The 2017 federal election was a referendum on two sets of policies that had been in place for nearly a decade: the Liberals and the Conservatives.
The Liberals, who were in power for eight years, had a majority in Parliament.
The Conservatives, who had dominated Canadian politics for decades, had governed Canada for eight.
The result of the election was the Liberal Party, led by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
The Liberal Party has never before won an election in Canada.
The election of 2017 was, in some ways, the first in Canada to feature a majority party, but it was a narrow victory for the Liberals.
On Election Day, the Liberals were up by about 1.3 percentage points over the Conservatives, a margin that gave the Liberals a clear majority in the House of Commons.
The Conservative Party, which had governed in opposition for more than two decades, lost seats in the provinces, and their seats went from the Conservatives to the New Democrats, who won a majority of seats in Parliament with about two-thirds of the vote.
For a short time, the election seemed to be a referendum not on Trudeau’s party, which was the main opposition party, or on the Liberal leader, Justin Trudeau, but on the way Canada had been governed since Confederation.
Trudeau has made Canada a much fairer, more just country.
But the political landscape has changed.
The last federal election saw the Liberals win the majority in both houses of Parliament for the first time since 1984.
That year, the Conservatives won a landslide victory in the 2014 federal election.
This time, both Trudeau and the Liberals faced a minority government.
The majority government, led in the absence of a Liberal government, was able to govern for almost six years.
The government also had a significant mandate, with more than half the population having voted for the governing party.
The Trudeau government has promised to bring down the deficit, raise taxes and invest in infrastructure, while slashing the size of government and lowering the minimum wage.
But this government has also faced some criticism from within its own ranks for not making the promised changes to help Canadians who are struggling.
And Canadians were not the only ones to say they weren’t happy with the results.
The polls, conducted by Ipsos-Reid on behalf of the Centre for Policy Alternatives and conducted between January 20 and March 12, suggest that a majority still view the Liberal government as not honest.
“We need to have a full and frank discussion of how we get back to a more just and fair country and the fact that we’ve had this election, we’re in a minority and we’re looking to get rid of this government and we need to get a good deal for Canadians,” says James Clements, an assistant professor of political science at the University of Toronto and author of a report on the 2016 election.
“And to say that we need an election and the results are in the Liberal camp, it’s kind of a leap to say we don’t have an election.
The fact that they were able to get that kind of an election, I think, is something that is deeply concerning.”
Clements says the Liberals have struggled with the question of how to make changes to Canada’s health-care system.
They have proposed to repeal the current system and replace it with a single-payer system.
However, Clements believes the Liberals are “not really committed” to making the changes needed.
“I think that’s the real problem,” he says.
“They’re not ready to say, ‘Look, we’ve got to do something that’s not only fair but good.’
That’s not going to help us in the long run.”
In the months following the election and following Trudeau’s election victory, many Canadians expressed their frustration with the Liberal and Conservative governments, and the lack of action they had taken to improve their governments’ record on public services.
Many also expressed disappointment in the way their politicians were able or willing to communicate with them.
Many Canadians are frustrated by what they see as their government’s inability to provide a meaningful, meaningful plan for their country.
“People want to be able to hear from their elected representatives, and to know what’s really going on in the government, but at the same time they’re not able to,” says Clements.
“It’s frustrating.”
The Liberals and Conservatives are currently locked in a bitter battle for control of the federal government, with the Liberals holding a narrow majority in most polls and the Tories holding a majority.
Both governments have pledged to spend $1.5 trillion over the next five years on infrastructure, and have promised to cut corporate taxes and to implement a national childcare plan.
The parties have also pledged to raise the minimum wages of low-wage workers.
But both of the parties have not come up with specific policies that they would like to see enacted, and they have not made promises to help those Canadians who currently struggle to get by.
Many are worried that a lack of transparency and a lack,