As of now (7 am on September 21st), the Conservatives and the PPC handed 25 seats to the Liberals or the NDP by splitting the vote. This includes the Yukon where a former CPC candidate split the vote by running as Independent. And after all mail-in ballots are counted, the PPC will most likely tripled their voter share, from 290k votes to almost 900k votes, without picking up a single seat.
Missed opportunities on both sides and a failed strategy by O'Toole. The Conservatives picked up voters in the Altantics, but not as many as some predicted. The split with the PPC lost them another two or three seats. What the Conservatives gained in the most eastern provinces, they lost in the most western ones. The Liberals picked up two seats in Alberta. Another 6 seats were handed to the Liberals or the NDP in BC by splitting the vote. The Liberals came in only in third place in BC (overall votes), but they picked up the most seats. Quebec is frog country. Nothing changed there. Bloc and the Libs continue to dominate. As for Ontario ... the GTA seems like a lost cause. Outside of the GTA 14 seats were handed to the Libs/NDP, again the Conservatives and the PPC splitting their vote.
The PPC voters will say that the Conservatives deserved it. The die hard Conservatives will call the PPC traitors. In the end this will lead to just another Liberal win.
Personally I don't think the pick ups by the Conservatives in the Atlantics were made due to O'Toole pandering to the left. But I strongly believe that O'Toole lost in the West by pandering too much to the left and thus losing voters to the PPC. Same goes for the suburbs of Toronto and Ottawa, were the Conservatives could have made their way in. Hard to say what the Conservatives and O'Toole will do now. It seems like the wants to stay as leader. Maybe we will see a challenger, but I'm not too optimistic.
They shift left to cater to the centrists, and they leave the right right-wing fringes behind, who then vote PPC.
They shift right to re-capture the right-wingers and they leave their moderate centrists behind, who then vote LPC.
It's a no-win scenario for the Conservatives when there's another right-wing party out there splitting the vote. History has shown this. Canada is a 65-70% left wing country, with the left-wing vote spread over a couple of parties. The only reason conservatives ever get to govern is because there's only one conservative party, consolidating that whole 30-35%, which is sometimes enough to defeat the highest polling left-wing party. Introduce another right-wing party, even one that just polls at a few percent, and that's it. Liberal rule forever.
And Benrier knows this. He knows he's never going to win a seat, and that he's condemning this country to perpetual Trudeau rule. He just doesn't care He's getting paid and that's all that matters.
And PPCtards call themselves "patriots". Amazing.
Even with every last PPC vote going to the CPC that wouldn't have gotten them anywhere.
The current outcome allows the CPC to hold ground and regroup. A minority CPC government, even if they had been able to achieve it, would have decimated any Conservative Party after they got left dealing with the BLOC to hold power for a that short time.
Canada hasn't felt enough pain yet to change the atmosphere. That time is coming.
The CPC may have been right to court leftist views this time around to maintain a semblance of a base but it will need to follow the shift away from this eventually as the inevitable hate comes towards Trudeau and what he has done begins to trully unfold.
Timing is everything. The PPC, whether you want to believe it or not, saved the CPC from an extraordinary slaughter fest. A minority CPC government would have left them holding the Trudeau created shitstorm, that's about to be unleashed, within the next 6 months or so.
If every last PPC vote had gone to CPC, the CPC would have won. https://i.imgur.com/jK9Z8fT.png
They would have won a minority government. 144 is far from 170.
The problem is... Who would have propped them up? The Bloc.
At what cost would it have been to the CPC brand to maintain that. Both financially and in overall voter support if the Bloc later on pulled their support or extorted it so badly that the CPC became the most hated party in Canada.
That's still better than another four years of Trudeau.
They'd have done the same thing previous conservative minority governments did - use their time in office to build the electorate's confidence, and then turn their minority into a majority when the opposition calls an election.