Dion expected to resign; Liberal Party Leadership race starts again
Monday, December 8th, 2008
Out there, there are supporters of our current Liberal Party leader, Stephane Dion.
I’m not one of them.
And so, the news that Mr. Dion is expected to resign in the upcoming week makes me quite happy. I am a Liberal Party girl at heart. Never been a big fan of Stephen Harper, or conservatives in general. The previous election’s results disappointed me, considering how few seats the Liberals managed to hold on to. At the same time, I was still pleased that the Liberals hadn’t gained more seats than the Conservatives, as expected. Why?
Let’s see: 1) Stephane Dion can’t speak English all too well. 2) Most Canadians speak English.
I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with a PM from Quebec. I love the idea. I love French, too. I just love English a tad bit more. The truth is, simply put, the lack of Dion’s decent English-skills made it hard for him to communicate his ideas (policies, platform, and inspirational ideas and other thoughts) with a lot of voters.
French is indeed one of Canada’s official languages, but we must realize that the proportion of English-French speakers in Canada is not proportionate, and this proportion is diminished even more when you take Quebec out of the equation (the Bloc takes up too much of Quebec anyway). It is also important to remember that on the global stage, great English and bad French is going to be a hell of a lot more useful than sort-of-bad English and great French.
I think that many voters were actually usual Liberal voters, but voted for Conservatives instead. Now why would long-time Liberal supporters do something like this? Even if they did think Dion’s policies were pretty good? Because Dion and his French accent was just such a huge turn-off, that they voted for their Conservative candidate. Dion loses. End of story.
And that is why I am glad Dion is resigning.
Who will win the position of the Liberal Party’s next leader, Ignatieff or Rae or someone else, will be another story. Yes, the whole unanimous we-support-Dion pact was a lie. Well, politics in general are full of lies, and this one I can accept. And the coalition? That’s another story too.
I’m just glad Dion will be resigning soon, or so they say. I’m hoping, at least, because anything without an actual date is never certain. But I think, the sooner, the better. Nice meeting you, Mr. Dion.






My name is Annie, and I'm a high school student from Canada. This blog, well, it really isn't much. Just a few ramblings, ideas, thoughts...