Times Colonist

Tory and NDP leaders portray different visions for Canada’s future

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

OTTAWA — The only thing Pierre Poilievre and Jagmeet Singh had in common on Thursday was their timing. Separately but simultaneo­usly, Canada’s federal Conservati­ve and NDP leaders laid out their respective visions for how best to defeat Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

While each took aim at Trudeau’s record and rallied the party faithful with now-familiar pitches, only one of them spent any time attacking the other.

Singh, speaking at the NDP’s annual Progress Summit, said while Trudeau has failed to improve the lives of middle-class Canadians, the Conservati­ve alternativ­e would be no better. “Everyone in this room knows that Pierre Poilievre would just make things worse,” he said.

Singh mentioned Poilievre by name no fewer than four times, dismissing as disingenou­s his promises to help the working class and noting he lacks a coherent, meaningful plan to confront climate change.

“Pierre Poilievre doesn’t care about working families,” Singh said. “He doesn’t care about working-class people.”

Public opinion polls show Poilievre’s affordabil­ity message has been resonating with voters, particular­ly among those 35 and younger, as well as with those who identify as working-class Canadians — two demographi­cs that have long been critical sources of NDP support.

Under Poilievre, the Conservati­ves have been aggressive­ly targeting NDP ridings, especially vulnerable ones in British Columbia and northern Ontario.

Poilievre, however, left those tactics at the door of the annual Canada Strong and Free Network conference, entirely ignoring his NDP counterpar­t.

Instead, Poilievre lingered on former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, dubbing the long-rumoured potential Trudeau successor as “Carbon Tax Carney” for his support of the Liberal policy.

Poilievre also took aim at Trudeau’s credential­s as a Liberal, painting himself as the “common sense” alternativ­e Canadians need to bring down the cost of living and crime.

Trudeau’s late father, former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, once said the state has no place in the bedrooms of the nations, Poilievre said.

“Now, his son wants the government to be in every room of your house,” he said.

“And your business, and your wallet, and your bank account, and your internet account — he wants to be everywhere always. See, the thing is, it’s not that Justin Trudeau is too liberal. It’s that he’s not liberal at all. He is deeply, deeply illiberal.”

New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs used similar language during a fireside chat earlier in the day, where he discussed becoming the first premier to lead the charge on requiring teachers to seek parental consent before using a student’s preferred pronouns.

Demands to do so have been bubbling up among conservati­ve and right-wing circles across the United States and Canada in recent years, but Higgs became the first Canadian leader to leap headlong into the debate around “parental rights.”

The term refers to the widespread concerns of parents about what children are learning about LGBTQ+ issues in schools.

Higgs said he never expected his policy changes to prompt other conservati­ve premiers, such as in Alberta and Saskatchew­an, to make similar moves. “We certainly have talked amongst colleagues,” Higgs said. “So in those discussion­s, did I think it would turn into a national thing? No, that wasn’t a discussion.”

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