Today, Harper and the Conservatives are saying that "Canadians rendered a clear judgment in the Federal Election."
Harper continues to try and spin his way into somehow claiming that he and his party won the last election with the will of Canadians. And his main problem has been that he is unwilling to govern in a way that is sensitive to the fact that no matter how you spin the results of the last election, he and his party were not chosen to rule this country by the vast majority of Canadian voters.
In a news release out this afternoon the Conservatives state that:
"Canadians passed judgment on Stephen Harper when they awarded the Conservative Party a strengthened mandate."
Nope, sorry Harper, but no matter how you slice the pie, you and your party did now receive a "strengthened mandate." In fact, the vast majority of Canadians - 62% to be exact - DID NOT vote for you and your party.
And to drive home the point - 165,275 less Canadians voted for you and your party in the this election compared to the previous one held in 2006.
Here's the breakdown:
There was a total of 13,675,146 votes cast in the last election with 5,208,796 going to Harper and the Conservative Party - that's 38% of the vote.
Last time I checked 38% is not a majority - not even close. Definitely doesn't represent the will of the majority of voters.
The Liberals got 3,633,185 votes, the Bloc Quebecois got 1,379,991, the NDP got 2,515,561 and the Green Party came in at 937,613. This makes up the total of the 62% that did not vote for Harper.
Now if I was spin-doctoring for Harper, I would argue off the top that the Green Party numbers should not be included because they are not part of the coalition that is being proposed by the Libs, NDP and the BQ.
Take out the Green Party votes from the last election and you're at 7,528,737 votes going to the NDP, Bloc Quebecois and the Liberals. Harper and the Conservatives can argue (with my fancy spin doctoring) that they received 40% of the vote when compared to the vote totals of the three other parties represented in Parliament.
Still kind of desperate. Definitely still not the majority and the will of the nation.
Okay let's go Karl Rove on the spin-doctoring.
What about if you take out the Green Party and then spin the numbers again claiming that the Bloc Quebecois numbers don't count because they don't represent "Canadian" votes, but "separatist" votes (I know this sounds desperate, but Harper appears desperate at this point, and they're pretty much saying it already).
Okay, let's drop off the BQ's 1.37 million votes and the Green Party's 937,613 votes.
Now we have a total votes cast in the election of 11,675,146 with the Conservatives now getting 45.8% of the vote and the combined Liberals and NDP getting the remaining 54.2%.
Still not a majority with the BQ and the Green Party taken out of the picture.
Sorry, Stephen, but no matter how hard you spin it, you were not given a "mandate" by the majority of Canadians, so please stop talking and ruling the country like you did.
Here's the numbers from the last election and from the 2006 federal election if you want to crunch the numbers yourself.