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Partridge
01-23-2006, 06:44 PM
Polls Predict Conservative Win in Canada

http://www.localnewsleader.com/elytimes/stories/index.php?action=fullnews&id=129359
(http://www.localnewsleader.com/elytimes/stories/index.php?action=fullnews&id=129359)
By BETH DUFF-BROWN, 52 minutes ago

OTTAWA - Canadians voted Monday in an election sure to dramatically change the country‘s political landscape. All the polls predict a victory for Conservative leader Stephen Harper. That would end nearly 13 years of Liberal Party rule, shift the country to the right and move to improve relations with the U.S. If Prime Minister Paul Martin somehow eked out a victory, he would likely head a weak minority government and find it difficult to get legislation past a divided House of Commons.

"Today will be a great day. Western Canada is finally going to get some representation," said Don Smythe, after casting his ballot for the Conservatives in Calgary, Alberta, Harper‘s constituency. "I think Canada has finally realized that it‘s time for a change and Stephen Harper and the Conservatives are the ones to do it."

He also wants to improve relations between Canada and the United States, which comprise the world‘s largest trading bloc and conduct $1.5 billion in business daily.

The Liberals have angered Washington in recent years, condemning the war in Iraq , refusing to join the continental anti-ballistic missile plan and criticizing President Bush for rejecting the Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions and enacting punitive Canadian lumber tariffs.

He also wants to spend more on the Canadian military, expand its peacekeeping missions in Afghanistan and Haiti and tighten security along the border with the United States in an effort to prevent terrorists and guns from crossing the frontier.

He claims Harper supports the war in Iraq, which most Canadians oppose, and would try to outlaw abortion and overturn gay marriage.

"Canadians can disagree, but it takes a lot to get Canadians to intensely hate something or hate somebody. And it usually involves hockey," Harper quipped.

William Azaroff, 35, voted for the left-of-center New Democratic Party but conceded a Conservative government was likely to win.

Martin‘s government and the 308-member House of Commons were dissolved in November after New Democrats defected from the governing coalition to support the Conservatives in a no-confidence vote amid a corruption scandal involving the misuse of funds for a national unity program in Quebec.

Just as campaigning hit full swing over the Christmas holidays, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police announced they were investigating a possible leak by Liberal government officials that appeared to have influenced the stock market.

When the 38th Parliament was dissolved, the Liberals had 133 seats, the Conservatives had 98, the Quebec separatist party Bloc Quebecois had 53 and the New Democrats had 18. There also were four Independents and two vacancies.

Laureen Browne, a longtime Liberal supporter from Calgary who hasn‘t missed an election in 40 years, worries a Harper government would kowtow to U.S. interests.

"If the Conservatives win, we may as well become another U.S. state and let George Bush make decisions for us," she said. "If I don‘t vote, then I can‘t complain; and if the predictions are right, I will be complaining the loudest."