The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Greens, Tories aim to break 30-year Liberal hold on Charlottet­own

- STU NEATBY Byrne said many voters have been responding positively to both leader Jagmeet Singh and NDP policies, such as a proposed one per cent tax on fortunes worth more than $20 million. The federal leader is seeing a surge nationally in recent polling

The federal riding of Charlottet­own has been reliably won by Liberals since the Mulroney era.

But some believe the Liberals may be vulnerable in the riding. The federal Greens in particular have poured considerab­le resources into the campaign of local candidate Darcie Lanthier. The party is hoping the electoral success of the provincial Greens will translate to a breakthrou­gh at the federal level.

Meanwhile, some polls have suggested Conservati­ve candidate Robert Campbell may be the most realistic challenger to the Liberal stronghold.

For incumbent Liberal candidate Sean Casey, this race has simply felt like a repeat of the 2015 campaign. In that race, the NDP were the main challenger­s. Casey believes the NDP and Greens usually share the same collection of voters.

"This actually feels an awful lot like the last campaign, except you can trade orange for green,” Casey said.

Casey won handily in 2015, capturing 56 per cent of the vote.

This time around, Casey believes Liberal policies are having an impact on the housing shortage and on addressing social inequality. Several federally-financed affordable housing projects, including the 60-unit Martha Place on Acadian Drive, are under constructi­on. Many Islanders have benefitted from the Canada Child Benefit, Casey says. Experts credit the national program with pulling 278,000 children above the poverty line since 2016.

However, the federal Greens have invested heavily in the Charlottet­own race. While specific spending figures have not been released, the party has spent heavily on ad-buys in traditiona­l media.

The party’s leader, Elizabeth May, has also visited the riding twice over the course of the campaign. Along with three ridings in Vancouver Island, the federal party considers Charlottet­own and Fredericto­n to be key battlegrou­nds.

"It feels like the Greens are making more noise than the blue,” Casey said.

“But will that translate to the ballot box? I'll leave that up to the voters."

Lanthier believes frustratio­ns over issues like affordable housing or runaway climate change could shift Charlottet­own’s traditiona­lly cagey voters.

“This is one of those change elections,” Lanthier said.

Lanthier believes the Charlottet­own election is a “twoway” election, between her and Casey. She believes Green MPs could be influentia­l in a minority government scenario.

"After 31 years of Liberal MPs, we're in a housing crisis. We're in the bottom 15 per cent of federal ridings for average household income. We're doing very poorly," Lanthier said.

Conservati­ve candidate Robert Campbell believes he is getting strong reception from voters. He said the Conservati­ve platform, with its anti-carbon tax message and its emphasis on income tax cuts, has resonated.

Campbell’s campaign recently erected several signs near those of Casey. The signs bore the words “we trusted you” and listed several outstandin­g issues in Charlottet­own, including Employment Insurance reform, housing and taxes.

"The whole idea is, if he's running on his record, he's got to run on it all, not [just] a portion of it," Campbell said.

"He's touting his good stuff, I'm showing him the things that he's failed to do."

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