In Canada's pandemic election, unvaccinated candidates are knocking on
doors
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[August 23, 2021]
By Steve Scherer
MIRAMICHI, New Brunswick (Reuters) - In
Canadian federal elections, it is a tradition for candidates to knock on
people's doors to ask for their support. Ahead of next month's vote,
most of the contenders doing the rounds will be vaccinated against
COVID-19 - but not all of them.
The Conservatives, led by the still little-known Erin O'Toole, and
the small right-wing People's Party of Canada (PPC) are not requiring
inoculations for their candidates as a fourth wave builds mainly among
the unvaccinated.
This does not sit well with millions of inoculated Canadians, who are
enjoying their first taste of freedom and normality after 17 months of
pandemic life, and three-quarters say they have little sympathy for
those who choose not to get the shots, according to an Aug 17 Angus Reid
poll.
"If you have a candidate going door-to-door and they are not vaccinated,
and they knock on the door of a senior citizen who is immunocompromised
... then they put them in danger," said Trevor Boutilier, a 40-year old
Ottawa bus driver, who is not planning on voting Conservative for the
first time in his life.
Two days before calling a snap Sept 20 vote, Liberal Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau mandated vaccinations for federal employees and
domestic air and train travelers, thrusting the issue to the forefront
of his election bid.
While campaigning in the Atlantic provinces on Sunday, Trudeau brought
his Procurement Minister Anita Anand, who he called his "minister of
vaccines", and Liberal candidates wore pins saying "I'm fully
vaccinated."
"We now need to protect our kids," Trudeau said at a Liberal rally in
Miramichi, New Brunswick, referring to children under 12 who cannot yet
access any of the inoculations. "We have not finished the fight against
COVID-19."
Trudeau, 49, called the election on Aug 15, two years ahead of schedule,
in hopes his handling of the pandemic, his successful national
inoculation campaign, and his plans to support an economic rebound would
propel Liberals to a majority after relying on the support of opposition
parties since 2019.
"The Liberals will want to make (vaccine mandates) a wedge issue because
they know that it's divisive within the Conservative tribe," Nanos
Research pollster Nik Nanos said.
In Canada, 72% of the eligible population has already been vaccinated
against COVID-19, and support for a proof-of-vaccination system for
travel and public events is above 61% nationally, according to an EKOS
poll published on Aug 16.
Even most Conservatives and O'Toole himself have had two shots, but
about 15% of Conservative voters still have not been inoculated,
compared to 4% of Liberals, the EKOS poll said. A third of PPC voters
have not been vaccinated.
PPC leader Maxime Bernier on Friday called Trudeau's vaccine mandate for
domestic travel "fascist", making it clear where right-leaning voters
can go if O'Toole were to agree with Trudeau.
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Justin Trudeau, Liberal leader of Canada, visits the riding of
Malpeque in Cornwall, Prince Edward Island, Canada, August 22, 2021.
REUTERS/John Morris
"This mirrors what's going on in the United States,
with Republicans being much less likely to vaccinate than
Democrats," EKOS President Frank Graves said.
Unlike in the United States, Canadian politicians of different
stripes have, by and large, approached the fight against COVID-19 as
a non-partisan national health issue.
POLLS TIGHTENING
O'Toole, 48, has argued his position on federal workers is
essentially the same as the Liberal's because the mandate is not
likely to be fully enforced, with the main union representing public
servants saying accommodations like testing must be made.
But the Conservative leader has struggled more to defend his
position on candidates and travel. A campaign official declined to
say how many Conservative candidates had not been vaccinated.
"Erin O'Toole won't come clean on which candidates he is putting
forward ... who won't get vaccinated," Trudeau said on Thursday.
Polls have tightened since the campaign began, in part because many
voters did not like the idea of having an election in a pandemic,
pollsters say.
During the initial days of the contest, O'Toole shunned in-person
rallies for virtual events, calling "Mr. Trudeau's pandemic
election" a threat to public health.
Trudeau says the pandemic is the reason an election is needed, so
Canadians can choose the party that will lead them safely through
it.
The Liberals would win 32.4% compared to 32.8% for the
Conservatives, putting the parties in a statistical tie, according
to an EKOS poll from Sunday.
(Reporting by Steve Scherer; editing by Diane Craft)
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