Here are your answers compared to this voter’s answers.
Social › Abortion
B>B Personal answerPro-choice |
Social › LGBT Adoption Rights
B>B Personal answerYes |
Domestic Policy › Government Surveillance
B>B Personal answerNo |
Social › Gay Marriage
B>B Personal answerYes |
Healthcare › Healthcare Funding
B>B Personal answerIncrease funding but focus on efficiency, ensuring money is spent on frontline services rather than bureaucracy. Prioritize key areas like mental health, rural healthcare, and long-term care for seniors. Encourage innovation and reform (e.g., digital healthcare, better hospital management) alongside funding increases. Consider mixed public-private models to ease demand without fully privatizing care. |
the Economy › Taxes
B>B Personal answerNo |
Education › University Tuition
B>B Personal answerYes |
Domestic Policy › Gun Control
B>B Personal answerNo |
Immigration › Deporting Criminal Immigrants
B>B Personal answerPrioritize skilled immigration to match Canada’s labor needs while ensuring economic benefits. Improve infrastructure planning to support growing immigrant populations without straining public services. Strengthen vetting processes for national security concerns without making the system overly restrictive. Ensure fair and efficient pathways for refugees while preventing abuse of the system. |
the Environment › Environmental Regulation
B>B Personal answerYes |
Healthcare › Healthcare Privatization
B>B Personal answerLess |
Education › Student Loan Debt
B>B Personal answerTarget forgiveness for low-income borrowers or those in critical fields like healthcare, education, or social work. Cap forgiveness based on income to avoid benefiting wealthier individuals who can afford repayment. Reform student loan interest rates so students pay back what they borrowed, not excessive interest. Invest in tuition reduction or expand grants to prevent future debt issues. |
Healthcare › Safe Haven
B>B Personal answerCombine safe havens with addiction recovery programs to ensure they are a step toward rehabilitation, not just a place to use drugs. Increase public education and prevention efforts alongside harm reduction strategies. Implement strict regulations and community engagement to address safety concerns around these facilities. Study the effectiveness of existing sites before expanding them further. |
Elections › Criminal Politicians
B>B Personal answerNo |
Housing › Foreign Owned Homes
B>B Personal answerRestrict foreign home purchases but allow exemptions for permanent residents and those planning to live in the home. Implement higher property taxes on non-resident buyers instead of an outright ban, discouraging speculation while allowing investment. Prioritize policies that increase housing supply, such as faster development approvals and incentives for affordable housing construction. Regulate domestic speculators and multiple-property owners, not just foreign buyers, since they also drive up prices. |
the Environment › Plastic Product Ban
B>B Personal answerYes |
the Environment › Fracking
B>B Personal answerNo |
Housing › Affordable Housing
B>B Personal answerTarget subsidies for affordable and workforce housing, rather than general market housing. Pair subsidies with zoning reforms to speed up construction and reduce red tape. Introduce policies to discourage real estate speculation, ensuring new homes go to residents, not investors. Require a mix of housing types, including rentals, starter homes, and family-friendly units. Ensure infrastructure funding is included to support new developments with roads, schools, and public services. |
Crime › Parole Hearings
B>B Personal answerRequire strict criteria for parole eligibility, such as demonstrated rehabilitation, remorse, and a low risk of reoffending. Increase parole eligibility to 20–25 years instead of 15, to balance justice and rehabilitation. Allow parole hearings but with strong victim and family involvement, ensuring their voices are heard in the decision-making process. Use life without parole for extreme cases, such as serial killings or crimes involving extreme cruelty. |
Elections › Right of Foreigners to Vote
B>B Personal answerConsider allowing permanent residents to vote in municipal elections since they contribute to local communities. Require a minimum residency period before granting voting rights (e.g., those who have lived in Canada for 5+ years). Focus on making the citizenship process more accessible rather than expanding voting rights to non-citizens. |
Crime › Demilitarize the Police
B>B Personal answerYes |
Housing › Home Buyer Incentives
B>B Personal answerSubsidize homebuyers but tie it to increasing housing supply, ensuring developers build more affordable housing. Limit subsidies to first-time buyers in high-cost areas, rather than offering blanket assistance. Encourage rent-to-own programs instead of direct subsidies, allowing gradual ownership. Increase funding for affordable housing construction, which addresses the root problem rather than just demand. Implement tax reforms to discourage speculation, such as higher taxes on empty homes or multiple properties. |
Crime › Defunding the Police
B>B Personal answerShift non-criminal crisis response (e.g., mental health calls) to specialized teams while keeping police focused on serious crime. Increase funding for both policing and community programs instead of taking from one to fund the other. Invest in de-escalation and mental health training for officers to improve public interactions. Audit police budgets to cut inefficiencies without reducing necessary law enforcement services. |
Elections › Minimum Voting Age
B>B Personal answerNo |
Technology › Ethical Artificial Intelligence
B>B Personal answerSupport disclosure for high-impact algorithms (e.g., those affecting elections, hiring, healthcare, or financial services). Push for independent audits rather than full government access—third-party groups could assess fairness and safety without exposing trade secrets. Encourage transparency reports where companies explain how their algorithms work in general terms without giving away proprietary code. Ensure user choice & control so people can opt out of certain algorithm-driven decisions or customize what they see. |
