For years, Canadian conservatives whined about vote splitting like it was the only reason they couldn’t win an election. Well, guess what? If Mark Carney becomes Canada’s next Prime Minister, it won’t be because of Conservative vote splitting. It’ll be because the NDP split the vote with the Liberals long enough to make themselves irrelevant.
That’s right — Canada’s far-left socialist party, the NDP, once gave the Liberal Party the kind of voter base they could never build on their own. It was the NDP that reached the disaffected, the union loyalists, the socialists, the students. The Liberals? They hijacked that platform, dressed it up in press conferences, and rode it to power through image and charisma.
Now, with Mark Carney on deck, the Liberals are doing it again — except this time, they’re hijacking the Conservative playbook.
Carney Is Not a Fiscal Conservative — He Just Talks Like One
Let’s be crystal clear: Mark Carney is not Paul Martin. He’s not Jean Chrétien. He’s not even Bill Morneau. He’s a banker, not a finance minister — someone who moves money, but never once had to build a dollar from scratch.
His supporters — many of whom have no economic literacy — are trying to brand him as a “sensible centrist,” the second coming of 1990s Liberals. But that’s revisionist history at best.
The 1990s Liberals only moved to the right because they were forced to. You can thank the Reform Party for that — the only party in modern Canadian history that actually educated the public about economics. Their existence pulled the Liberals from Trudeau’s far-left nonsense back to a centrist position, one that actually cut spending and balanced budgets.
And how did the Liberals win? Because the vote was split. Reform and the Progressive Conservatives fought for the same voters. Sound familiar?
Jagmeet Singh & The NDP: A Party That’s No Longer Needed
The NDP, once a voice for the working class, is now a footnote, and Jagmeet Singh is leading them into total political irrelevance.
Today’s Liberal Party is the NDP — just with better marketing and international donors. Singh sold out long ago, propping up Trudeau’s broken leadership in exchange for superficial gestures and empty policies. That’s the reality.
So now, leftists across Canada are making a cold calculation: Why vote NDP when we can get everything we want with Carney — plus international clout, plus Ivy League branding, plus photo ops with the Davos crowd?
The NDP is finished. Their entire reason for existing has been absorbed, co-opted, and repackaged by a Liberal party that eats its own when it’s politically convenient.
Carney’s Vision Will Cripple the Private Sector
Mark Carney, like most globalist elites, believes the economy is a spreadsheet — a tidy series of line items that can be tweaked with carbon taxes, ESG policies, and feel-good regulation.
But here’s the problem: Carney has never lived in the real economy.
He’s never had to sweat for a paycheck. Never had to sell, hustle, or grind to make payroll. He’s a bean counter — and that’s how he’ll govern.
So when he slaps a carbon tax on Canadian producers who don’t bow to his ESG agenda, what happens?
Producers pass costs to consumers (if they can).
Consumers stop spending.
Businesses cut jobs.
And we enter stagflation.
The Canadian dollar will be debased because money printing will be his only tool. Inflation will rise while productivity falls — and the Forex markets will notice. At best, the loonie gets punished. At worst? It collapses in real terms.
Carney Isn’t a Fighter — He’s a Flatterer
Let’s not pretend Mark Carney is built for the storm that’s coming. The moment his policies start backfiring — and they will — he won’t dig in. He won’t fight for small business or defend the middle class.
He’ll step down. Quietly. Embarrassed.
Because Carney isn’t a wartime prime minister — he’s a cocktail circuit technocrat. He’s there to implement the script, not defend it. And when the economy turns against him (as it always does under top-heavy regulation), he’ll vanish with a carefully crafted exit speech and a European advisory gig.
The Final Word: Collapse Is Coming — Prepare Accordingly
Conservatives who feared vote splitting never understood the real game. The left uses vote splitting strategically. The right panics over it emotionally. That’s the difference.
Now, the same pattern is repeating — except this time, it’s the collapse of the NDP that opens the door for a globalist banker to sell socialism in a three-piece suit.
If Carney wins, the warning signs will be immediate:
Sluggish private sector growth
Increased consumer inflation
Investment fleeing to the U.S.
A dollar under pressure
A nation losing faith in its leadership — again.
You can’t say you weren’t warned.