Toronto Star

Singh says voters were duped by Trudeau

Targeting Liberal party, NDP leader confident in face of financial shortfalls

- ALEX BALLINGALL OTTAWA BUREAU

LONDON— The time has come for Jagmeet Singh to prove whether he can live up to the promise of his leadership: to break through to new voters and lift his New Democratic Party back to relevance in the contest for power.

Singh made his opening pitch of the 43rd federal campaign Wednesday, moments after Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau emerged from the regal confines of Rideau Hall to start the election.

Speaking at a Goodwill centre between a pawnshop and an auto garage in the centre of this southweste­rn Ontario city, Singh proclaimed himself the champion of millions of voters he said were duped by a Liberal leader who is really nothing more than a progressiv­e pretender.

“Four years ago, Justin Trudeau charmed us with pretty words and empty promises,” Singh said.

“Behind closed doors, Justin Trudeau does whatever the wealthy and powerful corporatio­ns want him to. It’s clear Justin Trudeau isn’t who he pretended to be.”

Singh and the NDP start the campaign with polls placing them in a battle for third place with the burgeoning Greens, far behind the Liberals and Conservati­ves who launched their campaigns on party-branded jumbo jets Wednesday morning, while the NDP is touring Ontario and Quebec in a single bus crammed with staff and political journalist­s.

The party has struggled with limited funding, as have donations tanked from the high water mark of $18 million four years ago to just over $5 million last year. And on the first day of the campaign, the NDP still dragged behind the other parties — including the Greens and Maxime Bernier’s fringe, rightwing People’s Party — in securing a full roster of candidates in Canada’s 338 electoral districts.

But while Singh acknowledg­ed Wednesday there have been challenges, he was optimistic the NDP can overcome these obstacles in the coming campaign and even compete for power — though he noted his social democratic party would be willing to work with anyone who shares their priorities if Canadians elect a minority parliament on Oct. 21.

“I believe that a lot can change in a campaign, and I’m confident the issue of this election is: who’s on your side? Who’s going to fight for you?” Singh said.

The NDP planned to launch their campaign in Toronto, where party officials hope to wrest back some of the ridings the Liberals won when they swept the entire city in the 2015 election. But facing a slew of booked hotels because of the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, the party opted to hold the launch event in London North Centre, a Liberal-held riding in the centre of the city that the NDP has never won.

Singh noted the challenges with the opioid crisis that the city is facing, and held up his party’s plan to declare a national public health emergency and to decriminal­ize drugs in favour of rehab treatment as part of the solution. He claimed the NDP’s policy offers for the election – contained in the party’s New Deal for People platform – show that New Democrats are the only federal partisans willing to take on corporate interests that have prevented Liberal and Conservati­ve government­s from institutin­g programs l i ke universal pharmacare and taxing the rich.

Notably, Singh did not mention Green Leader Elizabeth May during his speech Wednesday. When asked why, the NDP leader said he sees Trudeau and the Liberals as his chief opponents, and that his New Democrats have solutions on housing affordabil­ity, health care and the climate crisis that the environmen­t-focused Greens lack.

“My target is Mr. Trudeau,” he said. “I’m running to become prime minister of Canada, because I believe we can make a difference in people’s lives and put people first instead of corporatio­ns.”

In June, when the party released the bulk of its platform, the NDP promised massive new programs and dropped its 2015 campaign pledge to maintain a balanced federal budget. Instead, the party would spend untold billions to expand Canada’s public health care system to cover medicine, dental, vision, hearing, mental health and addictions services over the coming decade. It would spend $15 billion on a climate plan to slash emissions, retrofit buildings, subsidize electric vehicles and support clean tech and renewable energy in a way it claims would create 300,000 jobs.

The party also pledges to pour $5 billion into the government’s housing programs to build 500,000 new affordable units.

So far, the party has been silent on how much this will all cost, but has said that tax hikes on the rich and businesses will raise “several billion dollars” to help pay for it.

Singh said Wednesday that they are working with the Parliament­ary Budget Officer — Canada’s fiscal watchdog — to detail the costs of its platform. He also pointed to measures the NDP has proposed to bring in revenue by raising taxes on corporatio­ns and the rich. The PBO has already ruled on some measures in their platform; on Tuesday, the office said the NDP’s “super wealth tax” on people’s net worth exceeding $20 million could raise as much as $70 billion over the next decade.

After his campaign launch in London, Singh boarded his bus and rode to Mississaug­a, where he was set to spend the rest of the day preparing for Thursday’s leaders’ debate in Toronto. Singh will be left to spar with Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer and May, the Green leader, as Trudeau chose to skip the event.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh’s party is still behind in securing a full roster of federal candidates.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh’s party is still behind in securing a full roster of federal candidates.

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