Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "2022 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election" in English language version.
I am pro-immigration. My wife is a refugee to Canada from Venezuela. Canada needs immigration to fulfill its economic success and so our party will put forward a pro-immigration platform in the next election
While the final membership verification process is still underway, according to the party's leadership contest spokesperson Yaroslav Baran, the first batch of mail-in ballots with all six names on it have already been sent out to Conservative supporters who had memberships pre-dating the leadership race process.
Also on the candidate's chopping block is the federal Liberal's Bill C-11, a new version of the controversial Bill C-10 that died on the order paper after the last federal election was called.
Carbon capture and 'green energy': We're going to go with technology instead of taxes. Instead of forcing our provinces to impose a tax on their citizens, we're going to incentivize them to enable more environmentally friendly technology, like carbon capture and storage. … We're going to export our clean, green energy to the world.
"Everyone knows that Pierre Poilievre supported the blockade. ... Well, I'm sorry, if you want to be a leader of a party, if you want to sit in the House of Commons and make laws, you have to obey them," he said. "That's not just a failure in leadership. It disqualifies you, as far as I'm concerned, as being someone who thinks, or aspires to be, a leader of a party."..."I'm proud of the truckers and I stand with them," Mr. Poilievre said in a podcast recorded on Feb. 10, as the protesters who had arrived in late January were settled in and showing no signs of leaving.
"Jean Charest should be excluded from becoming prime minister after he sold out Canada's security for a quick buck by working to get Huawei technology on Canada's communications networks," he said. The comment is in reference to Mr. Charest's previous work as a consultant to China's Huawei in the Meng Wanzhou extradition case and the company's efforts to participate in Canada's 5G wireless networks.
He would also repeal the "anti-free speech" Bill C-11, which regulates online streaming and Bill C-36, which could see a person appear before a provincial court if the person fears that another person will commit an offence motivated by bias or hate.
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has generic name (help)Over 17 years in Parliament, he's always opposed their "great reset," he says. "I'm against their proposals; I'm against their socialist agenda; I'm against the proposals they've made." Despite criticism, he continues, "I've never backed down." As prime minister, if anyone in his cabinet looked to attend the forum's annual retreat in Davos, "They'll have to resign their posts as minister."
Jean Charest has said he wouldn't change Canada's gun laws, including a regulation introduced by the Liberal government that banned some 1,500 types of "assault-style" weapons. That, plus Charest's past support for the long-gun registry, has drawn attacks from firearms groups and leadership front-runner Pierre Poilievre.
While the final membership verification process is still underway, according to the party's leadership contest spokesperson Yaroslav Baran, the first batch of mail-in ballots with all six names on it have already been sent out to Conservative supporters who had memberships pre-dating the leadership race process.
"Everyone knows that Pierre Poilievre supported the blockade. ... Well, I'm sorry, if you want to be a leader of a party, if you want to sit in the House of Commons and make laws, you have to obey them," he said. "That's not just a failure in leadership. It disqualifies you, as far as I'm concerned, as being someone who thinks, or aspires to be, a leader of a party."..."I'm proud of the truckers and I stand with them," Mr. Poilievre said in a podcast recorded on Feb. 10, as the protesters who had arrived in late January were settled in and showing no signs of leaving.
"Jean Charest should be excluded from becoming prime minister after he sold out Canada's security for a quick buck by working to get Huawei technology on Canada's communications networks," he said. The comment is in reference to Mr. Charest's previous work as a consultant to China's Huawei in the Meng Wanzhou extradition case and the company's efforts to participate in Canada's 5G wireless networks.
Over 17 years in Parliament, he's always opposed their "great reset," he says. "I'm against their proposals; I'm against their socialist agenda; I'm against the proposals they've made." Despite criticism, he continues, "I've never backed down." As prime minister, if anyone in his cabinet looked to attend the forum's annual retreat in Davos, "They'll have to resign their posts as minister."
Jean Charest has said he wouldn't change Canada's gun laws, including a regulation introduced by the Liberal government that banned some 1,500 types of "assault-style" weapons. That, plus Charest's past support for the long-gun registry, has drawn attacks from firearms groups and leadership front-runner Pierre Poilievre.
Also on the candidate's chopping block is the federal Liberal's Bill C-11, a new version of the controversial Bill C-10 that died on the order paper after the last federal election was called.
He would also repeal the "anti-free speech" Bill C-11, which regulates online streaming and Bill C-36, which could see a person appear before a provincial court if the person fears that another person will commit an offence motivated by bias or hate.
I am pro-immigration. My wife is a refugee to Canada from Venezuela. Canada needs immigration to fulfill its economic success and so our party will put forward a pro-immigration platform in the next election