The Welland Tribune

Liberals score upset in Quebec

Tories hang on in Edmonton

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau’s Liberals have pulled off a stunning byelection upset, snatching the federal riding of Lac-Saint-Jean away from the Conservati­ves.

A Liberal victory in Quebec’s nationalis­t heartland — where the party hasn’t won since 1980 and where it posted its worst result in the province in 2015 — would have been remarkable at any time.

But it was particular­ly sweet for the prime minister on Monday, coming at time when his government has been mired for weeks in controvers­y over small business tax reform proposals, the personal finances and ethics of his finance minister and a new cultural policy that has been especially panned in Quebec.

The Conservati­ves held onto another long-time Tory riding, however. Dane Lloyd, a 26-yearold with a history of posting controvers­ial views in social media, easily retained the Edmonton riding of Sturgeon River-Parkland with 77 per cent of the vote.

Among other things, Lloyd has referred to women’s advocates as “feminazis” and started a Facebook campaign to create a Canadian chapter of the National Rifle Associatio­n.

He succeeds Rona Ambrose, the respected former cabinet minister and interim Conservati­ve leader, who quit as the riding’s MP last spring to join a Washington-based think-tank.

Lac-Saint-Jean had been held since 2007 by former Conservati­ve minister Denis Lebel until his retirement last spring. Prior to that, it was a Bloc Quebecois stronghold, the home base of sovereignt­ist champion and Bloc founder Lucien Bouchard who went on to become premier of Quebec.

Richard Hebert, former mayor of Dolbeau-Mistassini, won the riding Monday for the Liberals, taking 38 per cent of the vote — more than double the party’s vote share in 2015. He was some 14 percentage points ahead of the Conservati­ve candidate, who was just slightly ahead of the Bloc contender.

The NDP’s Gisele Dallaire, who was a close second behind Lebel in 2015, finished a distant fourth Monday with just 12 per cent of the vote.

Voter turnout in the riding was 41 per cent — surprising­ly high for a byelection and a sign of just how vigorously it was contested. The four main party leaders all campaigned in the riding.

By contrast, turnout in Sturgeon River-Parkland was just 23.7 per cent, more typical for a byelection.

The Quebec win bodes well for the Liberals, who won a surprising 40 of the province’s 78 seats in 2015. They are hoping to do even better in the province in the 2019 election to make up for potential losses in suburban Toronto and Vancouver ridings, where they fear newly minted NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh could make gains among new Canadian voters.

As much as Hebert’s upset was a coup for Trudeau, it was a blow to Singh and new Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, both of whom were facing their first electoral test.

Scheer lost a crucial seat in a province that is likely to determine the outcome of the next election. He can take some small consolatio­n in hanging onto the Edmonton seat, where his party’s share of the vote actually increased by seven points over 2015.

The results arguably bode even worse for Singh. He watched the NDP — which swept Quebec in 2011 and has been struggling to regain that momentum since Jack Layton’s untimely death a few months later — sink into the role of bystander in Lac-Saint-Jean.

His party’s share of the vote in Sturgeon River-Parkland, meanwhile, dropped about three points, as did the Liberals’ share.

The fact that Singh is a practising Sikh has also been something of an issue in Quebec, with one poll suggesting one in two Quebecers wouldn’t vote for a leader who wears a turban.

Dallaire said she doesn’t know how much that factored into Monday’s result. She suggested the Liberal victory had more to do with voters’ choosing to side with the party in government.

“The belief is you get more when you’re on the good side,” she told The Canadian Press.

Dallaire conceded that Singh, who was elected leader just a month ago, isn’t well known in Quebec.

“There’s still a lot of work to do to make sure that people know him more than just for his physical aspect,” she said.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Richard Hebert, the Liberal candidate for the byelection in the Lac-Saint-Jean riding, right, cheers with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during a Liberal party rally in Dolbeau-Mistassini, Que, on Thursday, Oct. 19.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Richard Hebert, the Liberal candidate for the byelection in the Lac-Saint-Jean riding, right, cheers with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during a Liberal party rally in Dolbeau-Mistassini, Que, on Thursday, Oct. 19.

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