These issues below are sorted in descending order based on how important the average Canadian voter ranked them on the quiz.
DW>DW ChatGPT Party ResearchYes, big grocery chains are exploiting inflation to gouge families for record profits |
David Weber’s answer is based on the following data:
Strongly agree
Yes, big grocery chains are exploiting inflation to gouge families for record profits
The party has repeatedly highlighted excessive corporate profits and concentration among major grocers and supported tougher enforcement/competition reforms; framing high prices as profiteering by big chains fits their messaging during the recent cost-of-living debates. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.
Agree
Yes, food is a human right and the government must ensure it remains affordable
Greens often use rights-based framing on basic needs and support policies to ensure affordability (income supports, anti-poverty measures, market regulation). They may not explicitly endorse price caps as the primary tool, but the principle aligns. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.
Agree
Yes
Greens have emphasized affordability and stronger action on grocery price gouging/market power (e.g., calls to strengthen competition policy and scrutinize major grocers), but they more often propose anti-gouging/competition measures than broad, permanent price caps. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.
Slightly disagree
No, we need more competition from foreign chains, not government interference
They support increasing competition and curbing oligopoly power, but are not typically champions of relying on foreign chains as the main solution and would be wary of deregulation/market-only approaches over stronger domestic competition rules and enforcement. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.
Disagree
No
They generally support government intervention to address affordability and corporate concentration in groceries; an outright rejection of caps/intervention is not aligned with their typical stance, though they may be cautious about blunt price controls. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.
Disagree
No, price controls defy basic economics and will inevitably lead to empty shelves
Greens are less likely to argue from a laissez-faire 'price controls always fail' perspective; they tend to favor targeted regulation and oversight, even if they might acknowledge risks of poorly designed caps. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.
Very strongly disagree
No, high prices are caused by the carbon tax and government debt, not grocers
The Green Party strongly supports carbon pricing and would reject blaming grocery inflation primarily on the carbon tax/government debt; they have defended carbon pricing as an essential climate policy with rebates/offsets. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.
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