INTL Canada Election- September 20, 2021

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

How "Boring" Erin O'Toole Has Come Within A Hair's Breadth Of Unseating "Entitled" Justin Trudeau
Tyler Durden's Photo

BY TYLER DURDEN
SATURDAY, SEP 18, 2021 - 03:00 PM
Over the summer when he first called Monday's snap election, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expected to trample the Conservative opposition, and possibly even cement the Liberals' first majority government since the beginning of his reign.

Erin O'Toole
Trudeau had hoped that his handling of the pandemic might help him gain a political leg up. But one month later, the picture is looking very different. The polls are extremely close, and it's possible that thea Conservatives might upset the Liberals. At the very least, it's looking virtually certain that the Liberals will only manage to securie another minority government in coalition with the NDP and the greens, leaving them effectively right where they started, with the public frustrated over what would then prove to have been a monumental waste of time and resources, according to Bloomberg.



Source: the New Republic

As the campaign enters its last frantic weekend, there are many seats considered a "toss-up” by various pollsters, suggesting the election could go down to the wire.



Source: Bloomberg




Source: The New Republic

With Trudeau terrified of the election slipping away, he came out swinging on Thursday and Friday, attacking his main rival, Conservative leader Erin O'Toole. Trudeau has tried to pitch himself as the better leader on COVID issues, but O'Toole has generated unexpected levels of popularity by insisting that rapid testing is a preferable policy course to vaccine mandates, which Trudeau has implicitly backed.

O'Toole has also successfully slammed Trudeau as a hypocrite for calling an election in the middle of a pandemic.

"Mr. Trudeau called an election that's costing us $600 million rather than keeping the Delta variant from spreading, rather than actually working together."
Despite his recent success in the polls, O'Toole is still a political obscurity in the US. So, in an attempt to familiarize its readers with the potential next leader of Canada, Bloomberg has published a piece on O'Toole trying to explain his appeal to voters.


According to sources quoted in the report, one of O'Toole's most formidable attributes is that he's boring - unlike the flashy political scion whose boyish (and some might say, Fidel Castro-esque) looks have made him a darling of the international press (while enduring constant criticisms of being all surface and little substance), O'Toole is basically the anti-Trudeau. A stolid public servant who achieved his position via hard work, not via birthright.

O'Toole has used this rhetoric as an effective cudgel.

"Every Canadian has met a Justin Trudeau in their lives - privileged, entitled and always looking out for number one," O’Toole said this week near Ottawa, summing up his campaign message. "He was looking out for number one when he called this expensive and unnecessary election in the middle of a pandemic. That’s not leadership, that’s self-interest. And it’s Justin Trudeau through and through."
[...]
"The one big positive thing about Erin O’Toole is what you see is what you get, privately and publicly," said Ashton Arsenault, vice president at Crestview Strategy in Ottawa. "There’s no difference between the two and I don’t think you can say that about everybody in the political universe."
In six weeks, Trudeau's lead has eroded from a 6 point lead to a statistical dead heat.

One of the most bizarre contrasts between O'Toole and Trudeau is their appearance. O'Toole is actually a year younger than the PM. But his thinning white hair give him the air of a dad, not a man-boy.

The suburbs around Canada’s biggest city, known by their area code, 905, are the main electoral battleground. It’s also O’Toole home turf. Although he was born in Montreal, O’Toole grew up near Toronto and has served as the member of parliament for Durham since 2012.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
I thoroughly expect that there will be cheating to get Trudeau over the finish line. Let's hope that the 2020 US Election gave Canadians a heads-up and they can spot it and deal with it more adeptly than we did.


September 18, 20211:41 PM EDTLast Updated 4 hours ago
Americas
Trudeau warns against vote split in dead heat Canada election
By Anna Mehler Paperny and Steve Scherer



3 minute read


DUNDAS, Ontario, Sept 18 (Reuters) - With the Canadian election in a dead heat two days before the Sept. 20 vote, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his Conservative rival implored supporters to stay the course and avoid vote splitting that could hand their opponent victory.

Both men campaigned in the same seat-rich Toronto region on Saturday as they tried to fend off voter defections to the left-leaning New Democratic Party (NDP) and the populist People's Party of Canada (PPC), both of which are rising in polls.

The latest Sondage Leger poll conducted for the Journal de Montreal and the National Post newspapers put the Conservatives one percentage point ahead of Trudeau's Liberals, with 33% over 32%. The NDP was at 19% while the PPC was at 6%.

Trudeau, 49, called an early election, seeking to convert approval for his government's handling of the pandemic into a parliamentary majority. But he is now scrambling to save his job, with Canadians questioning the need for an early election amid a fourth pandemic wave.

