Canada is unaffordable, unsafe, and ungoverned — because Ottawa chose it. We will unchoose it.
Every plank below goes to the floor of the House in our first session. No royal commissions, no five-year studies, no walking it back after the election.
Everyone in Canada illegally goes home. No amnesty. No ten-year appeal ladders. Deportation orders enforced in weeks, not decades. Foreign nationals convicted of serious crimes serve their full sentence, then are removed from Canada permanently — no second chances, no re-entry.
The death penalty for first-degree murder, fentanyl kingpins, and human traffickers — whoever commits the crime, citizen or not. Ottawa abolished it in 1976 without ever asking you. We'll put restoration to a binding national referendum in year one.
End catch-and-release bail. Mandatory prison for repeat violent offenders. Sentences served in full — no automatic release at two-thirds. Build the prison capacity to make every one of those words real, and stop pretending a court date is a punishment.
Prices are high because demand is imported faster than homes are built. Removing everyone with no legal right to be in Canada takes the pressure off housing overnight. Official multiculturalism has failed — we will repeal the Multiculturalism Act and stop funding division. Canada's Christian heritage gets the same protection the law already gives Indigenous heritage: this is its homeland — its land, its culture, its calendar. One public culture, one flag over public buildings and public ceremonies. No enclaves, no parallel societies, no neighbourhood where Canada ends at the street sign. Immigration goes to near zero — 1950s volumes, 1950s expectations: come legally, support yourself, and join the public life of the country you asked to join. Those who won't, don't stay.
Larger classrooms, fewer classes, and a self-led, AI-assisted curriculum. Teachers freed from lecturing to do what software never can: give every child a secure, inviting place to learn. Scrap the lockstep grade system — a student who can excel, excels, years ahead of schedule. Ottawa's lever is investment, not interference: federal dollars build the networks, connectivity, and computing power that make it possible, while classrooms stay local. With that investment, every student in Canada gets a personal AI teacher for every subject.
In private, you are sovereign — your home, your faith, your family, your property. You should never have to fight to be an individual, and under our government you won't, because the people trying to hurt you will be in prison. Harassment, intimidation, and violence get prosecuted, not managed — and that includes the organized version: any campaign to intimidate a street, a block, or a neighbourhood into leaving gets prosecuted as organized crime. Ringleaders imprisoned, foreign nationals deported after sentence, the network dismantled. In public, there is one Canadian culture, and everyone in public life participates in it. The state's job is simple: keep you safe, keep the public square Canadian, and leave your private life alone.
Our government will do the following, in this order:
A decade of open-door policy wasn't an accident — it was the plan. Judge the government by what it built: the most expensive housing market in the G7, record food-bank lineups, deportation orders nobody enforces, schools sliding down every international ranking, and a resource sector buried under its own permits. They didn't fix it because the people funding them profit from it.
A federal party isn't registered by wanting it. The Canada Elections Act sets out exactly who must exist before Elections Canada adds a party to the registry: a leader, a chief agent, an auditor, at least four officers, and 250 confirmed members. The Crusader Party is a republic — nobody is appointed. Once the Party Platform Debate is settled, the Crusader Elections fill every position, including the leadership, by party vote. Declare your candidacy below; the member drive is at the bottom of the page.
The party's chief financial officer under the Canada Elections Act. Receives contributions, authorizes spending, and files the party's financial returns with Elections Canada. No party can be registered without one. Suits someone with financial management or compliance experience — and nerve.
The Act requires every party to appoint an auditor before it can register. You must hold a professional accounting designation (CPA) and be a member in good standing of a recognized accounting body. You audit the party's annual financial return — the independent eyes Elections Canada demands.
Elections Canada requires a minimum of four officers, whose names and addresses appear in the party's public registry entry. Officers are the governing spine of the party: bylaws, conventions, riding associations, candidate processes. Founders, in the most literal sense.
Federal party registration requires 250 confirmed members under the Canada Elections Act. Add your name now — you'll be contacted to confirm membership when registration is filed with Elections Canada.