David Murray
372 posts

David Murray
@MurrayDavidJ
SVP at https://t.co/ro0FXkMXtX Former Director of Policy @pierrepoilievre


@tylermeredith Mainstreet is the outlier. Subsequent polls have the liberals well enough ahead again. Why do you guys keep clinging to one single poll to pretend you're "so back"? It's very sad if you really believe it, but I think it's just pure disingenuous garbage that you spew out.

If Jean Charest had won the leadership.. odds are the Conservatives would be in government.

Royalty in the front row for the #WorldSeries 👀


Rarely do I disagree with Sean, but I respectfully do on this. Let me offer my own view. The danger of "digital sovereignty" becoming a lucrative grift is very real, and we should worry about it. I'm not endorsing anything the government is or isn't doing on this, but digital sovereignty is still something everyone, including conservatives, needs to think about. Why does this matter? One small but important example. Late in the summer, in a hearing in the French Senate, a senior Microsoft executive was asked if he could guarantee that data from French citizens could not be transmitted to United States authorities without the explicit authorization of French authorities. The executive said that he could not guarantee this due to the US CLOUD Act. The same would be true of Canada. As our lives and society increasingly shift to the digital world, we need to recognize that the digital world is not rule-free. The question is one of power, who makes those rules, who are they made to protect, and where are they made? The digital world is not neutral, so neutrality is not an option. Someone is making the rules. Ultimately, it's about whether Ottawa, Washington, or Silicon Valley should set the rules that govern digital infrastructure, assets, data, algorithms, and technology. Conservatives should think seriously about how we envision that.

Trump signs an EO on H-1Bs raising "the fee that companies pay to sponsor H1-B applicants to $100,000"

Please see my statement on Canada’s intervention before the Supreme Court.




The idea that you can apparently destroy someone’s property at no cost. That’s an interesting precedent.








