Canada's Trudeau, rival look to fire up supporters ahead of tight vote
Send a link to a friend
[September 18, 2021]
By Julie Gordon and Steve Scherer
OTTAWA/WINDSOR, Ontario (Reuters) -Canadian
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday acknowledged the unpopularity of
his pandemic election and intensified his calls on progressive voters to
back his campaign, with his bid for re-election at risk of being doomed
by low turnout.
Opinion polls show Trudeau's Liberals neck and neck with the
opposition Conservatives led by Erin O'Toole ahead of Monday's vote,
suggesting that getting out the vote will be crucial. Low turnout has
historically favored the Conservatives.
Trudeau, at a campaign stop in Windsor, Ontario, on Friday, made a rare
concession that a pandemic election was not ideal, but urged supporters
to vote despite any misgivings.
"I understand the frustration that some people are feeling. They just
want things to get back to normal and an election isn't getting back to
normal," he said, as anti-vaccine mandate protesters chanted outside the
venue.
"It's a time of choice, it's a time of decision, it's a time of stepping
up," he said, painting his party as the best choice to end the pandemic,
fight climate change and grow the economy.
Trudeau, 49, called an early election on Aug. 15, seeking a
parliamentary majority after two years of minority government in which
he had to work with other parties to govern. But he is now scrambling to
save his job.
Two senior Liberals with direct roles in the campaign both told Reuters
they were worried that Canadians might be more focused on returning to
their routines - rather than on politics - and therefore less motivated
to vote.
The pandemic is intensifying in parts of the country and voters will
likely face longer lines than usual on Election Day, due to fewer
polling stations and distancing requirements.
O'Toole, 48, a former Cabinet minister who has led his party for just
over a year, has proved competitive with a disciplined campaign
appealing to centrist voters, while avoiding alienating his center-right
base.
"It's not about convincing people they should think about voting for you
anymore. It's about getting the people who are committed to voting for
you out to vote," said Darrell Bricker, chief executive of Ipsos Public
Affairs.
"Turnout is going to be everything."
The Liberals lead the Conservatives 31.9% to 30.4%, according to the
latest election poll by Nanos Research, with the New Democrats in third
at 20.3%. Trudeau has slight edge on O'Toole as preferred prime
minister, at 29.8% to 27.8%.
But opinion polls do not always reflect what happens on Election Night,
as turnout can hugely affect seat counts.
"If turnout is unusual, we could have many more surprises on Monday
night," Philippe Fournier, a polling analyst for the 338Canada.com
website, told the Reuters Global Markets Forum on Thursday.
[to top of second column]
|
Canada's opposition Conservative party leader Erin O'Toole gestures
as he makes a stop at a constituency office during his election
campaign tour in London, Ontario, Canada September 17, 2021.
REUTERS/Blair Gable
CLOSER THAN EXPECTED
Trudeau held a comfortable lead in the polls going into the
campaign, but that has vanished because of what many voters see as
an unnecessary election.
He also faces a challenge from New Democratic Party (NDP) leader
Jagmeet Singh, 42, who outstrips Trudeau and O'Toole in personal
popularity and appeals to the same voters the center-left Liberals
need. Singh was endorsed Friday by progressive U.S. Senator Bernie
Sanders, a two-time presidential candidate.
If enough voters opt for Singh, it could split the progressive camp
and allow O'Toole to take power. Trudeau on Friday called on
progressive voters to choose Liberals over the NDP to keep the
Conservatives from winning.
"The Liberal party is not only the only party that can stop the
Conservatives, but we're also the only party with a real plan to get
things done," he said.
Trudeau's rallying call was bolstered by former U.S. Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, who on Friday tweeted her support for his
progressive leadership. That followed an endorsement by former U.S.
President Barack Obama on Thursday.
O'Toole, campaigning in London, Ontario, where the far-right
People's Party of Canada (PPC) is gaining traction, jabbed
again at Trudeau's decision to call an election during a pandemic,
painting the Liberal leader as selfish and power hungry.
O'Toole needs to convince PPC supporters that he is their only hope
of getting Trudeau out of office.
"We deserve change. And if people vote for anything other than the
Conservative Party of Canada for that change, then they're voting
for Justin Trudeau," O'Toole said.
Oddsmakers, meanwhile, are betting that Trudeau will indeed win his
third election. They give the Liberals an 80% chance of taking the
most seats, OddsChecker said on Friday.
"We might have done all of this to end up with the same result as
last time," said Daniel Beland, director of the Institute for the
Study of Canada at Montreal's McGill University.
(Reporting by Julie Gordon; Additional reporting by David Ljunggren
in Ottawa, Steve Scherer in Montreal and Lisa Mattackal in Bengaluru;
Editing by Peter Cooney, Alistair Bell, Daniel Wallis and Jonathan
Oatis)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |