The Peterborough Examiner

3 federal byelection­s to be held Feb. 25

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OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has set Feb. 25 as the date for byelection­s in three vacant ridings — including the British Columbia riding where NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is hoping to win a seat in the House of Commons.

Trudeau has called the byelection­s for Burnaby South, the Ontario riding of York-Simcoe, and Montreal’s Outremont.

The Liberal leader had said he’d call the byelection­s for early February. Both Singh and Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer have complained that Trudeau has taken too long to do it.

“The people of Burnaby South deserve a voice in Ottawa as they face some of the highest housing costs, skyrocketi­ng medical fees, and deep concern for their own future and the future of the environmen­t,” Singh said at the end of last week. “It’s clear Mr. Trudeau isn’t acting on the best interest of the people of Burnaby, but rather he’s focused on the best interest of his own political party.”

The byelection­s will be crucial tests for New Democrats, who’ve been struggling to find their footing since their party was relegated to a distant third in the 2015 general election. Singh’s leadership has been battered by poor fundraisin­g and the announceme­nts of several veteran MPs that they won’t seek reelection this fall; winning a byelection and taking a seat in Parliament would shore up his position.

But the race in Outremont, left vacant after former NDP leader Tom Mulcair resigned, will also be seen as a test of whether the NDP can hang on to what’s left of the orange wave that swept Quebec in 2011. Outremont is a former Liberal stronghold the party would like to win back.

The Conservati­ves are expected to easily keep York-Simcoe, left vacant by the resignatio­n of longtime Tory MP Peter Van Loan.

Trudeau has not called a byelection in another B.C. riding, Nanaimo-Ladysmith, vacated last week by New Democrat MP Sheila Malcolmson.

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