The Hamilton Spectator

There is no tidy ending for Justin Trudeau

Liberal leader demonstrat­ed questionab­le judgment in his bid for a majority government

- Susan Delacourt Susan Delacourt is an Ottawa-based columnist covering national politics for Torstar.

The election is over, but it isn’t, really. Justin Trudeau is still the prime minister, but not the same one he was after the campaigns of 2015 or 2019.

Welcome to the complicate­d saga of a Canadian federal election during a pandemic. It’s not a neat and tidy movie, but more of a sprawling miniseries.

Trudeau kept his job on Monday night, but only as a minority government leader — yet again — after a campaign that did not yield widespread approval of business as usual in Canadian politics.

This will prompt some reflection for Trudeau, but also for Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole, who led his party to high hopes and dreams of unseating the Liberals sooner rather than later.

All the parties who were vying to grow their support in this election were held back from their loftiest goals.

The leader who will most acutely feel that gap between hope and reality is Trudeau, the man who gambled that a majority was in easy reach.

Nothing about this election campaign was easy for the man given a third term in this strange election. A tight Liberal-Conservati­ve fight, massive lineups at the polls, combined with thousands of mail-in votes — all told the story Monday night of an election that would not be settled easily.

Trudeau came out of the 2019 election campaign saying that Canadians had given him a lot to think about. But the food for thought from this latest election should keep the entire Liberal team stocked for the winter.

One minority government can be dismissed as a fluke; plain old bad luck. Two minority mandates in three tries would be a strong sign that Canadians want this particular prime minister’s power to be held in check.

The Liberals said they needed a mandate to do big things to get Canada out of the pandemic. “Relentless” was the adjective they chose for their slogans. But big and relentless are better words to describe a pandemic — Canadians, it seems, want a pandemic government that does maybe more repenting than relenting.

Not only should Trudeau consult more with opposition parties to get anything done with this new mandate — he will be feeling pressure to consult with rank-and-file Liberals, too.

As far as I can tell, Trudeau did not do much consulting when deciding to spring this election on the country and some Liberals will be arguing — correctly — that this all-tooclose election happened because voices of dissent on a summer election were discounted or not heard at all.

It all says that Trudeau and his team have every right to be relieved, but not triumphal.

If Trudeau ever imagined the campaign as an easy romp to a majority, his political instincts — and/ or those of his team — were out of sync with the mood of the country.

That isn’t just a problem in terms of election strategy. It’s a governance issue, too, if the party in power is misreading the electorate.

Day after day, Trudeau said in the election campaign that big decisions need to be made about the post-pandemic future.

Will he be basing those decisions on better instincts than those that led to his election call?

Another division heightened in this election was the one between leaders and the rest of their parties.

Populism may be in fashion in some quarters, but most of the parties conducted the election as an extremely top-down exercise.

Trudeau became the lightning rod for everything from vaccinatio­n protests to the fact that Canada was in the middle of an election — his call entirely. It was abundantly clear, as late as July, that the timing of the election call was not a matter on which rank and file Liberals were being consulted.

O’Toole, meanwhile, put his own face on the cover of the Conservati­ve platform and routinely neglected to showcase candidates at his stops along the trail.

The NDP unabashedl­y hinged their hopes on Jagmeet Singh’s “likeabilit­y” as the main selling point for the party, while the Bloc Québécois changed the course of the polls in Quebec with one perceived insult to leader Yves-François Blanchet. And Green Leader Annamie Paul never did manage to get out from under the perception her leadership was challenged.

Little wonder that political observers are getting ready to switch their sights from election coverage to leadership challenges.

Liberal commentato­rs were already reading the early election results as an instructio­n to “get back to work.” They may be getting ahead of themselves.

Trudeau has been sent back to work through the vote count, but the campaign was a series of instructio­ns to do that work differentl­y.

This isn’t a movie with a neat ending. The election drama of 2021 is a long-running series.

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