The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Window narrows for Trudeau to win majority in snap vote

- STEVE SCHERER

OTTAWA — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has a window for a snap election that could give him a majority government and free him of his dependence on opposition parties to govern – if only they would cooperate and withdraw their support.

On Wednesday Trudeau’s Liberals, doing well in polls due to their handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic, sought to capitalize on that boost before an emerging second wave worsens and expensive financial aid programs begin to wind down.

The government called a surprise confidence vote which, if lost, would have triggered a snap election. But the left-leaning opposition New Democrats backed Trudeau, allowing the government to survive.

“I’m convinced that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was looking for a way to go to an election,” New Democrats leader Jagmeet Singh told the Canadian Broadcasti­ng Corp after the tense vote on Wednesday.

“We’re not going to let them go to an election just because it suits them,” Singh said.

Trudeau, who has been in power since 2015, lost the popular vote last year after struggling through an ethics scandal and the emergence of old pictures of him in blackface, leaving him with a minority government. That means Trudeau must negotiate all legislatio­n to win opposition support. A majority government is independen­t.

But his handling of COVID-19 has put wind in the Liberals’ sails, and there is no way to predict how long it will last.

“If we look at the 6-, 12-, 18-month horizon, there are an increasing number of uncertaint­ies related to the state of the economy and what happens with the pandemic,” said pollster Nik Nanos, founder of Nanos Research.

“(Liberals) are starting to see a window that’s open today and that they know will be open 60-90 days at the very least. Why try to extend the mandate when they can have a smash and grab majority?” Nanos said.

The Liberals would win 38.5% of the vote today, according to Nanos Research, 6 points more than their main rivals, the Conservati­ves, which could be just enough to secure a majority.

Getting there needs the New Democrats to stop backing the government, including the pre-Christmas fiscal update, which Liberals have said will include major spending plans.

KINGMAKER

The New Democrats have said they want to use their kingmaker position to force the Liberals to incorporat­e more social safety-net measures into the spending package. The party is also wary of an expensive election campaign.

But this week, as it negotiated with the Liberals for its support to quash a Conservati­ve motion that led to the confidence vote, it got no concession­s. The Liberals abruptly cut off talks on Tuesday morning, an NDP source said.

“It’s hard to sit across the table and negotiate with somebody who wants to lose (the negotiatio­n),” the source said.

Trudeau has insisted he does not want an election. Instead, he wants to pass pandemic aid and the fiscal package to stimulate an economic recovery.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
REUTERS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

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