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"Despite what the NDP likes to say, the choice is between a Conservative or a Liberal government right now," Trudeau said in Aurora, Ontario. "And it does make a difference to Canadians whether we have or not a progressive government."

Trudeau has spent two of the final three days of his campaign in Ontario where polls show the NDP could gain seats, or split the progressive vote.

A tight race could result in another minority government, with the NDP, led by Jagmeet Singh, playing kingmaker. It has also put a focus on turnout, with low turnout historically favouring the Conservatives. read more

With polls suggesting a Liberal minority may be the most likely result on Monday, Trudeau was pressed on whether this could be his last election. He responded: "There is lots of work still to do, and I'm nowhere near done yet."

If voters give Trudeau a third term, everything they dislike about him "will only get worse," Conservative leader Erin O’Toole told supporters on Saturday, saying his party was the only option for anyone dissatisfied with the Liberals, in a dig at the PPC.

The PPC, which has channelled anger against mandatory vaccines into surprising support, could draw votes away from the Conservatives in close district races, helping the Liberals eke out a win. read more

On Saturday, the Liberals announced they would drop a candidate over a 2019 sexual assault charge that the party said was not disclosed to them. Kevin Vuong, a naval reservist running in an open Liberal seat in downtown Toronto, denied the allegations on Friday, noting the charge was withdrawn.

"Mr. Vuong will no longer be a Liberal candidate, and should he be elected, he will not be a member of the Liberal caucus," the party said in a statement on Saturday.

Earlier this month, Liberal member of parliament Raj Saini ended his re-election campaign amid allegations of inappropriate behaviour towards female staffers.

O'Toole, 48, campaigned in Saini's district on Saturday, one of three Liberal ridings he is hoping to swing his way. Earlier, he appeared in a Conservative-held riding west of Toronto that was closely fought during the 2019 election.

The area’s member of Parliament, who is not running again, came under fire last spring for saying COVID-19 lockdowns were the "single greatest breach of our civil liberties since the internment camps during WW2."

O'Toole, who said he wants to get 90% of Canadians vaccinated, has refused to say who among Conservative Party candidates were.

Reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Andrea Ricci
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
 

DHR43

Since 2001
The People's Party of Canada has a platform that I'm sure 95% of the members here would enthusiastically endorse. All other major parties are substantially or radically leftist.
 

CGTech

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Agreed. I was looking over platforms yesterday before starting to bring the winter wood inside, trying to decide who is actually worth my vote...

:prfl:
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

LIVE

News|Interactive
Infographic: All you need to know about the Canadian election
Canadians go to the polls on Monday. Here’s what you need to know about the parties, leaders, and key election issues.
More than 27 million people are eligible to vote as Canadians on September 20 will elect the country's next parliament [Al Jazeera]

More than 27 million people are eligible to vote as Canadians on September 20 will elect the country's next parliament [Al Jazeera]
By Alia Chughtai
19 Sep 2021
Canadians will vote on Monday to elect the country’s 44th Parliament after a campaign that has seen Prime Minister Justin Trudeau‘s Liberal Party in a tight race against the opposition Conservatives.
More than 27 million people are eligible to vote, according to Elections Canada, which reported this week that approximately 5.78 million ballots have been cast in advance polls.
KEEP READING
Canada election: Meet the major party leaders‘What next?’: Experts in Canada alarmed by anti-Trudeau protestsCanada’s Conservative leader now says he will keep firearms ban
On election day, the polls open and close at staggered times across Canada, which stretches across several time zones. The last polls close on the country’s west coast at 7pm local time (02:00 GMT).
Election officials say the final results could be delayed in some close races as mail-in ballots, expected to number in the hundreds of thousands, are counted.

Here’s all you need to know about the Canadian electoral system, the key issues at the heart of this year’s campaign, who Canada’s main party leaders are, and what they have promised.
The system
Canada is a parliamentary democracy.
Monday’s vote will decide the 338 seats in the House of Commons, the lower house of parliament.
To achieve a majority government, a party needs to secure 170 seats.
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-01.jpg
To win a majority, a party must get 170 seats in the House of Commons [Alia Chughtai/Al Jazeera]Key issues
The federal election campaign comes amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Canada has reported more than 1.56 million cases and more than 27,300 coronavirus-related deaths to date, according to Johns Hopkins University data.
In addition to the pandemic, the economy, housing, the climate crisis and health care are some of the critical issues on the minds of Canadians ahead of Monday’s vote.
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-10.jpg
COVID-19, the economy, housing, the climate crisis and health care are some of the critical issues on the minds of Canadians [Alia Chughtai/Al Jazeera]Poll numbers
The Liberals, headed by Trudeau, and the Conservative Party, led by Erin O’Toole, have been neck-and-neck throughout the campaign, each polling at about the 31 to 32-percent mark. But the Liberals are projected to secure more seats in parliament than the Conservatives.

