Lethbridge Herald

ELECTION CAMPAIGN BEGINS

LEADERS GRAPPLE WITH QUESTIONS ON ETHICS, VALUES

- Stephanie Levitz THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Polls suggest Liberals and Conservati­ves are in a dead heat —

An election campaign sure to feature plenty of pocketbook promises got underway amid deeper questions of ethics and values Wednesday as federal leaders challenged Canadians to consider the kind of country they want to vote for 40 days from now.

A front-page story about the SNC-Lavalin affair cast a pall over Justin Trudeau’s Liberal campaign launch, while Andrew Scheer’s kickoff bid for Conservati­ve support in Quebec prompted questions about that province’s controvers­ial secularism law.

“We’ve done a lot together these past four years, but the truth is we’re just getting started,” said Trudeau, moments after asking Governor General Julie Payette to dissolve Parliament and launch the campaign for the Oct. 21 vote.

“Canadians have an important choice to make — will we go back to the failed policies of the past or will we continue to move forward?”

Clouding his optimism was SNC Lavalin, given fresh life by a Globe and Mail report that the RCMP’s investigat­ion into potential obstructio­n of justice has been hamstrung by the shroud of cabinet confidence.

Asked what his government is hiding, Trudeau would only say that his Prime Minister’s Office issued the largest waiver of cabinet confidence­s in Canadian history — a decision that was made earlier this year at the

height of the tempest, to allow former minister Jody Wilson Raybould to testify.

He stayed largely mum when questions about the controvers­y, which reached a fresh crescendo in August when the ethics commission­er declared Trudeau broke the law by trying to influence a decision on whether the Quebec engineerin­g firm should go to trial on charges related to alleged corrupt dealings in Libya.

“My job as prime minister is to be there to stand up for and defend Canadians’ jobs,” he said when asked if he’d made personal mistakes. “I will always defend the public interest.”

When it comes to Quebec’s controvers­ial Bill 21, which bans religious symbols in public service, Trudeau suggested for now he’s content to let questions about whether that’s in the public interest rest with the courts.

“I’m very pleased that Quebecers themselves have chosen to contest this bill in court, to stand up and defend the Charter of Rights and Freedoms,” he said.

“I have been watching very closely the process, considerin­g the federal potential actions, and at this time I feel it would be counterpro­ductive for the federal government to engage in this process.”

Quebec Premier Francois Legault urged the leaders to keep the law off the federal agenda, and to promise not to challenge it in court.

“Bill 21, which prohibits religious signs for people in authority, was adopted legitimate­ly. A large majority of Quebecers support Bill 21. So I think Quebecers have the right to know. I would like the leaders of the federal parties to commit to not participat­e directly or indirectly, in any judicial challenge to this law.”

While Trudeau has repeatedly said he is against the bill, Scheer — kicking off his campaign in Quebec, where the measure is broadly popular — dodged the question, repeating only that it was up to the courts and that a Conservati­ve government would not introduce a similar federal bill. Indeed, Scheer had more pressing matters to attend to Wednesday — namely, siphoning votes away from a resurgent Bloc Quebecois.

“It’s not the Bloc that will replace Justin Trudeau, it’s not the Bloc that will leave more money in your pockets,” an energized Scheer told the crowd. “Quebecers can only rely on us, Bloc members of Parliament will always be powerless spectators.” Scheer kicked off his campaign energized by the rekindled SNC saga, a central element of the party’s preferred narrative: that ethics scandals have robbed Trudeau of the moral authority to govern.

“You just cannot trust Justin Trudeau,” Scheer said. “He will say anything to cover up his scandals, he will say anything to get re-elected.”

For his part, Bloc Leader Yves Francois Blanchet launched his Quebec-only campaign by urging voters tempted recently by the Liberals, Conservati­ves and New Democrats to return to their senses. The mission, he said, is not to win government, but to ensure the eventual government respects Quebec values of secularism, gender equality and love for the environmen­t.

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