Just to play devil's advocate...
Parrothead wrote:Some of his promises included:
Massive infrastructure spending over the next 10 yrs.
Good. Here in MA people don't like spending on infrastructure, and it sucks - the roads are bad, the bridges are in disrepair, and the rails were futzed for months after last winter's blizzard. Thousands and thousands of people were unable to commute. The costs were through the freaking roof.
Running "modest" $10b deficits for the next 3 yrs.
Not sure how your economy's doing, but depending on that deficits may not be seen as a priority. Several economists might back me on that, for largely pragmatic reasons.
(As for deregulation, Bill Clinton tried that. It got us the Collapse of 2007. And as for austerity... well, look at Europe.)
Pulling Canada out of bombing Syria.
Syria is *hugely complex, and I can't presume to know much about the situation on the ground. Here, though, there's a lot of debate about whether e.g. a no-fly zone would be more helpful.
Introducing a Carbon Tax, investing in green energy.
I suppose that, given the Canadian oil export business, this may look like shooting yourselves in the foot. I see it as planning ahead. Your oil won't last forever either.
Buying next gen CF-18s instead of F-35s, then spending any savings on the navy.
Hmm. I don't know much about the state of Canada's navy. F-35s, uh... I know they're expensive and IIRC kind of kludgey. I don't keep up much on military matters.
It may be a matter of priority again, though. If you're pulling out of Syria, and not inspecting foreign fighters to appear in your sky any time soon... well.
During the foreign policy debate, IIRC, Trudeau said he'd tell Putin off, to his face. Uhm, there's a G-20 meeting coming up
Okay,
that smacks a little of cowboy diplomacy. I can understand the sentiment though, Putin is a total antidemocratic shit.
Edit:
We'll see how things go, with time.
That was my thought, the first time Bush Jr. was elected.
Didn't turn out too well.