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Gladu's floor crossing shows the Liberal tent is big enough to welcome real talent, and that's a good thing. Her engineering background, energy expertise and fiscal hawk instincts are exactly what this governing party needs to continue building Canada strong. Meanwhile, Poilievre's inability to keep a four-term MP who won with 59% of the vote is a five-alarm fire for Conservative leadership.
Gladu’s traitorous move is part of an unprecedented wave of floor crossing eroding Canadian democracy. Voters cast ballots for a party, not a free agent who can jump ship whenever it's convenient. When elected MPs switch sides, they invalidate the democratic mandate voters handed them and hand power — in this case a majority — to a party nobody chose. Until a by-election is required, every floor crossing makes the entire system more illegitimate.
Gladu’s switch lays bare what being a Liberal now means — not shared principles, just shared ambition. A party that can absorb a staunch Conservative one day and a left-wing defector the next isn’t a “big tent,” it’s a power magnet. Ideology bends, reverses, or disappears entirely if it helps secure a majority. In today’s Liberal Party, values aren’t the foundation, only winning is.