Harper rings the register against Liberal tax increases
Conservative Leader Stephen Harper is literally putting cash on the table in an effort to halt the momentum of Justin Trudeau’s Liberals in the closing days of the federal election campaign.
With just five days of campaigning left before Canadians go to the polls next Monday, the Conservatives have twice staged low-tech stunts designed to illustrate how much they say Liberal tax changes will cost voters as Harper attempts to pick apart the Liberal platform.
The prime minister played the role of game show host again Tuesday at a partisan rally in west-end Toronto, calling out Liberal tax increases as a pizza store owner counted bills onto a table to the backdrop of a loudly ringing cash register.
“The tax hikes the Liberals talk about, they are not just numbers in a pamphlet,” said Harper, without jacket or tie and with his blue shirt sleeves rolled up.
“They are real dollars and I want to show you again today what the payroll tax hikes look like.”
Conservative party videographers took tight shots as pizza store owner Dino Ari laid bills on a table to repeated “ka-chings” from a cash register.
“Hand it over, Dino,” Harper coached. “I hope you counted that carefully.”
The Conservatives staged a similar display on the Thanksgiving weekend and the stunt appears destined for party advertising in the final moments of this extraordinary 78-day campaign, the longest in modern Canadian history.
All three major party leaders were in the Greater Toronto Area on Tuesday morning as polls continue to suggest an electorate in flux and swaths of seat-rich Ontario up for grabs.
There’s also compelling evidence of a motivated electorate.
An estimated 1.2 million voters cast ballots in advance polls Monday, according to Elections Canada, bringing the four-day holiday weekend total to more than 3.6 million ballots cast.
That’s an increase of 71 per cent over advance ballots in the 2011 election, when only three days of advance polls were held.
Antipathy to Harper’s Conservatives appears to be the only unifying element among the various challengers to the throne.
“I got into politics because I disagreed deeply with the vision that Stephen Harper has for this country and there is no circumstances in which I could either support him or even stand back and allow him to be prime minister,” Trudeau said when asked about a potential minority Conservative government.
The Liberal leader, who ventured into an NDP-held riding in Toronto, appears to be trying to peel off voters from both the New Democrats and Tories, while hoping to win over strategic voters who might see an incumbent NDP MP as the best vehicle for removing Harper from office.
“You do have a choice — multiple choices,” Trudeau said.
“I’m not asking you to look at the polls. I’m asking you to look at our platform.”
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair, at a rally in Oshawa, continued to maintain that New Democrats are only a few dozen seats short of unseating the Conservatives — notwithstanding that every party starts with zero seats when a new general election campaign begins.
“Mr. Trudeau in this campaign has spent more time going after the NDP than he’s spent going after Stephen Harper,” Mulcair charged. “I challenge Mr. Trudeau to start taking on Stephen Harper.”
Harper, who spent the 2011 election campaign warning repeatedly about a potential, unstable coalition government if he couldn’t secure a majority, is refusing to speculate on any such outcome this time.
With no potential dance partners after Oct. 19, Harper is counting on rallying his core support.
The Conservative leader visited the highly symbolic Toronto riding of Etobicoke-Lakeshore, where former Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff lost his seat in 2011 en route to the worst Liberal electoral drubbing in party history.
Etobicoke is also Ford country, as in the well-known Toronto city councillors Rob and Doug Ford, both of whom were in attendance for Harper’s morning rally.
The tax hikes the Liberals talk about, they are not just numbers in a pamphlet. They are real dollars. The Liberals think Canadians should pay more tax. They do not hide it, they’re campaigning on it, even promising it. You make it, they take it, then they spend it. That’s their philosophy. — Conservative Leader Stephen Harper