Jagmeet Singh’s New Democratic Party has come in third with about 20-percent support.

Here’s how the parties stacked up as of September 19:
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-02.jpg
The Liberals and Conservatives have been in a tight race [Alia Chughtai/Al Jazeera]Liberal Party
Trudeau has faced criticism for calling an election two years ahead of schedule, but he defended the decision by saying he wanted Canadians to have a say in how the country recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic.
But the Liberal leader has been met by angry protesters on the campaign trail, with demonstrators denouncing mandatory vaccines and other public health measures.

Last week, after groups of anti-vaxxers organised protests outside Canadian hospitals, Trudeau announced that if re-elected, his party would make it an offence to block access to healthcare facilities or to harass healthcare workers and patients seeking care.
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-09.jpg
Justin Trudeau represents the riding of Papineau in Montreal, Quebec [Al Jazeera]Conservative Party
The Conservative Party has made gains since the start of the election campaign, getting into a close race against the Liberals.
O’Toole, the party leader, has promised billions in new investments if elected and says the Conservatives would balance the budget in 10 years “without cuts” through its economic stimulus and growth plan.
Earlier in the campaign, the Conservatives faced public backlash for saying they would roll back some gun control measures that Trudeau’s government enacted last year. O’Toole later went back on that pledge, saying he would keep the curbs in place.
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-07.jpg
Erin O’Toole won the Conservative Party leadership in 2020 [Al Jazeera]New Democratic Party
Singh, the first person of colour to lead a federal party in Canada, and his left-leaning New Democratic Party are proposing a $20 minimum wage and 10 days of paid sick leave for all federally regulated workplaces which include, amongst others, airlines, banks and most Crown corporations.

The NDP also has pledged to reduce carbon emissions to 50 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.
Late last month, Singh emerged as the most likeable federal party leader in an Ipsos poll; 45 percent of respondents viewed him favourably, compared with 41 percent for Trudeau, who finished second.
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-04.jpg
Jagmeet Singh in 2017 became the first visible minority leader of a federal party in Canada [Al Jazeera]Bloc Quebecois
Yves-Francois Blanchet is the leader of the Bloc Quebecois, a party that only runs candidates in the French-speaking province of Quebec.

Under Blanchet, who represents Beloeil-Chambly, a riding south of Montreal, the party increased its seats in Parliament from 10 to 32 in the last federal election in 2019.
The party says it will introduce a bill making sufficient French-language knowledge a condition for granting Canadian citizenship to immigrants in Quebec, and it has also called for no interference from Ottawa on Quebec laws. That demand comes in light of a controversial provincial law known as Bill 21 that bars some public servants from wearing religious symbols – such as the hijab – while on the job.
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-05.jpg
The Bloc Quebec bills itself as the only party to defend Quebec’s interests at the federal level [Al Jazeera]Green Party
The Green Party won three seats in the last federal election.
Annamie Paul won the party leadership last year but, along with Maxime Bernier, she is one of two federal party leaders who are not members of parliament after she lost a by-election in Toronto Centre in October 2020. She is campaigning for that same seat in this election.

The Greens’ platform primarily focuses on the environment, and the party has pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 60 percent from 2005 levels by 2030.
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-06.jpg
The Green Party has promised to cancel all new pipeline projects in Canada [Al Jazeera]
People’s Party
The far-right People’s Party has no representative in Parliament and got only 1.6 percent of the vote in 2019.
Leader Maxime Bernier formed the party in 2018 after he narrowly lost the Conservative leadership race. Under the PPC banner, Bernier lost his seat in Quebec’s rural Beauce riding, which he had held since 2006, in the last federal election.

The PPC is running on an anti-coronavirus vaccine and anti-immigration platform.
Interactive_Elections_Canada_4-08.jpg
Bernier, a former Conservative MP and cabinet member, formed the PPC after losing the Conservative leadership race in 2017 [Al Jazeera]
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA
 

DHR43

Since 2001
Just got back from voting. Name ID is verified three times and address ID is verified two times.

They give you a one use pencil that you either keep or they dispose of it in the garbage.

They even offer hand sanitizer, which I declined. Huge quantities of disposable masks available.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
This election will also be rigged. I'm sure they have the Soros crew in place.
Dominion has a Toronto office.

Claims are that Canada "hand counts" ballots.


One wonders if they put up cardboard on the windows of the poll precinct - or is that only a BananUS dodge?

