Stand for something. Vote for principles.

The following is a post on Twitter that I feel is worth sharing.

“Why I’m Voting PPC — And Why You Should Too

Let’s get something straight.

Every time I express support for the People’s Party of Canada, someone inevitably throws out the tired line: “You’re splitting the vote.” But ask yourself this—why is it always the PPC being accused of vote-splitting, and never the CPC? It’s as if the Conservative Party thinks they’re entitled to our votes simply because they wear the label “conservative.”

They’re not.

If a party no longer represents your values, they don’t deserve your support. Period.

Let’s call it what it is: the PPC is not splitting the conservative vote—they are the conservative vote. The CPC is just another establishment party trying to masquerade as something they’re not. They’ve abandoned conservative principles on issue after issue, yet expect you to show up on election day like obedient voters and tick the box next to their name out of fear.

Fear of the Liberals. Fear of “wasting your vote.” Fear of not winning.

But I’m not a fear voter. I’m a values voter. And I vote for the party that best aligns with my values—not the one the media tells me is “electable,” and certainly not the one begging for my vote while betraying everything I stand for.

The PPC platform? It’s everything Canadians expect from a principled, conservative party—but aren’t getting from the CPC.

In fact, the PPC is promising to do all the things you wish the CPC would do—things the CPC has outright stated they have no intention of doing.

The CPC is pro-war, pro-NGO interference, and soft on the immigration issues that matter. The PPC, by contrast, is bold, honest, and unafraid to stand on principle, even when it’s unpopular.

And let’s not forget what matters now more than ever:

There is no PPC candidate being accused of being under foreign influence.

There is no PPC candidate who supported vaccine mandates.

None. Not one.

That cannot be said for the CPC, many of whom stood silently or actively enabled the most abusive mandates in Canadian history. And now, they want your vote—again—as if they didn’t betray you when it mattered most.

I used to say the CPC’s greatest asset was Justin Trudeau. But now that he’s gone and Mark Carney is the unelected Prime Minister, the truth has become even clearer: a vote for the CPC is now a vote for the Liberals. Not the other way around.

Why? Because they’re two wings of the same bird.

They don’t oppose each other on principle. They oppose each other theatrically—while remaining united in ignoring the issues that matter to real Canadians. Whether it’s their shared contempt for President Trump, their silence on sovereignty, or their coziness with globalist institutions, it’s obvious: they are on the same team. And you’re not on it.

Conservatives don’t win by playing it safe. They win when they offer bold, unapologetic alternatives to the status quo. That’s what the PPC is doing—and they’re doing it without compromise.

I know and respect many of the candidates running for the PPC. Veterans. Newcomers. Everyday Canadians. People who’ve put everything on the line—not for power, not for recognition—but because they love this country and believe it’s worth saving. Some have worn the uniform. Others are first-generation immigrants who deeply appreciate what Canada once stood for, and are doing everything they can to protect it.

These are the kinds of people I want representing me. And I refuse to reward the CPC—which does not share my values—by abandoning the party that actually does.

This election, I’m voting PPC.

They’ve earned my vote.

Unlike the Liberals and the CPC, who seem more united in their hatred of Trump than in solving actual Canadian issues, the PPC is focused on what really matters: restoring national sovereignty, repairing our fractured relationship with the United States, and putting the interests of Canadians first.

The PPC isn’t just talking about uniting Canada—they’re doing it. They are the only party confronting the globalist agenda that has caused nothing but hardship over the last 9 years. At a time when the stakes could not be higher, “close enough” is simply not good enough.

Stand for something.

Vote for principles.”