Welcome to Concerned Canadians:
Our lives feel like they are changing at a rapid pace. As Concerned Canadians, we attempt to make sense of our country as we go about our day-to-day lives and ask some basic questions so many Canadians are pondering.
Our goal is to bring everyday Canadians together to make change happen.
We feel the same as many other fellow Canadians; daily we discover that our federal government does not hold the same values that have held our country in such high regard around the world. We wore a set of family-type values with pride while travelling or simply speaking to people from other countries, and fear that is no longer part of our identity.
This federal administration has eroded what it means to be Canadian and has become an embarrassment on the world stage.
Our goal is to get that information out to as many Canadians as possible, to those who feel the direction of our country needs to be corrected. Anyone interested in joining Team Canada is more than welcome.
January 29th 2024, please join us in a peaceful gathering at Queens Park in Toronto to invoke our Canadian Parliamentary process and ask Parliament to hold a vote of no confidence in which, upon losing, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland must resign their positions and hold a Federal Election within 45 days of their resignation.
There are a few ways that a vote of no confidence can arise: through one of the opposition parties explicitly stating that the House has lost confidence in the incumbent government; through a question posed by the governing party; or, through the opposing parties’ rejection of an important piece of legislature, such as the budget or the Speech From the Throne (which establishes the government’s plan for the parliamentary session).
Once the incumbents are defeated in a confidence motion, the Governor General decides what happens next. The GG will either invite the opposition parties in the House of Commons to try to form a government (by creating a formal coalition or by having parties make agreements to vote together in the House), or dissolve Parliament and call an election.
