The Daily Courier

Federal NDP struggling to gain traction

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OTTAWA — Federal New Democrats will enter the final few weeks of Parliament before the summer break hoping to recapture some momentum after a difficult stretch largely overshadow­ed by internal divisions and harassment allegation­s.

The bad news has piled up for the NDP in recent months, as new leader Jagmeet Singh has faced pushback from some members of caucus and suspended or expelled others because of questions about their conduct.

As a result, Singh and his third-place party have struggled to find a rhythm and advance their message, despite the fact time is beginning to grow short with the next federal election looming.

“Certainly if there was a plan, it was put on the backburner because of the distractio­ns created by the other files,” former NDP national director Karl Belanger said of the winter and spring parliament­ary sessions.

“And unfortunat­ely when people heard about the NDP, it was usually not good news.”

Many New Democrats were jubilant last fall when Singh was selected leader, sparking hopes that the former member of the Ontario legislatur­e would inject the party with the same energy as Liberal counterpar­t Justin Trudeau.

And there has been good news for the NDP, starting with the fact it has managed to raise more than $1 million in each of the last three quarters after a precipitou­s plummet following the last federal election.

Singh also emerged from his party’s national convention in February with momentum after a rousing speech that defended taxes and big government while taking aim at foreign web giants, the “ultra-rich” and the Trudeau government.

“Those were big,” Belanger said in an interview on Sunday. “The convention and the fundraisin­g, it felt like the party was turning a corner as it was heading towards 2019. And so I think that New Democrats were pretty optimistic.

“But right now it feels like that corner, that turn is taking a little bit more time than people were expecting because of these other issues that are happening.”

The NDP leader and others have acknowledg­ed that the party has since struggled to drive the agenda and get its message out, particular­ly as headlines have been dominated with questions about the conduct of individual MPs.

Saskatchew­an MP Erin Weir was expelled from caucus May 3 after a threemonth investigat­ion found evidence to support three allegation­s of sexual harassment and one of non-sexual harassment.

The former economist, however, has refused to go quietly, insisting he is simply a “close talker” and that the non-sexual harassment complaint was part of a smear campaign orchestrat­ed by members of his own party.

Singh also ordered suspended Quebec MP Christine Moore last week, pending the results of an investigat­ion after a veteran of the war in Afghanista­n accused her of sexual misconduct. Moore has denied the allegation­s and threatened to sue.

Asked Wednesday about the mood in caucus, Singh said while addressing misconduct is critical, “these aren’t the issues we want to bring forward as a party. We want to talk about inequality and the environmen­t.”

Echoed NDP caucus chair Matthew Dube: “We’re spending a lot of time talking about these issues, which is understand­able because they are important, but we do look forward to moving to (other) serious issues that we have to take on.”

Singh has faced other trouble from his caucus, most notably when several members publicly criticized their leader for punishing veteran MP David Christophe­rson for breaking with the party and voting his conscience on a bill in March.

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