The Hamilton Spectator

What the political parties learned from Quebec byelection

- CHANTAL HÉBERT Twitter: @ChantalHbe­rt

Andrew Scheer’s Conservati­ves are not going to allow Justin Trudeau to rebuild a Liberal fortress in Quebec without a fight: that’s just one of the messages from Monday’s Chicoutimi-Le Fjord’s byelection upset. And some of the other messages — in particular for the New Democrats — are more alarming than others.

But first some essential electoral geography pertaining to the Quebec riding where 53 per cent of voters turned their backs on Trudeau, trading a seat on the government benches for a Conservati­ve one on Monday.

In the last federal election, every party won some of its Quebec seats in tight fourway battles. Had a small fraction of the vote dispersed differentl­y, Chicoutimi-Le Fjord could just as easily have ended up in the opposition column.

Among the Quebec ridings the Liberals won on election night 2015, they registered their second lowest share of the vote in Chicoutimi-Le Fjord.

Six other Liberal seats in the province — including that of Social Developmen­t Minister Jean-Yves Duclos — are in the same fragile category.

Monday’s byelection results suggest the four-way splits observed in Quebec in 2015 will not be a feature of next year’s general election.

Chicoutimi-Le Fjord also has a fickle history. It changed federal allegiance in five of the seven last general elections. The Tories, the Bloc, the Liberals and the NDP have all had turns at representi­ng the riding. Before 2015, the Liberals had last held the seat during Jean Chrétien’s last term in office. It was less than a full embrace of the party itself. At the time, voters essentiall­y followed floor-crossing MP André Harvey from the Tories to the Liberals.

To score a win on Monday, Scheer did not reinvent the wheel. He borrowed a page from Brian Mulroney’s handbook and made overtures to nationalis­t voters fleeing the Bloc’s civil war. And, like Stephen Harper often did before him, Scheer recruited a candidate whose local popularity stood to make up for his own lack of Quebec coattails.

Over the past month, newly elected MP Richard Martel — a former hockey coach — introduced his leader to Chicoutimi voters rather than the reverse.

At 5.6 per cent, the Bloc Québécois score offers the feuding federal sovereigni­sts a glimpse at their non-existent political future should they insist on going in next year’s general election campaign as a house divided.

The New Democrats, who slipped from a close second place in 2015 to a miserable 8.7 per cent share of the vote, have seen their worst fears confirmed. The party’s hard-earned Quebec footprint is fading.

The Liberals had expected to benefit from the NDP collapse. That did not happen. Their share of the vote remained relatively stable with a variation of less than 2 per cent from the general election. But turnout was down from 66 per cent to 36 per cent. A lot of voters stayed home on Monday.

As Chicoutimi-Le Fjord went this week, Quebec will not necessaril­y go next year.

But there are lasting take-aways from this week’s vote.

With a less-polarizing figure such as Scheer at the helm, it will be harder for the Liberals to rally Quebecers against the Conservati­ves. In Quebec, he will not suffer from comparison­s to his unpopular predecesso­r.

By the same token, the Liberals are living dangerousl­y by continuing to count almost exclusivel­y on Trudeau’s star power to hold his home province.

The prime minister campaigned in the Chicoutimi-Le Fjord and the government showered money on the region, all to little or no avail.

Luckily for the Liberals, their next big byelection test will take place on the friendlier territory of Montreal’s Outremont riding. For Trudeau, the stakes in winning back Thomas Mulcair’s soon-tobe vacated seat have just gone up.

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