Everyone won apparently

Everyone won apparently

Everyone has a story about winning, and almost none of them hold up.First up, the Iran ceasefire. After nearly six weeks of Operation Epic Fury, the US and Iran agreed to a two-week pause in the fighting — announced on Truth Social less than two hours before Trump's own deadline, the one where he threatened to send Iran "back to the stone ages." Both sides declared total victory. The problem is the Strait of Hormuz is still largely closed, over 400 tankers remain anchored in the Persian Gulf, and Iran is now demanding tolls for ships passing through what used to be an international waterway. Joseph and Andrew break down what the stated war aims actually were, whether any of them were achieved, and why Trump's inability to set modest goals — and stick to them — has handed the Iranian regime a survival story it will tell for decades. Andrew puts it plainly: if you're going to take on a despotic regime, you have to do it from the moral high ground. Threatening to wipe out a civilization is not that.Then, the floor crossings. Conservative MP Marilyn Gladu became the fifth MP to cross to the Liberals since last April's election, bringing Carney's seat count to 171 — one short of a majority. With three byelections on April 13th in Scarborough Southwest, University–Rosedale, and Terrebonne, a Liberal majority is now a question of when, not if. What makes Gladu's crossing so striking isn't just the number — it's who she is. An MP who aggressively challenged the COVID response, pushed back on vaccine policy, fought the conversion therapy ban, and voted to restrict abortion is now a Liberal. Joseph and Andrew credit Fred Delorey for the framing: what we're seeing isn't just Conservative dysfunction — it's Mark Carney operating as a ruthless political player. The whole caucus is now available for picking, not just the red Tory wing. And for Pierre Poilievre, Andrew draws the parallel nobody wants to hear: Jeremy Corbyn nearly won in 2017, and by 2019 the public had moved on. Moments pass.Finally, Hungary. On April 7th — five days before the election — US Vice President JD Vance flew to Budapest, stood on stage with Viktor Orbán, called Trump on his phone so the crowd could hear "I love Hungary and I love Viktor," and told voters to stand with Orbán at the polls. He did all of this on the same day he called EU behaviour "one of the worst examples of foreign election interference I have ever seen." Andrew doesn't mince words on the hypocrisy — and draws on his own experience as a British MP who did Council of Europe election monitoring to explain just how extraordinary Vance's visit actually was. Joseph flags the Russia angle: the Financial Times has reported a Kremlin-linked operation flooding Hungarian social media to boost Orbán — and now you have the US and Russia aligned on the same side of a European election. Andrew's line: the MAGA obsession with strongmen is being used by Putin like a useful idiot.The Hungarian election is April 12th. Independent polls have Tisza up 16 to 19 points. We'll see.

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Episoder(72)

One Country, Two Fires

One Country, Two Fires

A week ago, the Henry Nowak case was the story dominating the news agenda. Then Belfast caught fire — literally — and two separate stories became one. Percy and Joseph work through how a murder in Sou...

11 Jun 38min

The Purity Test

The Purity Test

Over the weekend the BC Conservatives picked the candidate the smart money had written off — and half the commentariat instantly called it a gift to the NDP. We're not convinced. A party that went fro...

2 Jun 34min

37 Words: How Alberta's Ballot Question Tilts the Field

37 Words: How Alberta's Ballot Question Tilts the Field

Last week, we recorded with Evan Menzies about the brewing Alberta referendum — and within hours of us hitting publish, Premier Smith unveiled the actual ballot question. So we're back at it.It's also...

27 Mai 42min

Alberta Separatism with Evan Menzies

Alberta Separatism with Evan Menzies

In February, Dave Cournoyer told us Alberta was sliding toward a separation referendum the pro-Canada side wasn't ready to fight. Three months later, the referendum is both stalled and very much alive...

21 Mai 51min

James Wharton on Reform's Surge and Starmer's Survival

James Wharton on Reform's Surge and Starmer's Survival

Sixty episodes ago, James Wharton came on the show with a Labour government struggling to find its sea legs. 15 months later, Keir Starmer is fighting for his job.So we brought James back. Lord Wharto...

12 Mai 42min

Kyla Ronellenfitsch on the Conservatives' brand problem

Kyla Ronellenfitsch on the Conservatives' brand problem

For forty years, the Conservative Party owned cost of living. Not anymore — and Kyla Ronellenfitsch has the polling to prove it.This week on Craft Politics: pollster and data scientist Kyla Ronellenfi...

30 Apr 39min

Rudy Husny Breaks Down Quebec's Political Landscape

Rudy Husny Breaks Down Quebec's Political Landscape

We brought in Rudy Husny — former senior advisor to Ed Fast at International Trade, two-time federal Conservative candidate in Outremont, 2020 Conservative leadership contender, and one of the most th...

22 Apr 40min

Majority Rules

Majority Rules

Carney has his majority — 174 seats after sweeping all three by-elections. First time a Canadian minority has become a majority through floor-crossings and by-elections. But the bigger story is the Co...

16 Apr 39min

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