The Guardian (USA)

Canada elections: Trudeau wins narrow victory to form minority government

- Leyland Cecco in Toronto

Justin Trudeau has won a second term as Canada’s prime minister after the country’s federal election, but his narrow victory means he will lead a minority government that will be forced to depend on other parties to govern.

With results still trickling in on

Tuesday morning, the Liberals had 156 seats, 14 short of the 170 needed for a majority in the 338-seat House of Commons.

“We seek hardship for none and prosperity for all, and if we unite around these common goals, I know we can achieve them,” Trudeau told cheering supporters in Montreal. He said Canadians had sent a clear message of support for progressiv­e policies.

Despite Trudeau’s attempt to strike a conciliato­ry tone, Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer issued a stark warning to the Liberals. “Mr Trudeau, when your government falls, Conservati­ves will be ready, and we will win,” Scheer told supporters at his concession speech.

Donald Trump was quick to congratula­te Trudeau for “a wonderful and hard-fought victory”. Although the two leaders have not had a warm relationsh­ip – Trump described Trudeau as “dishonest” at last year’s disastrous G7 meeting in Quebec – the US president tweeted: “Canada is well served. I look forward to working with you toward the betterment of both of our countries!”

Four years after the Liberal leader swept to power promising “sunny ways” after nearly a decade of Conservati­ve rule, Trudeau struggled to inspire voters as he campaigned for re-election. Trudeau, 47, was endorsed by Barack Obama in the last days of the campaign, but his standing as one of the few remaining progressiv­e leaders in a major democracy was undermined by the emergence of blackface images, and lingering criticism of his handling of a major corruption inquiry.

Before the vote, polls showed him neck-and-neck with Scheer. But with neither of the main parties reaching the number of seats needed for a parliament­ary majority, Canada is headed towards a minority government, and Trudeau will be forced to co-operate with smaller left-of-centre parties to govern.

“We’re seeing a much-needed chastening of the Liberal party,” said David Moscrop, a political scientist at the university of British Columbia. “Some of [the result] is a backlash against Liberal arrogance and entitlemen­ts. The Liberals set the bar so high they’re bound to run into it.”

In the final week of campaignin­g, Trudeau faced a strong challenge from the left-wing New Democratic party, led by Jagmeet Singh, which looked poised to peel away progressiv­e votes from the Liberals.

But despite a surge in the polls in the final weeks of the campaign, the NDP was unable to convert that success into electoral wins. The party’s 44 seats were nearly cut in half.

The overall result laid bare the deep divisions in the country: not a single Liberal was elected in the western Prairie provinces, which the Conservati­ves swept.

Trudeau lost key cabinet members, including veteran lawmaker and public safety minister Ralph Goodale, 70, who was the only Liberal MP in Saskatchew­an, where the local energy industry is increasing­ly at odds with federal environmen­tal policies.

In Alberta, Amarjeet Sohi, the natural resource minister, and Randy Boissonnau­lt lost their seats, a result that means the neither Alberta nor Saskatchew­an will have representa­tion in Trudeau’s federal government, at a time of growing frustratio­n in the economical­ly strapped western provinces.

Jody Wilson-Raybould, the former attorney general and justice minister who was expelled from the Liberal party after publicly criticisin­g Trudeau for his role in the SNC Lavalin scandal, was successful in her bid to retain her seat as an independen­t.

The first Indigenous person to hold one of the most powerful positions in government, Wilson-Raybould played a central role in one of the most damaging episodes in Trudeau’s first term of office, when she testified the prime minister and his staff improperly pressured her to abandon the criminal prosecutio­n of engineerin­g giant SNC Lavalin.

After she resisted, she was shuffled out of the position of attorney general and eventually ejected from the party.

Jane Philpott, the former treasury board president and close friend of Wilson-Raybould, was also booted from the party for criticisin­g Trudeau. But her attempt as an independen­t candidate to keep her seat in Ontario failed, with a disappoint­ing third-place finish for the one-time Liberal star.

Monday’s result marked a clear defeat for Scheer, whose campaign pledges to quash carbon pricing legislatio­n and cut taxes failed to resonate with voters. The Conservati­ve party also took a heavy loss, with deputy party leader Lisa Raitt losing her race to former Olympic kayaker Adam van Koeverden.

Meanwhile, Maxime Bernier, the leader of the populist People’s Party of Canada, which critics have called xenophobic and racist, lost his seat. It means the former Conservati­ve minister’s newly formed party will have no presence in the House of Commons.

After his landslide victory in 2015, Trudeau positioned himself as a progressiv­e force in Canada and aboard: he welcomed Syrian refugees when the US and other countries were closing their doors, and he legalized cannabis nationwide.

But in a country heavily reliant on natural resources, his efforts to strike a balance on the environmen­t and economy have been criticized by the right and the left. His government brought in a carbon tax to fight the climate crisis – but also paid billions to rescue a stalled pipeline project.

Monday’s result marks a significan­t erosion of support for the charismati­c prime minister, but the narrow victory will be enough to ensure Trudeau’s marquee policies – including the national carbon tax – are likely to remain in place.

But without his majority, Trudeau will have to reach out to other parties with a “confidence-and-supply” deal in which junior partners will support the government on individual pieces of legislatio­n, as opposed to joining in a fully-fledged coalition.

Such a deal will leave the leftwing NDP and the Bloc Québécois holding the balance of power a minority government. The most likely ally for Trudeau is Singh, who has made a commitment to fighting climate change and funding healthcare key requires for co-operation from the NDP.

 ?? Photograph: Todd Korol/ Reuters ?? Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer supporters watch the election results come in at his campaign headquarte­rs
Photograph: Todd Korol/ Reuters Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer supporters watch the election results come in at his campaign headquarte­rs

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