Parties trade accusations on trail
TORONTO • Accusations of wanton spending, misleading the public and prioritizing votes over the crisis in Afghanistan dominated the seventh full day of the federal election campaign.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh began Sunday in Toronto at an event honouring the tenth anniversary of Jack Layton's death. Layton led the NDP for eight years and the party soared to historic heights under his guidance, winning 103 seats in the 2011 election.
Singh paid tribute to Layton and his legacy and then took aim at Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau's response to the situation in Afghanistan. Choosing his words carefully, Singh said he wondered if the timing of Trudeau's election call had inhibited Canada's ability to help its allies in a country thrown into chaos since it fell to the Taliban this month.
“Maybe the fact that Justin Trudeau called an election might have impacted his ability to plan for the evacuation of our allies in Afghanistan,” he said. “And I'm worried about that, I'm thinking that maybe more could have been done.”
Singh said he would have sped up evacuations and made the paperwork process simpler. “When we've got an imminent humanitarian crisis, that is not the way to respond.”
As of Sunday morning, three flights had left the country since the Taliban takeover, carrying Afghans who once worked with Canadian forces in the war-torn country.
Meanwhile, the Conservatives took a swipe at Liberal spending with a news release highlighting the purchase of a $40,228 car for fisheries minister Bernadette Jordan.
The news release also pointed to $218,000 spent on furniture for the ministerial office since Feb. 1, 2019. Jordan was sworn in as minister in November that year.
The Liberals said the Conservatives were misleading the public. Jordan didn't have a car when she became minister, so one was bought for her use, said Liberal spokesperson Brook Simpson.
“As the Conservatives are aware, all cabinet ministers and the leader of the official Opposition, regardless of the party in power, have access to a vehicle to carry out the work of their offices,” Simpson wrote.
Further, the office expenses were incurred during a renovation that began prior to Jordan being sworn in as minister, Simpson said.
Pointing to a CBC News story from September 2020 that highlights $170,000 worth of taxpayer-funded renovations to Stornoway, the leader of the Opposition's official residence in Ottawa — and hence O'Toole's home since August 2020 — Simpson asked: “If the Conservative position is that renovation expenses should be repaid, will O'Toole pay back the $170,000 for his taxpayer-funded residence renovations?”