The Hamilton Spectator

If Liberals are planning a summer election, shouldn’t someone tell the prime minister?

- Geoffrey Stevens

Election? What election? If there were an election, you would think the prime minister would know. But no.

“In an election campaign, you make promises about what you might do once you’re elected. Right now, we’re continuing the work that we got elected for in 2015 and in 2019,” Justin Trudeau assured reporters in Montreal on Thursday. The Liberal government, he explained, is simply doing this summer what it has been doing since it was elected six years ago — growing the economy, creating good jobs and protecting the environmen­t.

So it’s business as usual. No campaignin­g. No summer election in the offing.

Perhaps it was too quiet for the prime minister in Ottawa last week. Or perhaps he wanted to spare cabinet ministers the trouble of travelling to Montreal. He went there himself to make a couple of announceme­nts about the stuff his government has been twice elected to do. Routine stuff, you understand.

One was a handout to — forgive me, make that an “investment in” — Quebec’s aerospace industry of $440 million; the other was $25 million to expand a wind turbine plant. Yep, creating good jobs, protecting the environmen­t. No election fodder here.

If the Liberal leader says his party is not going hippity hoppity down an election trail, of course it is not. Only handful of conspiracy-minded obsessed journalist­s — well, if more than a handful, surely less than a dumpsterfu­l — would look at last Friday’s schedule of some key cabinet ministers and draw the absurd conclusion that our prime minister might be trying to throw them off the scent.

Let’s see. These ministers are a peripateti­c bunch. Transport Minister Omar Alghabra had been in Vancouver on Thursday to announce that Canada’s ban on cruise ships, a COVID-prevention measure, will be lifted in November. He stayed to announce on Friday how the government is going to protect the oceans.

Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough was also in British Columbia. She and NDP Premier John Horgan unveiled a fed-prov program to create jobs through the developmen­t of clean energy.

Meanwhile, Mélanie Joly, the minister of economic developmen­t and official languages, was in Trois-Rivières with Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne to give out federal cash for two regional airports in Quebec.

Fisheries Minister Bernadette Jordan, who had been quite busy making announceme­nts about fish in Nova Scotia, shifted gears on Friday for an announceme­nt about energy refitting for the province.

The GTA was not forgotten on Friday. A trio of federal Liberal ministers descended on Scarboroug­h. Deputy minister Chrystia Freeland, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair and Mary Ng, the minister of small business, joined by a passel of provincial ministers and Toronto Mayor John Tory, announced a three-government deal to invest $35.9 million in the Tamil Community Centre.

Finally, in what would be deemed to be election-related, if an election were in the works, which we now know it is not, another Ottawa-area Liberal MP was poised to announce she will not seek re-election. This time, it is two-term MP Karen McCrimmon in suburban Kanata-Carleton.

Earlier, Infrastruc­ture Minister Catherine McKenna announced she will vacate her prime Liberal seat, Ottawa Centre. McKenna’s move prompted speculatio­n that Ottawa Centre was the chosen landing spot for star recruit Mark Carney, the former central banker.

But maybe not. The NDP holds the riding provincial­ly and is targeting the federal seat. The New Democrats reputedly have as many boots on the ground as the Liberals, possibly more. They are panting for a chance to knock off the Grits’ latest rock star.

So the search resumes for a safe place to park the former governor of the Bank of Canada and Bank of England. It could be Kanata-Carleton, in the extreme western reach of the capital.

Although it cannot claim the Parliament Buildings, it does have the Canadian Tire Centre, playground of the other senators, the ones who skate.

Carney could come to love the one-hour bus ride to Parliament Hill. If there were an election.

If the Liberal leader says his party is not going hippity hoppity down an election trail, of course it is not

Cambridge resident Geoffrey Stevens is an author and former Ottawa columnist and managing editor of the Globe and Mail. His new book, “Flora! A Woman in a Man’s World,” co-authored with the late Flora MacDonald, is being published this fall by McGill-Queen’s University Press. His column appears Mondays. He welcomes comments at geoffsteve­ns40@gmail.com.

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