National Post

Harper takes on mantle of underdog

Trailing in polls, Conservati­ves shift gears

- By Jennifer Ditchburn

• Midway through a marathon campaign, the Conservati­ves are talking like the distance runner who’s plotting and pacing for a late outside-track move into the lead.

Conservati­ve Leader Stephen Harper had one of the most challengin­g weeks of the election, with accusation­s of insensitiv­ity on the Syrian refugee crisis, the ouster of two embarrassi­ng candidates and griping from nervous and unhappy party activists.

His campaign was forced into a defensive posture, which appeared to siphon away the time usually spent trying to shape the narrative of the election. By Thursday, Harper had promised concrete measures would be forthcomin­g to speed up the intake of refugees.

Candidates, campaign strategist­s and Harper himself emphasize that restless voters will now begin visualizin­g either Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau or the NDP’s Tom Mulcair as prime minister — and theoretica­lly decide the risk is too big.

“You know, maybe you’d like to change houses. Does that mean you go out and buy swampland?” Harper said Thursday in Saint John, N.B.

“Swampland — that is what their national plan for runaway spending, taxes and debt is. When it happens, all of its citizens lose, and the country’s citizens lose for a very long time.”

The aggressive incumbent-as-underdog move has worked before — in Alberta with former PC Premier Alison Redford, in British Columbia with Christy Clark, and in Ontario with Kathleen Wynne.

British Prime Minister David Cameron came from behind — notably with the help of Australian campaign fix-it man Lynton Crosby, with whom Harper is also working.

In Quebec, where one poll last month put the Conservati­ves in fourth place, two of his highest profile candidates in the province predicted the party would come from behind in the latter part of the campaign.

Candidate Jacques Gourde said voters would see a “surprise” finish to the election.

“It would be a surprise because everyone says we’re in the third position (nationally), said Gourde. “We say we’re in the race right to the end.”

Caucus colleague Denis Lebel argues the 2011 election changed directions in the final week.

“It’s my fourth election campaign, I’ve always run against the wind. I’ve always had unions against me. In Canada, it’s always hard for our party,” said Lebel, who held a cabinet post in Harper’s government.

“We have to continue to circulate our message, it’s something I’m used to. I should have never won an election here according to the past polls.”

The 14th anniversar­y Friday of the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States provided the opportunit­y for Harper to return to messages where the party feels it has strength — on national and internatio­nal security.

In the stump speech he delivers at evening events, he says that Trudeau and Mulcair won’t even call jihadist terrorism by name out of a false sense of “political correctnes­s.”

Harper’s rhetoric on the mission against ISIL, on protecting Canadians from attacks at home from terrorists, continues to resonate with the Conservati­ves who show up at his events.

Cameron Mott, who came to a boisterous rally in Kitchener, Ont., earlier in the week, was a survivor of the attacks on the World Trade Center. He had arrived in the lobby of one of the towers just as a plane hit, having slept in that day. Half of his colleagues died.

“I think that the prime minister has the right position, it has to be a balance between humanitari­an aid, which I think he is (doing), and cognizant of the security,” said Mott, who now lives in Canada.

“We are in a tough time, and there are bad people out there.”

Walter Fleurestil, originally from Haiti, took in Harper’s speech in Victoriavi­lle. He said the message that he most liked was about security.

“I come from a country that hasn’t been touched by terrorism, but we understand what insecurity means,” Fleurestil said.

“Political games are being played for the election, but all Canadians are sensitive to security. Physical security comes first, everyone wants to see tomorrow.”

But then even at the tightly controlled Conservati­ve events, a sprinkling of attendees admitted they were thinking of changing their vote this time.

Bhupinder Sherma took in a Harper speech in Mississaug­a, Ont., but said he was not voting Conservati­ve. “I think the NDP will do better than these guys on immigratio­n. I’m very much decided, I will vote for the NDP,” said Sherma. “( Harper’s ) economic policies are good, but their immigratio­n policies — I can’t bring my parents here. Why would I vote for them?”

Swampland — that is (the opposition’s) national plan

 ?? Adrian Wyld / The Canadian Pres ?? Sara Vulin Daniel, right, watches as Conservati­ve Leader Stephen Harper and wife Laureen pay their respects Friday in Ottawa to honour Canadian victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Adrian Wyld / The Canadian Pres Sara Vulin Daniel, right, watches as Conservati­ve Leader Stephen Harper and wife Laureen pay their respects Friday in Ottawa to honour Canadian victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
 ??  ?? Lynton Crosby
Lynton Crosby

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