Dobbin
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Canada's Trudeau wins another minority in election, claims 'clear mandate'
By Steve Scherer and David Ljunggren, Julie Gordon


4 minute read



  • Summary
  • Liberals retain power but still with minority
  • Trudeau says he has a 'clear mandate'
  • Conservative leader concedes defeat
  • Vote tally trickling in after long lines at many polls
MONTREAL/OTTAWA, Sept 21 (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hung onto power on Monday as his main rival conceded defeat, saying he had won a clear mandate to govern although he fell short of his goal for a majority win.

Trudeau, in power since 2015 and governing with a minority of House of Commons seats since 2019, decided to gamble on an early vote and capitalize on his government's handling of the pandemic, which included massive spending to support individuals and businesses and a push for high vaccination rates.

Instead, he will end up where he started after an unexpectedly tight election race characterized by a lackluster campaign and voter anger at an election during a pandemic.
Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole, whose party placed second, conceded defeat as results trickled in late into the night. Trudeau spoke to supporters shortly after, pledging to work with other parties for the good of all Canadians.

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"You are sending us back to work with a clear mandate to get Canada through this pandemic and to the brighter days ahead," Trudeau said to a small crowd gathered in a hotel ballroom. "What we've seen tonight is that millions of Canadians have chosen a progressive plan."
CBC and CTV projected that Trudeau's Liberal government would hold a minority of seats in the House of Commons, meaning he will need another party's support to govern.

Elections Canada showed the Liberals leading in 156 electoral districts nationally, one more than they held before the election, including 110 in vote-rich Ontario and Quebec.
"It's a Groundhog Day election," said Gerald Baier, a professor of political science at University of British Columbia. "It seems that ambivalence has stayed (from the 2019 election)."
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The House of Commons holds 338 seats and a party needs to win 170 to hold a majority. The Conservatives led in 122 districts.

The Conservatives looked on track to win the popular vote, attracting 34% support to the Liberals' 32%, but Liberal support is centered around urban and suburban areas where there are more seats.

"Our support has grown, it's grown across the country, but clearly there is more work for us to do to earn the trust of Canadians," O'Toole told supporters, while suggesting that he planned to stay on as leader. "My family and I are resolutely committed to continuing this journey for Canada."
Conservative party leader Erin O'Toole speaks during the election night party, in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada, September 21, 2021.  REUTERS/Blair Gable

Canada's Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greet supporters during the Liberal election night party in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, September 21, 2021. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi

Canada's Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, accompanied by his wife Sophie Gregoire and their children Ella-Grace and Xavier, reacts during the Liberal election night party in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, September 21, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio



1/6
Canada's Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greet supporters during the Liberal election night party in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, September 21, 2021. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi

Polls reported results much more slowly than usual, with some stations forced to limit occupancy due to COVID-19 restrictions. Long lines forced some electors to wait hours to vote in southern Ontario, a critical battleground.

The Canadian dollar strengthened against its U.S. counterpart in Asian trading on Tuesday, in part as a projected election win for Trudeau's Liberal party reassured investors that economic support would continue.

STATUS QUO

Trudeau, 49, a charismatic progressive and son of former Liberal Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, swept to power in 2015. But the Liberals dropped to a minority in 2019 after Trudeau was damaged in part by disclosures that he had worn blackface years ago.

Amid a fourth wave of COVID-19, Trudeau backed vaccine mandates while O'Toole, 48, opposed them, preferring a combination of voluntary vaccinations and rapid testing to stop the spread of the virus.

Trudeau had said he needed a new mandate to ensure Canadians approve of his plan for getting the country past the coronavirus pandemic. The Liberals, whose fiscal policy supports for the pandemic exceed 23% of GDP, plan billions in new spending to support economic recovery if re-elected.

Cambridge Global Payments Chief Strategist Karl Schamotta said the election result "essentially preserves the status quo and ensures that the fiscal spending plans that have supported the economy for the last year and half are likely to continue."

A delay in counting mail-in votes could further hold up results in tight races.

Elections Canada will not start counting roughly 800,000 mail-in ballots until Tuesday, after it is able to verify them against in-person votes. Those could help to determine the outcome in at least two Atlantic districts and many more across Canada.

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A second minority government will mean Trudeau's Liberals will have to rely again on opposition parties, such as the left-leaning New Democratic Party, to pass legislation.

"A win's a win, and time in office and power is when you get to make change," said John Duffy, a former Liberal adviser.

Reporting by Steve Scherer and David Ljunggren; Additional reporting by Julie Gordon, Allison Lampert, Moira Warburton, Fergal Smith; Writing by Rod Nickel; Editing by Peter Cooney and Edmund Klamann
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
 
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