Not blue, but blue and orange, which, by the way, happen to be the colours I used when I ran for mayor and went down in flames. That's a different story.
The first thing you did was what one would almost believe to be an insurmountable challenge, a politically impossible assignment, but the Liberals have done it: the Cons and the NDP are united in opposition against the government, to the point that our staffs are working with each other seamlessly. Some of us feel that we almost should have a chair with our name on it in the Conservative House leader's office, because we're over there all the time, with me partly reminiscing but mostly hatching up schemes against you guys.
Normally, the Liberals can expect that because the Conservative ideology and the NDP ideology don't tend to overlap too often, it's a great advantage, especially for a majority government that has all that power that we've talked about, as referenced in these editorials. What better than to add to that an overwhelming majority, with all the power you get, and divided opposition benches? It's the sweet spot. But in this case, the government gets to claim the trophy, because they have managed to unite the opposition benches.
How did they do that, Chair? By being even more anti-democratic than Harper. Now, I could be missing something. I'm not always the sharpest pencil in the box, and I don't say that I am.