posts own Tristin Hopper. To get an early version sent direct to your inbox every Monday to Thursday at 6:30 p.m. ET (and 9 a.m. on Saturdays), sign up here.

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In slightly more than two weeks, it seems likely that the United Kingdom will be swearing in its third-ever woman prime minister. And just like the other two, this ones going to be a Conservative.

Liz Truss, the U.K. foreign secretary, currently enjoys a commanding 22-point lead in the Conservative Party leadership race to replace Prime Minister Boris Johnson. If this lead holds when results are announced on Sept. 5, she can expect to be sworn in immediately as the U.K.s head of government.

Trusss elevation to 10 Downing Street would further highlight a unique political quirk shared between the United Kingdom and Canada. When it comes to breaking gender glass ceilings in electoral politics, the role has been disproportionately filled by women representing right-leaning parties.

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To date, the only two women to reach Britains highest elected office were leaders of the Conservative Party: Margaret Thatcher and Theresa May. Kim Campbell, Canadas first and to date only woman prime minister similarly headed the Progressive Conservatives.

Meanwhile, the leading centre-left parties in both Canada and the U.K. the Labour Party and the Liberal Party are both conspicuous for having never once elected a woman leader.

While the U.K. Labour Party has seen the occasional woman serving as interim leader, a woman has never won a party leadership race. The Liberal Party of Canada remains the only major Canadian party that hasnt even had a woman as acting leader. Although the Liberals last leadership election in 2013 was dominated by women, all of them were steamrolled by the candidacy of Justin Trudeau.

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In Canada, the trend of conservative women beating progressives to high office even holds up at the provincial level.

Canadas first-ever woman premier represented the right-leaning B.C. Social Credit Party. Rita Johnston got the job after the 1991 resignation of Bill Vander Zalm, and would later switch her allegiance to the upstart B.C. Conservative Party after the Socreds collapse.

Of the nine women who have ever headed a Canadian provincial government, slightly more than half have represented a right-wing option in the legislature. In addition to Johnston, the first woman premiers in both Manitoba (Heather Stefanson) and Newfoundland and Labrador (Kathy Dunderdale) were Progressive Conservatives. Christy Clark, who was B.C. premier for six years, headed the B.C. Liberals, a party that despite its name is the provinces main centre-right option.

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A fifth is Albertas Alison Redford, who headed the ostensibly centre-right Progressive Conservative Party of Alberta, but thanks to a quirk of Alberta politics ended up being the progressive option in the 2012 provincial election she fought against the more conservative Wildrose. Although, that election broke its own Canadian glass ceiling by being the first in which both primary party leaders were women: Redfords main opponent was Wildrose leader Danielle Smith.

Canadas other four female provincial leaders consist of two Liberals (Ontarios Kathleen Wynne, P.E.I.s Catherine Callbeck), one New Democrat (Albertas Rachel Notley) and Quebecs Pauline Marois, who headed the Parti Qubcois.

There are other countries whose first national leaders represented centre-right options, most notably Germany with Chancellor Angela Merkel, and New Zealand, with Prime Minister Jenny Shipley. But Canada and the U.K. are basically the only major democratic countries where it is the norm.

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While the United States has not elected a female president, the only woman ever nominated for a major party candidacy was Hillary Clinton for the Democratic Party. A Democrat was also the first female state governor.

Israels Golda Meir, one of historys first women to serve as prime minister, represented the countrys Labor Party. Indias Indira Gandhi, still the countrys only female prime minister, headed the left-leaning Indian National Congress. Norways first woman prime minister, Gro Brundtland, represented Labour. So did Australias first woman prime minister, Julia Gillard.

And while Canadian conservative parties may be comfortable with putting women in the top job, its a whole different story when it comes to basically any other electoral first.

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The first Canadian women to win office at the municipal, federal and provincial levels all represented progressive parties. Similarly, Canadas first LGBT politicians are represented almost exclusively by either Liberals or NDPs, a rule that also holds up for Canadians from Indigenous groups or other ethnic minorities.

The only real exceptions to this rule are Lincoln Alexander, Canadas first Black MP, and Douglas Jung, Canadas first-ever Chinese-Canadian MP: Both were elected as Progressive Conservatives.

Theres yet another case of Canadian hospital staff seeming to nudge a chronically ill patient towards killing themselves. Global News interviewed a Canadian Forces veteran suffering from PTSD who was casually offered the option of euthanasia during a conversation with a Veterans Affairs Canada employee. The story comes only days after a widely circulated Associated Press feature broke revelations about a patient in London, Ont., with a severe brain disorder being offered medically assisted death by a hospital ethicist who first reminded him that his treatment was costing the system north of $1,500 a day.

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ArriveCAN the mandatory COVID-screening smartphone notable for once sentencing 10,000 innocent Canadians to mandatory house arrest has garnered another enemy. A coalition of Chambers of Commerce representing border communities from Manitoba to New Brunswick has come out to urge the federal government to scrap the app, saying it kneecaps tourism, worsens supply chain problems and is bafflingly ineffective at preventing the spread of COVID ArriveCANs sole justification for existing. The coalition joins a diverse field of official ArriveCAN haters, including politicians on both sides of the border representing both left and right-wing parties. The government has lost all credibility on this app, and people dont trust it, says a recent web video by the extremely mustachioed Conservative MP Martin Shields.

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ArriveCAN has been glitchy, invasive, and added to the hold-up at airports. Not to mention it cost taxpayers $25 million. The government has lost all credibility on this app, and people don't trust it, but they insist on keeping it around. It's time to scrap the app. #cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/c7LPoJzRTK

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FIRST READING: Why Tories (and not Liberals) are way better at putting women in high office - National Post