You're not voting for a PM, you're voting for an MP and if a bunch of MPs from different parties decide to band together in a coalition they can force in a government from a non-plurality party.
I .. dont see how that applies to what I just said. You're ignoring a lot about politics and looking at the "bright side scenario" to come to that conclusion, it's unlikely to happen and is still advantageous to conservatives eho can do the same. You're still voting for a party on a spectrum
It's not an unlikely scenario, the past two elections haven't resulted in a majority government (which I personally think is extremely healthy). If this poll was the seat proportion on election day we'd likely see something a bit rarer where the plurality party would be excluded from government but it'd be pretty consistent with the past two elections... Trudeau's popularity slumps while CPC palatability to other Canadians continues to decline. Lil' PP certainly isn't going to attract any centrist voters.
Sure, liberals are LARPing as progressive. I'm sure you're going to be thrilled when the conservatives start turning over abortion laws, bring religion into politics and cut more checks to the corporations. That's what they did to our teeth last time. Or better yet, them spending time REDUCING the legal age of consent. Yknow, very cool and very legal policies.