Besides last time PPC got 3% of the vote. If they get 7%, that's EXACTLY what Ham is saying sends the message to Conservatives, even if the PPC had no seats. If they lose seats because they don't represent 20% of their potential voting base, they'll adapt or die.
I'm in my late 20s, so I'm not much ahead of you, and I only woke up to politics in 2015 anyhow.
If you want a good historical context of what the PPC is trying to do, look up the reform party 1987 and what they became.
You said what's on my mind. People saying the PPC only got 3% of votes last election are fools. It's a new party. No one expect them to win or even get 10%. But they did get nearly 400,000 votes Canada wide. It could be 800,000 next election and even if no seats are won I will be happy knowing there are 800,000 reasonable Canadians out there who think like me and who are tired of CPC.
Besides last time PPC got 3% of the vote. If they get 7%, that's EXACTLY what Ham is saying sends the message to Conservatives, even if the PPC had no seats. If they lose seats because they don't represent 20% of their potential voting base, they'll adapt or die.
I'm in my late 20s, so I'm not much ahead of you, and I only woke up to politics in 2015 anyhow.
If you want a good historical context of what the PPC is trying to do, look up the reform party 1987 and what they became.
You said what's on my mind. People saying the PPC only got 3% of votes last election are fools. It's a new party. No one expect them to win or even get 10%. But they did get nearly 400,000 votes Canada wide. It could be 800,000 next election and even if no seats are won I will be happy knowing there are 800,000 reasonable Canadians out there who think like me and who are tired of CPC.