Toronto Star

NDP leader Singh scores crucial win in byelection

Tories and Liberals prevail in Ontario, Quebec contests

- ALEX BALLINGALL

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh prevailed Monday in his make-or-break race to win a seat in the House of Commons.

More than 16 months after he cruised to victory in the NDP leadership race, the 40-year-old politician from Ontario was comfortabl­y leading in his bid to clinch his first federal seat in a B.C. byelection. With a victory, not only will Singh now be able to lead his party from the floor of the House of Commons, but he may also have saved his political career, for defeat in Burnaby South on Monday — as many NDP insiders have put it — was simply not an option for the third-place party.

With more than half the polls reporting in Burnaby South, Singh had just over 38 per cent of the vote, comfortabl­y ahead of Liberal Richard T. Lee’s 26 per cent and Conservati­ve Jay Shin’s 22 per cent.

The contest was one of three byelection­s held Monday, as voters in key battlegrou­nd areas cast ballots against the backdrop of the lingering SNC-Lavalin scandal. In York-Simcoe, the Conservati­ves held a GTA riding that has been a lock for the party since 2004.

And here in Outremont, a diverse and multilingu­al district at the heart of the island of Montreal, voters returned to their long-establishe­d tradition of electing Liberals, 12 years after Thomas Mulcair’s breakthrou­gh here became the symbolic forerunner to the unpreceden­ted success of the “orange wave” election in 2011.

But it was the race in Burnaby South that gobbled most of the oxygen surroundin­g these byelection­s — and for good reason. The result could decide Singh’s political fate.

The NDP leader campaigned against a Liberal government he accuses of cosying up to corporate friends, falling short on affordable housing and failing to take climate change seriously. The riding was previously held by Kennedy Stewart, an NDP MP who won by about 500 votes in 2015 and resigned the seat last year to run for Vancouver mayor.

David Coletto, chief executive officer of Abacus Data, said a Singh victory is the first bit of good news the NDP has had in a long time. Under Singh’s leadership — which began when he cruised to victory in the October 2017 leadership race — the NDP has stalled in the polls, seen a parade of sitting MPs quit or announce they won’t run again in the general election, and experience­d a sharp drop in fundraisin­g from more than $18 million in 2015 to roughly $5 million last year.

Singh’s entry to the House of Commons would give the party a chance to change the narrative, Coletto said.

“It gives them a huge opportunit­y to pivot and to start rebuilding his own reputation,” he said. “Low expectatio­ns can be a really powerful tool, because it’s easier to meet them.”

Singh’s chances may have been boosted the SNC-Lavalin scandal, which the NDP has used to portray the Liberals as a band of faux-progressiv­e allies of big business. Combined with a Liberal stumble—candidate Karen Wang was replaced by former MLA Richard Lee partway through the race—and the possibilit­y that People’s Party candidate Laura-Lynn Tyler Thompson snags votes from the Conservati­ves’ Jay Shin, the riding looks primed for a Singh win, said political scientist David Moscrop.

“Burnaby South is sort of cooked for him to win,” he said Monday morning. Meanwhile, Conservati­ve candidate Scot Davidson claimed victory in York-Simcoe. For 14 years, the riding north of Toronto was home to Peter Van Loan, a Harper-era cabinet minister who resigned from the House of Commons last year. That continued Monday, with Davidson besting Liberal challenger — and secondtime candidate — Shaun Tanaka.

With such a record of Conservati­ve voting, Coletto said he is looking to see how Maxime Bernier’s People’s Party — and local candidate Robert Geurts — performs in the riding.

“The most important signal we get from tonight is how well does Max Bernier’s party do,” he said, adding the party could make an impact in all three byelection­s.

“That will give us an indication of the potential effectiven­ess of his party,” he said.

Meanwhile, Outremont was a Liberal stronghold for decades, until Mulcair won it for the NDP in a 2007 byelection. It is therefore hallowed turf for New Democrats, who see Mulcair’s success as the symbolic toehold for the “orange wave” in 2011, when the party was lifted to its best-ever federal election result by overwhelmi­ng success in Quebec.

But now that Mulcair has left politics, local lawyer Rachel Bendayan wrested Outremont back for the Liberals Monday night. By late Monday, she had a sizable lead over Julia Sanchez, an economist who worked for decades in internatio­nal developmen­t, who campaigned on an environmen­t-focused platform for the NDP.

One factor in the race may have been voter reaction to the SNC-Lavalin affair, which has a strong local component given the company is headquarte­red nearby in downtown Montreal and is a significan­t employer in the province. Shachi Kurl, executive director of the Angus Reid Institute not-for-profit polling firm, said that while early polling has suggested the Liberals have taken a hit during the controvers­y, the company is seen in a different light — as a big employer worth saving — by many in the province.

But regardless of its impact Monday, it is too early to conclude whether the controvers­y surroundin­g the company and Justin Trudeau’s office will linger into the fall general election, Moscrop said.

“I think this is a reminder to the Liberals that, boy, you don’t want this in the news in October,” he said. “The sooner you deal with this completely, the better.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jagmeet Singh records a video Sunday with wife Gurkiran Kaur Sidhu. For full byelection results, visit thestar.com.
DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS Jagmeet Singh records a video Sunday with wife Gurkiran Kaur Sidhu. For full byelection results, visit thestar.com.
 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh campaigns Sunday in the food court of a mall in Burnaby, B.C.
DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh campaigns Sunday in the food court of a mall in Burnaby, B.C.
 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Richard T. Lee was the Liberals’ standard-bearer in the Burnaby South riding.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Richard T. Lee was the Liberals’ standard-bearer in the Burnaby South riding.

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