Category Archives: Politics

U.S. showing “authoritarian tendencies“

When political scientists talk about signs of dictatorship (or “authoritarian drift”) in a democracy like the U.S., they usually look at patterns of behavior rather than one single event. Here are the big theoretical markers:


1. Weakening Checks and Balances

  • A leader tries to bypass Congress, ignore court rulings, or sideline independent agencies.

  • The balance of power tilts heavily toward the executive branch.


2. Undermining Elections

  • Casting doubt on election legitimacy without evidence.

  • Limiting who can vote, or making voting harder for certain groups.

  • Using state power to tilt the playing field in favor of one party.


3. Attacking Free Media and Information

  • Labeling independent media as “fake news” or enemies.

  • Restricting journalists’ access or punishing critical coverage.

  • Flooding the public with disinformation to confuse facts.


4. Cult of Personality

  • The leader becomes larger than the party or the system.

  • Followers show personal loyalty to the individual rather than the Constitution or institutions.

  • Symbols, slogans, or direct appeals bypass normal political processes.


5. Undermining Rule of Law

  • Selectively applying laws against political opponents.

  • Shielding allies from legal accountability.

  • Using law enforcement or intelligence services for political gain.


6. Erosion of Civil Liberties

  • Restricting protests, free speech, or assembly.

  • Expanding surveillance of citizens.

  • Targeting minority or opposition groups as scapegoats.


7. “Emergency Powers” That Never End

  • Declaring crises to justify expanded executive powers.

  • Keeping extraordinary powers in place after the crisis is over.


The U.S. system was designed to resist dictatorship through the Constitution, federalism, and a culture of democratic norms. But theory reminds us: institutions only hold if people — leaders, voters, judges, military, civil servants — continue to respect them.

⚖️ So, the U.S. doesn’t meet the definition of a dictatorship, but political scientists warn that if too many of these warning signs pile up without pushback, any democracy could drift toward authoritarianism.

Parliament Resumes

🇨🇦 🏛️

Monday  marks the return of the House of Commons, as Parliament reconvenes under the newly seated government. What to know:

  • Leaders from the Liberal and Conservative parties opened the session talking cooperation — but it didn’t take long for the usual sparring to begin. Housing, cost of living, deficits: these are front and centre. North Shore News

  • Prime Minister Mark Carney is facing pressure to show how his government will deliver on promises now that the legislature is active again — particularly with the minority status meaning he’ll need opposition support. North Shore News

  • Among the key issues: upcoming austerity budget, border security legislation, and the challenge of balancing principles with compromise. North Shore News

  • What to keep an eye on

    • How opposition parties respond to the budget and whether they support or block measures, especially those that affect costs of living.

    • Whether cross-party cooperation materializes in more than just rhetoric.

    • Any major shifts in policy or tone from the government now that it’s back in session.

With Parliament returning, Here’s what to keep an eye on:

 


🔍 Key Issues & Developments

  1. The Budget

    • The Government has delayed its budget until October. North Shore News

    • Look for details on deficit projections, spending vs cuts, and how much will be allocated to capital vs operating costs. North Shore News

  2. Trade & Tariffs Tensions

    • Canada’s relations with the U.S. over tariffs—especially in steel, aluminum, softwood lumber, and autos—are under pressure. North Shore News+1

    • Farmers (canola, etc.) and fishers (lobster, etc.) are especially watching how trade negotiations with China and other partners evolve. North Shore News

  3. Bail, Crime, & Public Safety Legislation

    • Expect competing proposals (“duelling bail bills”) from the Conservatives and Liberals. North Shore News

    • Also legislative efforts around public safety, organized crime, possibly safe zones around places of worship. North Shore News

  4. Leadership & Opposition Dynamics

    • Pierre Poilievre has once again taken the floor as Leader of the Opposition after winning a byelection, setting the stage for sharper exchanges with Prime Minister Carney. North Shore News+1

    • With a minority government, every bill is likely to depend on negotiating support from smaller parties. North Shore News

  5. Confidence Votes & Parliamentary Strategy

    • The budget will function as a confidence measure. Given the minority situation, Government must ensure it has enough support. North Shore News

    • Watch how the Liberals approach deals with the Bloc Québécois, NDP, and Greens—whether they try to legislate broadly or pick and choose support issue by issue. North Shore News


🗣 What to Listen For

  • Question Period exchanges between Carney and Poilievre, especially on trade, inflation, and fiscal responsibility.

  • Statements or motions that test the government’s stability.

  • Whether smaller parties (Bloc, NDP, Greens) will leverage their position or align with government/Conservatives on specific bills.

  • Reactions from the public and stakeholders (businesses, provinces, industries) once budget details are released.


💡 Why It Matters

  • Decisions made this fall will shape Canada’s economic trajectory—deficit, inflation, trade relationships.

  • Legislation around bail, crime, and public safety has direct impacts on communities.

  • Minority governments tend to require compromise, which can shift policy in unexpected directions.

Trump is being played

Trump is being played, but Putin is the one doing the playing.

Every move on the global chessboard shows it. While Trump thinks he’s calling the shots, Putin has been setting the board, moving the pieces, and waiting for Trump to fall into traps.

It’s not about strength — it’s about strategy. Trump thrives on headlines, ego boosts, and instant wins. Putin thrives on patience, manipulation, and long-term power plays. One chases applause; the other chases control.

The danger isn’t that Trump doesn’t see the game.
The danger is that he doesn’t even realize he is the game.