Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "博勵治" in Chinese language version.
In several ways, Poilievre does not fit the mould of a new populist. For one, Poilievre is not new. He was a cabinet minister in the Stephen Harper government and he has been a member of Parliament for almost 20 years. For another, he is not your stereotypical reactionary. He is at ease with the non-traditional family, he is pro-choice, he is pro-immigration.
And Pierre Poilievre, the federal Conservative MP and frontrunner in his party’s leadership race, scores huge applause at a weekend barbecue in Calgary, a city where he grew up and was a paperboy for the Calgary Sun.
His rhetorical style evokes populists such as Donald Trump. But his enemies list is more circumscribed. Unlike Mr Trump, he favours immigration.
<ref>
标签用不同内容定义了多次Enfin, le chef de l’opposition officielle à Ottawa s’est engagé à réduire la bureaucratie et la « paperasserie » imposées aux entreprises afin de les rendre plus productives, notamment dans les secteurs minier et hydroélectrique, pour planifier la transition écologique.
試圖將博勵治妖魔化為“民粹主義者”或加拿大的特朗普,或暗示他是白人優越主義者或反對婦女權利,都不太可能成功。他支持墮胎和移民,並強烈譴責白人替代理論和所有的“那種想法”。
His pay-as-you-go approach to budgeting used in the Clinton and Obama years would help keep the lid on spending and deficits.
'we should be mining lithium, cobalt, nickel and other minerals necessary for electrification — but do it right here in Canada, of course.'
As a teenager, he worked in corporate collections at Telus, calling businesses that hadn't paid their bills and helping them develop payment plans.
We will greenlight mining and manufacturing of minerals like lithium, cobalt and copper to make our electric cars and batteries.
He has been compared to former President Donald Trump for his populist overtures, but in terms of substance, he has largely confined himself to pocketbook issues. He is pro-immigration — his wife is a Venezuelan immigrant — and now calls himself pro-choice.
Mon père qui a des origines canadiennes-françaises et qui vient d'un village fransaskois m'a transmis l'importance de préserver le français dès mon plus jeune âge. [My father, who has French-Canadian origins and comes from a Fransaskois village, taught me the importance of preserving French from an early age].
"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.
But he is no Donald Trump in tenets or temperament. He doesn’t echo the anti-immigrant rhetoric, and abhors Mr. Trump’s gargantuan deficits. He is so calculated that he could never be the erratic bundle of impulses that rambles at a Trump rally.
'We must permit Quebec to build more hydroelectric dams to provide the electricity that will be needed to power electric cars,' the person calling himself Pierre Poilievre said. 'The future of our green economy depends on [critical] minerals and green electricity.'
And second, what parts of his program—which, to be fair to him, he is pro-immigration, pro-same-sex marriage, and pro-choice—do you take exception to?
Mon père qui a des origines canadiennes-françaises et qui vient d'un village fransaskois m'a transmis l'importance de préserver le français dès mon plus jeune âge. [My father, who has French-Canadian origins and comes from a Fransaskois village, taught me the importance of preserving French from an early age].
As a teenager, he worked in corporate collections at Telus, calling businesses that hadn't paid their bills and helping them develop payment plans.
And Pierre Poilievre, the federal Conservative MP and frontrunner in his party’s leadership race, scores huge applause at a weekend barbecue in Calgary, a city where he grew up and was a paperboy for the Calgary Sun.
<ref>
标签用不同内容定义了多次"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 has been compared to former President Donald Trump for his populist overtures, but in terms of substance, he has largely confined himself to pocketbook issues. He is pro-immigration — his wife is a Venezuelan immigrant — and now calls himself pro-choice.
And second, what parts of his program—which, to be fair to him, he is pro-immigration, pro-same-sex marriage, and pro-choice—do you take exception to?
In several ways, Poilievre does not fit the mould of a new populist. For one, Poilievre is not new. He was a cabinet minister in the Stephen Harper government and he has been a member of Parliament for almost 20 years. For another, he is not your stereotypical reactionary. He is at ease with the non-traditional family, he is pro-choice, he is pro-immigration.
But he is no Donald Trump in tenets or temperament. He doesn’t echo the anti-immigrant rhetoric, and abhors Mr. Trump’s gargantuan deficits. He is so calculated that he could never be the erratic bundle of impulses that rambles at a Trump rally.
His rhetorical style evokes populists such as Donald Trump. But his enemies list is more circumscribed. Unlike Mr Trump, he favours immigration.
His pay-as-you-go approach to budgeting used in the Clinton and Obama years would help keep the lid on spending and deficits.
Poilievre pointed out that US Congress also imposed a Pay-As-You-Go Law on the deficit-prone United States Federal Government in 1990, which remained in place throughout the Clinton administration. Within a few years of its introduction, America's deficit was gone and the country had its first balanced budget since 1969.
We will greenlight mining and manufacturing of minerals like lithium, cobalt and copper to make our electric cars and batteries.
'We must permit Quebec to build more hydroelectric dams to provide the electricity that will be needed to power electric cars,' the person calling himself Pierre Poilievre said. 'The future of our green economy depends on [critical] minerals and green electricity.'
'we should be mining lithium, cobalt, nickel and other minerals necessary for electrification — but do it right here in Canada, of course.'
Enfin, le chef de l’opposition officielle à Ottawa s’est engagé à réduire la bureaucratie et la « paperasserie » imposées aux entreprises afin de les rendre plus productives, notamment dans les secteurs minier et hydroélectrique, pour planifier la transition écologique.
Poilievre pointed out that US Congress also imposed a Pay-As-You-Go Law on the deficit-prone United States Federal Government in 1990, which remained in place throughout the Clinton administration. Within a few years of its introduction, America's deficit was gone and the country had its first balanced budget since 1969.