New federal party looks for 'lightning' in the mushy middle
He's been an NDP leader and a Tory cabinet minister. Now Dominic Cardy hopes to drag Canadians into the middle, and knows he may well fail
by Donna Kennedy-Glans, Special to National Post · National Post“This is the most uphill of all uphill struggles, trying to break the two-party duopoly in Canada,” admits Dominic Cardy, newly crowned leader of the Canadian Future Party. The new party aims to occupy what it sees as the middle ground in Canadian politics, between Justin Trudeau’s Liberals and Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives.
Energized by the party’s recent and inaugural national convention in Ottawa attended by 112 enthusiastic souls, and excited to be bringing a brand-new political party to voters in a much-anticipated federal election, Dominic is pitching the Canadian Future Party as a political home for moderate centrist Canadians exhausted by polarized politics.