Lethbridge Herald

Voters go to the polls

FEW SURPRISES EXPECTED FOR BYELECTION­S TODAY IN QUEBEC, ONTARIO AND ALBERTA

- Joanna Smith

There will soon be five new MPs heading to Ottawa, but there is likely no mystery over which side of the House of Commons they will be sitting.

The five byelection­s taking place today are to fill seats vacated by some highprofil­e politician­s who had usually won their reelection­s by large margins, which usually means they will stay in their partisan folds.

That includes Calgary Heritage, which had been represente­d by former Conservati­ve prime minister Stephen Harper, and Calgary Midnapore, which was held by former Harper cabinet minister Jason Kenney before he left to focus on his ultimately successful bid for the leadership of the Alberta Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party.

The other three byelection­s — in the Montreal riding of Saint-Laurent, Markham— Thornhill, in the Greater Toronto Area, and Ottawa— Vanier — will likely elect Liberal MPs, as they have each done for many years.

Liberal party spokesman Braeden Caley played it safe when asked for his expectatio­ns, focusing on the efforts the candidates were making, saying the Liberal candidates in all five ridings had knocked on more than 160,000 doors between them.

Conservati­ve spokesman Cory Hann noted his party fared well in byelection­s when they were in government, and said he expected the Liberals to do the same.

“We can see that Liberals are going to have the upper hand in these,” said Hann.

It’s a tried-and-true method of keeping expectatio­ns low — so much so that Hann once used it to argue the opposite in 2014, when the Conservati­ves were in power.

Asked about that Sunday, Hann said the Conservati­ves felt they were facing possible protest votes at the time, but the fact remains: “Government­s do tend to have the upper hand in these byelection­s.”

Still, political junkies will be paying attention.

Emmanuella Lambropoul­os, a 26-year-old high school teacher, stunned many when she won the Liberal nomination contest in Saint-Laurent, defeating former Quebec cabinet minister Yolande James, who was considered to be the Liberal party favourite to replace Stephane Dion, the former Liberal leader who resigned his seat to become ambassador to Germany and the European Union.

Lambropoul­os is up against Conservati­ve candidate Jimmy Yu, NDP candidate Mathieu Auclair and William Fayad, for the Bloc Quebecois.

Markham—Thornhill could be one to watch, as Mary Ng, who is on a leave of absence from her job as director of appointmen­ts for Trudeau, is the Liberal candidate vying to replace John McCallum, a longtime MP who resigned his seat to become the Canadian ambassador to China.

In that riding, Ragavan Paranchoth­y is running for the Conservati­ves and Gregory Hines for the NDP.

There is also the possibilit­y that the current unpopulari­ty of the Ontario Liberal government led by Premier Kathleen Wynne could influence how people in the province feel about the federal Liberal party.

“Something people who watch the political tea leaves will be looking to see is if there is any impact the provincial numbers may be having on federal ridings,” said Greg MacEachern, a former Liberal strategist who is now at lobby firm Environics Communicat­ions.

The other Ontario byelection is in Ottawa-Vanier, which Liberal MP Mauril Belanger represente­d from 1995 until he died last August.

There, Mona Fortier won a hotly contested nomination contest to be the Liberal candidate, and she is up against Conservati­ve candidate Adrian Paul Papara, NDP candidate Emilie Taman and Green party candidate Nira Dookeran.

This is one riding where the NDP is feeling some mild optimism.

“We’re not expecting a major upset, but at the same time . . . there are lots of folks feeling that the government has taken them and their support for granted,” said Robert Fox, national director of the NDP, who said the Liberals’ broken promise on electoral reform is getting some traction.

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