the Economy › Government Spending
B>B Personal answerNo |
Immigration › Temporary Foreign Workers
B>B Personal answerIncrease TFWs in sectors with proven labor shortages (e.g., healthcare, skilled trades, agriculture) while ensuring Canadians get priority in other fields. Improve pathways to permanent residency so TFWs can become long-term contributors to the economy. Strengthen labor protections to prevent exploitation and ensure fair wages. Encourage domestic worker training & fair wages so employers don’t rely solely on TFWs instead of improving conditions for Canadian workers. |
Science › Nuclear Energy
B>B Personal answerYes |
Foreign Policy › Foreign Aid
B>B Personal answerTarget aid more effectively to ensure funds go where they create real impact. Encourage partnerships with Canadian businesses so aid leads to mutual economic benefits. Increase oversight to reduce waste and corruption. Shift focus toward sustainable development rather than just short-term relief. |
Science › Genetic Engineering
B>B Personal answerYes |
Foreign Policy › Military Spending
B>B Personal answerIncrease |
Science › Lab Grown Meat
B>B Personal answerYes |
Transportation › Green Transportation
B>B Personal answerYes |
Foreign Policy › AI Warfare Ethics
B>B Personal answerYes |
National Security › National Identification System
B>B Personal answerYes |
Education › Charter Schools
B>B Personal answerYes |
National Security › Backdoor Access to Encrypted Communications
B>B Personal answerYes |
National Security › Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Defense
B>B Personal answerYes |
Technology › Social Media Regulation
B>B Personal answerSupport disclosure for high-impact algorithms (e.g., those affecting elections, hiring, healthcare, or financial services). Push for independent audits rather than full government access—third-party groups could assess fairness and safety without exposing trade secrets. Encourage transparency reports where companies explain how their algorithms work in general terms without giving away proprietary code. Ensure user choice & control so people can opt out of certain algorithm-driven decisions or customize what they see. |
Domestic Policy › Copyright
B>B Personal answerNo |
Technology › Cryptocurrencies
B>B Personal answerSupport consumer protection laws (e.g., requiring exchanges to be transparent and insured). Encourage reasonable anti-fraud measures without limiting innovation. Push for clear, fair regulations that promote security while keeping crypto accessible. Advocate for tax clarity so crypto users know their obligations without excessive burdens. |
the Economy › Public Sector Borrowing
B>B Personal answerYes |
Transportation › Designated Autonomous Vehicle Lanes
B>B Personal answerYes |
Transportation › Commercial Drones
B>B Personal answerYes |
Here is how you compare to this voter on popular political themes.
You side slightly towards “security”, meaning you more often believe the government should do everything within its power to ensure the security of its citizens. This theme is more important to you.
You side moderately towards “politically incorrect”, meaning you believe our society is becoming too sensitive to language that is direct and honest. This theme is more important to you.
You side slightly towards “nationalism”, meaning you more often support policies that prioritize the interests of our nation above others. This theme is somewhat important to you.
You side slightly towards “decentralization”, meaning you more often believe that administrative power and decision making should be handled at the local level and serve the best interests of the local community. This theme is somewhat important to you.
You are a centrist on capitalism and democratic socialism issues. This theme is somewhat important to you.
You are a centrist on assimilation and multiculturalism issues. This theme is somewhat important to you.
You side moderately towards “left wing”, meaning you support policies that promote social and economic equality. This theme is somewhat important to you.
You are a centrist on authoritarian and libertarian issues. This theme is somewhat important to you.
You side extremely towards “deregulation”, meaning you very strongly believe that government regulation stifles innovation and economic prosperity. This theme is somewhat important to you.
You are a centrist on traditional and progressive issues. This theme is only less important to you.
You are a centrist on anthropocentrism and environmentalism issues. This theme is only less important to you.
You are a centrist on big government and small government issues. This theme is only less important to you.
You side moderately towards “protectionism”, meaning you believe globalization is detrimental to the safety, compensation, environment, and standard of living of workers. This theme is only less important to you.
You are a centrist on collectivism and individualism issues. This theme is only less important to you.
You are a centrist on tough and tender issues. This theme is only less important to you.
You side slightly towards “multilateralism”, meaning you more often believe policy decisions should be made collectively with support of everyone who may be affected by the outcome of the decision. This theme is only less important to you.
You are a centrist on imperialism and isolationism issues. This theme is only less important to you.
You side slightly towards “keynesian”, meaning you more often believe the government should provide economic assistance to stabilize the economy. This theme is only least important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked more important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 2 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked somewhat important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked less important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked less important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked less important to you.
Based on 3 questions that are ranked less important to you.
Here is how you compare to this voter on the traditional ideological axis.
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