bustaheims said:
Truthfully, in the long-run, this loss could be the best thing to happen to the Conservatives. If they're smart, their leadership will move away from the old Reform party side of things and move back towards the centre and the PC elements of their party. A more progressive Conservative party with someone more likeable than Harper could have a very real shot in the next election.
Maybe. But that assumes that they could do that while holding onto whatever is left of the social conservative bones of the Reform base. I think one of the things that will come out of any Conservative leadership campaign is just what an effective job Harper did to satisfy both constituencies in an effort to be electable. If a new Conservative leader swings the party further to the center an a far-right party emerges as a result then that new party could really throw a monkey wrench into any chances of a future Conservative government even if they only muster Green Party levels of support.
I'm not trying to editorialize here, regardless of leanings there's just a simple math problem. In the three elections the Conservatives won they never hit 40% and the three parties running to their Left(ignoring the Bloc for a second) consistently made up 55-65% of the electorate. Those victories were made possible because of a lack of strategic voting on the Left(and, if I can editorialize for a second, some objectively terrible Liberal leaders).
So any chance the Conservatives have in the future depends on one of two things. Either they somehow figure out a way to make up for the fact that, conservatively speaking, they've got a 20-30 point swing to make up in terms of the political landscape of the country or hope that voters have a terribly short memory and forget about the actual consequences of not voting strategically.