Montreal Gazette

NDP leadership hopefuls agree on everything

Four candidates not afraid to find common ground

- MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH

OTTAWA • It became clear at the first official debate for the New Democratic Party leadership Sunday that the four candidates are in complete agreement on essentiall­y every issue — and they’re not afraid to say so.

It was a rah-rah atmosphere in Ottawa as Manitoba MP Niki Ashton, B.C. MP Peter Julian, Northern Ontario MP Charlie Angus and Quebec MP Guy Caron expressed generally similar policy positions and built on each other’s arguments — a marked contrast from 14-person stages and wild policy differenti­ation in the Conservati­ve Party’s concurrent race.

The bilingual debate Sunday sounded much like the NDP’s policy booklet come to life.

“You’re very well-behaved debaters,” the moderator chimed in after one of many exchanges where candidates acknowledg­ed their full agreement with one another.

The crowd of partisan faithful — around 500 in the main room and another 200 in an overflow room — clearly found all this agreement agreeable.

With federal Liberals reneging on some of their more progressiv­e policies, the NDP candidates appeared to want to harness populism on the left — and the party’s traditiona­l working-class base — just like some Conservati­ves are trying to do on the right.

“(Trudeau is) not really progressiv­e. He plays one on TV, but he hasn’t been the kind of leader that people seek,” Julian said.

Ashton said it’s time to be unapologet­ic about “building a movement,” and investing in organizing.

“We have to ensure that we are reaching out to diverse communitie­s,” Julian said.

Caron agreed: “We need to reconnect with our members, with our riding associatio­ns, with our communitie­s and with Canadians.”

This connection doesn’t happen in the House of Commons, Caron said. It happens “when we talk to people.”

Generally speaking, candidates saw income inequality and climate change as the two biggest issues facing Canada. “We all agree” on that, ex-finance critic Caron said.

Few specific policy ideas have emerged that differenti­ate candidates, although Caron said he would implement a national basic income — something all candidates will likely not be on board for — while Ashton has said she would institute free post-secondary tuition.

One issue that could become a major differenti­ating factor is how candidates will reconcile natural resource developmen­t with environmen­tal policies.

Angus and Caron both praised how the Alberta NDP has navigated this issue. But rifts between Alberta New Democrats and the rest of the party — since provincial and federal are intertwine­d — could prove interestin­g.

Julian and Ashton seemed stronger in their opposition to pipelines, though all candidates, like their party, have so far rejected projects currently on the table, including Energy East and Keystone XL.

Candidates universall­y agreed on the need for the NDP to mobilize its membership and harness social movements.

“It’s time to take back our country from the rich and powerful and offer fundamenta­l change,” Ashton said, adding a “neo-liberal agenda” from past Liberal and Conservati­ve government­s needed to be replaced with a new progressiv­e agenda. The “one per cent” keeps getting stronger at the expense of regular people, she said.

Angus said while the government waxes on about the middle class, New Democrats can harness and understand the “new working class.” They’re “white collar and blue collar,” he said.

“We need the certainty and the fire to say that power doesn’t just belong to the well-connected and the cronies,” Angus said.

On trade deals, the candidates were similarly skeptical.

“God help Canada,” Angus remarked, after noting Trudeau invited former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve prime minister Brian Mulroney to help with potential renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Aside from the foursome who debated in Ottawa Sunday, two others are said to be weighing their options for a potential bid: Sid Ryan, a longtime union leader, and Jagmeet Singh, the deputy leader of the Ontario NDP.

The next debate takes place in Montreal March 26, featuring questions from the NDP’s youth branch.

The party will choose its new leader by ranked ballot this October.

BY REALLY FOCUSING (THE $8M INNOVATION INVESTMENT) ON THE FIRM RATHER THAN ON ... INSTITUTIO­NS OR ON INCUBATORS YOU ACTUALLY GIVE THEM THE JET FUEL THAT THEY NEED TO GO AND COMPETE GLOBALLY. — BEN BERGEN, COUNCIL OF CANADIAN INNOVATORS WE HAVE TO ENSURE THAT WE ARE REACHING OUT TO DIVERSE COMMUNITIE­S.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Left to right, Guy Caron, Charlie Angus, Niki Ashton and Peter Julian were described as “very well-behaved debaters” during the first federal NDP leadership debate in Ottawa on Sunday, after the four candidates acknowledg­ed their agreement on most of the main issues discussed.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Left to right, Guy Caron, Charlie Angus, Niki Ashton and Peter Julian were described as “very well-behaved debaters” during the first federal NDP leadership debate in Ottawa on Sunday, after the four candidates acknowledg­ed their agreement on most of the main issues discussed.

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