Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

‘Uninspired leadership’ mars Jagmeet Singh’s time at helm

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya letters@hindustant­imes.com

TORONTO: On October 1, 2017, Jagmeet Singh attracted internatio­nal attention, becoming the first-ever person from a visible minority background to capture the leadership of a major Canadian political party, winning the race to lead the New Democratic Party (NDP) in the very first round of balloting

Canadian media gushed over his historic achievemen­t — the National Post described his ascent as a “game-changer”, while the Globe and Mail called him “Justin Trudeau’s worst nightmare”. By the end of October 2017, he had a national approval rating of 40%, according to national broadcaste­r CBC’s Leader Meter.

Now, 365 days later, that figure has receded to less than half, currently at 19%. The commentary in has also turned. Recent opinion pieces reflect the trend — “Things are looking very ugly for the NDP and Jagmeet Singh,” said the Ottawa Citizen.

Singh’s early tenure has been marked with missteps, including the changing stances he has assumed after a pair of videos emerged of him speaking at events that supported Khalistan. Singh, soon after his victory, had also voiced support for self-determinat­ion in places like Punjab. But his tone has mellowed over recent months, and he even sent out greetings on India’s Independen­ce Day this year.

However, Chris Cochrane, assistant professor of political science at the University of Toronto Scarboroug­h, says that doesn’t mean the year ahead, leading to the October 2019 federal elections will follow a similar pattern. “I think the first year has been a year when the reality didn’t match expectatio­ns, but I think those were unreasonab­le given how deeply divided his party is,” he said.

The road to recovery for Singh will be through Burnaby South, the riding (as constituen­cies are called in Canada) where he will contest a by-election in the hope of finally getting elected to the House of Commons.

A loss may not be career- or leadership-ending, but the challenge will be far graver.

But the real challenge for the 39-year-old in the months ahead is if he can get his party to be a viable player for the federal elections with a “coherent agenda”.

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Jagmeet Singh

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