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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7-page paper focuses on the movement of Canada's political system to the more right-wing Reform Party, from the Progressive Conservative Party. Bibliogprahy lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTneoconca.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
more power at any one time than another. The Liberal Party (LP) held sway and power from 1935 to the late 1950s, and then came back to power from the
late 1960s and well into the 1980s (Encyclopedia of Nations, 2008). The LPs emphasis was that of trade and cultural relationships with the United States (Encyclopedia of Nations, 2008). On
the social side, the Liberal Party was supportive of increased government benefits to those on welfare. The LP also likes free trade (Encyclopedia of Nations, 2008).
The LPs opposite, the Progressive Conservative Party (PC) was in power from 1957 to 1968 and then from 1984 until the early 1990s, was more focused
on Canadas relationships with the United Kingdom (Encyclopedia of Nations, 2008). Though the conservatives have typically liked more protection than their liberal counterparts, political considerations of a global society have
changed this hard-and-fast rule to some degree (Encyclopedia of Nations, 2008). Additionally, the Progressive Conservatives wanted fewer people on the welfare dole and more people earning a living through gainful
employment. But in the late 1990s, the entire system changed, as the far right-wing populist Reform Party, formed in Alberta in
1988, increased its representation in Parliament to 60 seats, with help from support in the western provinces (Encyclopedia of Nations, 2008). This ended up being a majority -- and in
January 2000, members of the Reform party voted to create a broader and stronger conservative group dubbed the Canadian Alliance, which brought together the populist Reform Party with the Progressive
Conservatives in an attempt to unseat the Liberals (Encyclopedia of Nations, 2008). This ended up as the Conservative Party of Canada (CPC), officially created in 2003 (Cooke, 2006). Stephen Harper,
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