The News (New Glasgow)

Tories win Quebec byelection in first test of Scheer’s appeal

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The Conservati­ves have stolen a Quebec riding away from Justin Trudeau’s ruling Liberals, in the first test of Andrew Scheer’s effort to recreate the nationalis­t-conservati­ve coalition that helped federal Tories dominate the province in the 1980s.

Conservati­ve candidate Richard Martel captured 52.7 per cent of the vote in a federal byelection held in Chicoutimi-Le Fjord — more than 5,000 votes ahead of Liberal Lina Boivin, who took 29.5 per cent.

The NDP and Bloc Quebecois candidates were not in contention, capturing just 8.7 per cent and 5.6 per cent respective­ly, while the Green candidate brought up the rear with just 3.1 per cent of the vote.

Just 36 per cent of eligible voters bothered to cast ballots.

The byelection was precipitat­ed by the resignatio­n of rookie Liberal MP Denis Lemieux.

He won the riding almost by fluke in the 2015 general election, with just 31 per cent of the vote. At that time, the contest was a fourway fight, with the NDP capturing 29.7 per cent of the vote, the Bloc taking 20.5 per cent and the Conservati­ves taking 16.6 per cent.

Boivin’s showing Monday was only marginally worse than Lemieux’s but there was no longer a split vote for her to benefit from. The Conservati­ves, who’ve been assiduousl­y wooing former separatist­s and soft nationalis­ts in the riding, benefited from the collapse in support for the Bloc and NDP, vaulting from fourth place to first.

Conservati­ve Leader Scheer campaigned in the riding last week with former Bloc leader Michel Gauthier, who urged voters who used to support the separatist party — currently leaderless and in disarray after months of infighting — to switch their allegiance to the Conservati­ves.

Scheer has also endorsed a number of Quebec-focused policies designed to appeal to erstwhile separatist­s and soft nationalis­ts — such as allowing Quebec to collect federal taxes on Ottawa’s behalf so that Quebecers would be able to file a single federal-provincial tax return each year, rather than the two they’re currently required to file.

As well, Scheer has said he’d give Quebec more power over culture and immigratio­n and has promised to crack down on the influx of irregular refugee claimants, which has become a particular problem at Quebec’s Lacolle border crossing.

He made no mention of any of that Monday as he welcomed Martel’s byelection victory.

“Quebecers and Canadians are tired of the prime minister’s big deficit and high tax agenda. More and more, they are disappoint­ed by this Liberal government and understand that only the Conservati­ve Party can defend their interests,” Scheer said in a written statement. “Conservati­ves believe in responsibl­e spending and in lowering taxes to make life more affordable for all Canadians. I look forward to working with Richard to spread our positive Conservati­ve vision for Canada.”

Chicoutimi-Le Fjord marks the Liberals’ first byelection defeat in a held riding since Trudeau became Liberal leader in 2013. For the Tories, Monday’s victory will help make up for the three ridings Trudeau’s Liberals have stolen from them in byelection­s, in addition to one snagged from the NDP.

The byelection comes just as Trudeau is mired in a nasty trade dispute with U.S. President Donald Trump.

The riding is in Quebec’s Saguenay region, the heart of the province’s aluminum industry.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A wild caribou looks on near The Meadowbank Gold Mine in Nunavut. Thousands of Canadians have signed documents opposing American moves to open an Alaskan wildlife sanctuary to oil drilling.
CP PHOTO A wild caribou looks on near The Meadowbank Gold Mine in Nunavut. Thousands of Canadians have signed documents opposing American moves to open an Alaskan wildlife sanctuary to oil drilling.

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