Saskatoon StarPhoenix

At a glance

A look at some of the key developmen­ts Friday in the federal election campaign:

-

Conservati­ves

Harper’s first campaign event Friday was a brief speech in the backyard of a suburban Toronto home, where a backdrop of mothers and toddlers showcase his government’s universal childcare benefit. He warned that the Liberals would kill the benefit and the NDP would cause economic havoc, but he evaded questions on whether the economy has slipped back into recession. Mulcair says it has, but Harper sidesteppe­d. “You either stick with the plan that’s working and has most of our economy growing, or you adopt plans that throw all of the economy backward — and that’s what the NDP proposes.” He also warned of a tax-andspend Trudeau: “He will cut your taxes, but only if first he gets to raise your taxes. That’s what every tax-hiking politician says.”

NDP

Mulcair’s tour meandered through central Ontario. In Toronto, he said he wants to see more debates, but only if the prime minister is on board. “We’re more than willing to work and take part in the consortium debate, but we’re also expecting Stephen Harper to say the same thing.” Mulcair took advantage of a stop in Peterborou­gh to remind locals that their former MP, one-time Conservati­ve Dean Del Mastro, was convicted of cheating on campaign expenses. Peterborou­gh strongly wants a change, Mulcair said, to laughter from the crowd.

Liberals

While his campaign staff issued a news release trumpeting Justin Trudeau’s debate performanc­e, the leader used a stop in Finance Minister Joe Oliver’s Toronto riding to criticize the Conservati­ve handling of the economy. Trudeau said the government has put Canada in deficit and the Liberals would balance the books. He didn’t say how long that might take. “We are committed to a balanced budget, but how long it takes to get there will depend on the size of the mess Mr. Harper has left behind.” Ontario Liberal Premier Kathleen Wynne, who has been waging her own war on Harper since the campaign began, weighed in again Friday, complainin­g about a troubled relationsh­ip with the prime minister. “The reality is that the relationsh­ip with Stephen Harper has been a difficult one,” Wynne said in Toronto outside the Ontario legislatur­e. “I have tried to work with him. The fact is, it has deteriorat­ed.” She said a prime minister has to work with the provinces, for the good of the whole country.

Bloc Quebecois

Gilles Duceppe, the leader of the Bloc Quebecois, complained that the debate Thursday night was disrespect­ful to Quebecers because it touched on separatism in the absence of the only federal separatist party — his own. During the debate, Trudeau accused Mulcair of wanting to ditch the Clarity Act the make it easier for Quebec to separate. Duceppe said he doesn’t understand how the other leaders could claim separatism is dead, then discuss it in the debate. The only French-language leaders debate confirmed is scheduled for Oct. 2.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada