While electoral strategy is often likened to a chessboard, in Canada it looks much more like a game of Chinese checkers. Four or five parties, and a number of notable independents, simultaneously wage battles against a subset of their opponents in different parts of the country.
While electoral strategy is often likened to a chessboard, in Canada it looks much more like a game of Chinese checkers. Four or five parties, and a number of notable independents, simultaneously wage battles against a subset of their opponents in different parts of the country.