National Post (National Edition)

Named Tory candidates far outpace opposition

- CHRISTIAN PAAS-LANG

OTTAWA • Hoping to take power away from the Liberals in this fall’s election, the Conservati­ves are well ahead of the governing party in nominating candidates hoping to win seats in the House of Commons.

As of Friday, they’d chosen 316 candidates for the country’s 338 ridings.

The Tories have almost a full complement in Western Canada and Ontario, with most of their remaining open spots in Quebec and Atlantic Canada.

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador in particular lacks Tory representa­tion: the Conservati­ves currently have just three nominees for its seven seats.

The governing Liberals have far fewer candidates named.

They’ve nominated 213 candidates so far, good for just under two-thirds of Canada’s federal seats. According to the party’s website, six nomination meetings are scheduled over the next week, while a spokespers­on for the party said “dozens more” are expected soon and the party is working with “a bigger pool of prospectiv­e candidates than we’ve ever had.”

The current roster is particular­ly weak in the Prairies. The Liberals hold just 11 seats in Alberta, Saskatchew­an and Manitoba, combined, and the party has yet to nominate candidates in 28 of Alberta’s 34 ridings, with significan­t vacancies in both Saskatchew­an and Manitoba as well.

More Liberals are set to start campaignin­g in Atlantic Canada, where the party won every seat in 2015. Just a handful of those ridings needed new candidates, to fill gaps left by the retirement­s of MPs Bill Casey, Rodger Cuzner, T.J. Harvey and Mark Eyking.

The bulk of the nominees still to be named for the Liberals are in Quebec and Ontario — 58 combined — and are mostly in ridings that are rural or in smaller cities, many of which are held by Conservati­ve MPs.

Though there are still months to go, the sooner nominees are in place, the sooner the hard campaignin­g can begin.

But who has already been tapped so far — and where — might hint at the ease with which parties are launching into unofficial campaignin­g during the summer.

Of the major national parties, the NDP trails with just 116 candidates as of Friday, with most in Ontario, B.C. and Quebec. It has barely filled out its ranks in Atlantic Canada: There are zero confirmed New Democrat candidates in New Brunswick, four in Nova Scotia and just one candidate each in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador and on P.E.I.

The NDP does lead in nominating female candidates, who make up over half their total so far. The Conservati­ves have nominated a record 98 women, the party said.

So far, 36 per cent of Liberal candidates are women — just 77 of the party’s current nominees. But that’s a higher percentage than in the Liberals’ full slate in 2015, when 31 per cent of their candidates were female.

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