Ottawa Citizen

Conservati­ves seek seventh straight victory in Carleton

Former Harper cabinet minister could be hard to unseat in Conservati­ve riding

- BLAIR CRAWFORD

THE RIDING

Since it was carved out as its own riding in 2015, Carleton has been Conservati­ve country. More specifical­ly, Pierre Poilievre country. Poilievre has won six consecutiv­e elections for the Tories: four in the former riding of Nepean-Carleton and two more in Carleton.

The roughly U-shaped riding encompasse­s rapidly growing Stittsvill­e in the west, the rural land south to the Rideau River, then east of the river along the city's southern boundary as far as Ramsayvill­e Road. It's a huge area that includes a mix of suburban commercial and housing developmen­ts and farmland. With a turnout of 79 per cent in 2019, Carleton voters rank among the most engaged in the country.

WHAT TO WATCH

Poilievre was left the last federal Conservati­ve standing in Ottawa in the 2019 election, beating his Liberal challenger by eight percentage points. Unseating him will be a tough challenge. Gustave Roy is a virtual unknown running in his first election campaign, while the NDP candidate finished 25,000 votes behind the Conservati­ves in 2019. Voters in Carleton also leaned right in the 2018 provincial election, sending Conservati­ve Goldie Ghamari to Queen's Park with double the vote of her next closest challenger.

While Poilievre has stressed jobs and economic developmen­t — he is the Conservati­ves shadow minister of jobs and industry — if the Liberals are to have any chance at all, it will depend on how much weight voters put on the Liberals' climate policy and their handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. The closest the Liberals came to toppling Poilievre was in 2015, when he won by fewer than 2,000 votes. But that gap widened in 2019 to more than 5,000. Flipping Carleton from blue to red would be a tough challenge.

THE CANDIDATES

Conservati­ve: Pierre Poilievre

Poilievre, 42, is the incumbent for the former Nepean-Carleton riding and will carry the Conservati­ve flag in Carleton on Sept. 20. A native Calgarian, Poilievre came to Ottawa as a policy analyst for then-Reform Party leader Stockwell Day and later worked for MP Jason Kenney.

In his first election in 2004, he upset high-profile Liberal cabinet minister David Pratt, and he has been re-elected by voters every time since then. He made his mark as a cabinet minister in former prime minister Stephen Harper's government, earning a reputation as one of the party's aggressive pit bulls. It's a role he has maintained in opposition, where he has been a partisan and polarizing figure. When Andrew Scheer stepped down as party leader, Poilievre was mentioned as a front-runner to replace him. Though Poilievre decided not to run, his punchy 30-second “Pierre Poilievre — Fighting for you” ad made such a splash on social media this summer that they've rivalled those for Conservati­ve leader Erin O'Toole.

Poilievre married his wife, Anaida Galindo, in 2018. The couple has one daughter.

Green: No candidate nominated as of Aug. 27

Liberal: Gustave Roy

Roy, 37, grew up in Sherbrooke, Que., but has lived in Ottawa for 25 years. He has travelled extensivel­y and lived abroad in France and Rwanda, experience­s that “have shaped his outlook on life and remain a source of inspiratio­n and creativity to this day.”

A graduate of Carleton University, Roy has worked as a financial planner with RBC and in sales with a drug manufactur­er. He is married to Valerie, a nurse at Montfort Hospital, and they have one son. He is fully bilingual.

In a video message to voters after securing the nomination on July 15, Roy said Carleton's “diverse and growing communitie­s deserve to be represente­d by a positive and collaborat­ive leader, someone who's willing to work effectivel­y with everyone.”

NDP: Kevin Hua

Just 20 years of age, Kevin Hua is making his second bid for Parliament. He is a third-year Carleton University student studying Public Affairs and Policy Management with a subject specialty in Social Policy. As a student, he's worked on a co-op placement with the Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations and he also volunteers with Around the Campfire, which works with autistic children. Hua ran in Carleton in 2019.

People's Party: Peter Crawley

Crawley is a 34-year-old small business owner making his first run for office. He describes himself as “a concerned citizen looking to instil some integrity and accountabi­lity into our government.”

 ?? SOURCE: ELECTIONS CANADA
DENNIS LEUNG / POSTMEDIA ??
SOURCE: ELECTIONS CANADA DENNIS LEUNG / POSTMEDIA
 ?? TONY CALDWELL ?? Riverside South is in the riding of Carleton, which has elected Conservati­ve Pierre Poilievre since it became a separate riding in 2015.
TONY CALDWELL Riverside South is in the riding of Carleton, which has elected Conservati­ve Pierre Poilievre since it became a separate riding in 2015.

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