Grassroots Coalition becomes pro-Reform federalist Coalition of Principled Canadians and an Ontario-first provincialist Ontario Alternative
Last week on the Saturday, many leaders of several coalitions of concerned citizens meet yet again in Kingston to discuss their shared concerns about the future of the country and decide what direction this growing movement of principled grassroots politics was going to go, a compromise later on was made between the pro-Reform federalistas and the Ontario-first provincialistas, a move towards now going both ways had been made, the Grassroots Coalition pronged out into two campaigns, a pro-Reform federalist Coalition of Principled Canadians and an Ontario-first provincialist Ontario Alternative, with one goal being that of the original Kingston Accord, but will remain working between each other as the campus youth progressive democratic reformers who by a majority are provincial political partyless will keep good relations and open cooperation with the more adult elder conservative traditional reformers who still identify by a majority with the federal Tories but want to bring back real Reform to this nation once more.
The finishing result was the formation of an interim steering committee of 7-9 people with a possibility of having a representative from each province, which will develop a mission statement, declaration of principles and policies and work to create a working platform to go federal between now and Monday, October 19, 2009, it will continue to organize meetings with like minded groups to explore opportunities and to develop a political organizational structure for a possible federal party, however the main debate for this federal group was the debate over whether to limit its efforts to southern and central Ontario for the short term or expand its span to other provinces immediately, where many individuals have expressed interest in participating in this project nationally, with the internet begin the deciding factor, the Coalition of Principled Canadians will be inviting more group leaders to meet with them all in Kingston again on Saturday, June 23, 2007 as the exploration into the feasibility of inviting electronic input from those future representatives from the other provinces to become more inclusive for all Canadians not just Ontarians and is part of the greater plan to expand federally from coast to coast.
So moving past the Conservative's failed Unite the Right theory, just as the recent Liberal-Green-New Democrat coalition to Unite the Left flopped too, as its Elite Liberal Left wing of Stéphane Dion, Bob Rae and Elizabeth May couldn't win in Québec because of the Bloc Québécois, this is because any Reform movement never was Tory or Grit and one plus one didn't necessarily equal two, one has to wonder how after Western and Québec Conservatives left the top-down Tory Progressive Conservatives, Reform went from Alliance then back to the Tory model that was the Elite Conservative Right wing yet Bloc Québécois stayed constantly regionalist, maybe the reason lies in the English acronym spelt from the top-down transition's initials when collectively combined as a R.A.T. process from first to worst, actually similar to when the Ontario Tories wunderkinds originally helped name the Alliance C.C.R.A.P., as in Canadian Conservative Reform Alliance Party and never seemed to actually end the fiasco, so it only makes sense that this grassroots political movement would federally call itself Coalition of Principled Canadians or C.P.C., however back here provincially within this Silent Majority Revolution in Ontario, a mantra has developed that Ontario doesn't play second fiddle to any nation but the Dominion of Canada as Québec is not a nation but a province within Confederation like the rest of us - if this can't be agreed to then perhaps the time has come for everyone to decide!
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