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Christopher Dornan,Jon H.Pammett

The Canadian General Election of 2000

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Many saw it as a gamble for Jean Chretien: against the advice of party members, he called an early election. But the gamble paid off, and the Liberal Party cruised to their third straight majority government.
The Canadian General Election of 2000 is the authoritative study of the campaign and election. As with previous volumes in the Canadian General Election series, the 2000 edition includes analyses of:
the campaigns of all five major parties the roles of the print and electronic media, including the internet the pre-election polls voting behaviour across the country Articles are contributed by some of the most recognizable political writers, commentators, and pollsters, including: Edward Greenspon., Stephen Clarkson, Faron Ellis, Alan Whitehorn, Peter Woolstencroft, Andre Bernard, Paul Attallah, Mary McGuire, Janice Neil, Michael Marzolini, and Andre Turcotte.
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494 trykte sider
Oprindeligt udgivet
2001
Udgivelsesår
2001
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Citater

  • Маша Слепневаhar citeretfor 8 år siden
    ction timing. The personal decision by Prime Minister Jean Chrétien to call an election in the fall of 2000 rather than the spring of 2001 appears in retrospect to have been a masterstroke of political
  • Маша Слепневаhar citeretfor 9 år siden
    ation that something is going to happen — the question is, “What?”

    The arguments that 2000 was a transitional election may appear a bit nebulous. They centre around the increase of support for the Canadian Alliance party, which achieved a growth of 7 percent in its popular vote over its predecessor, the Reform Party. Despite such an improvement in votes, particularly in the province of Ontario which had been a key element in the Alliance strategy, and despite an increase of six seats in Parliament, the Alliance campaign has been generally termed a failure. Expectations were for much higher than these incremental gains, and the measurement of performance against expectations rather than actual results often sets the tone for discussion, and indeed action.
  • Маша Слепневаhar citeretfor 9 år siden
    The Canadian General Election of 2000 presents a puzzle of interpretation. In one sense, it resembles closely its predecessors of 1993 and 1997, which resulted in two majority Liberal governments. The Liberal victory in 2000 means the continuation of the dominance of that party, reasserting its control of the Federal Government for a third straight term in office. It appears unassailable, free to enact as much or as little legislation as it wishes, free to brush off opposition criticisms and ignore minor scandals, free to even now position itself to win a 2003/4 election by selecting the agenda for public discussion in the intervening years
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