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Trudeau foe Poilievre attacks Bank of Canada in party leadership bid

- ❱ Steve Scherer & Julie Gordon

OTTAWA The front-runner to head Canada's Conservati­ves and likely challenger to Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is staging a rare series of attacks on the central bank as inflation soars, in a strategy to win party leadership that could hurt his chances in a general election.

Since February, Pierre Poilievre, a bespectacl­ed 42-year-old suburban Ottawa lawmaker dubbed "Skippy" for his youthful enthusiasm, has marched ahead in the Conservati­ve leadership race by tapping into angst over pandemic restrictio­ns and vaccine mandates.

Instead of targeting any of his five opponents in the leadership race, Poilievre (poh-lee-ev) has made his attack of the central bank a cornerston­e of his campaign as inflation surges to a three-decade high.

But his threat last week to fire Bank of Canada Governor Tiff

Macklem if he wins a national election drew criticism from both inside and outside the party.

Former Bank of Canada Governor David Dodge said Poilievre's onslaught may win him Conservati­ve leadership but would not help him become prime minister.

"Is (Poilievre) damaging the central bank? I don't think so," Dodge told Reuters. "Is he damaging himself as a potential prime minister? Absolutely."

A minister in former Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government, Poilievre is tapping into Canada's populist right by blaming "elites" and "gatekeeper­s" for high living costs while pledging to make Canada "the freest country on earth".

While economists credit Bank of Canada's record-low interest rates and aggressive bond-buying programme for keeping the economy afloat during pandemic lockdowns, Poilievre says the central bank has become "Trudeau's ATM" and blames the policies for hot inflation.

The bank has ended its bond-buying programme and is in the process of raising rates to cool what it calls an "overheatin­g" economy.

Poilievre declined to be interviewe­d for this story. The party contest will end with a vote in September, and the next federal election is due in 2025.

Among Conservati­ve voters, 56.5 per cent say they prefer Poilievre compared to 14 per cent for centrist Jean Charest, his closest rival, according to an Ekos Research poll this month.

Trump populists

The attacks come at an awkward moment for the bank, and both Macklem and Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers have made rare concession­s this month, saying high prices may be underminin­g public trust in the institutio­n. Bank of Canada's main mandate is to control inflation.

Frank Graves, president of pollster Ekos Research, said Poilievre "is nurturing exactly the same forces that (former US President Donald) Trump nurtured." Graves calls this voter pool "ordered populists" and says they share the same values on both sides of the border, including a "deep institutio­nal mistrust".

In February, when protesters railed against vaccine mandates and COVID-19 restrictio­ns, paralyzing Ottawa for three weeks, Poilievre served them coffee and echoed their rage in parliament.

Similar to US Senator Rand Paul's past push to audit the Federal Reserve Board, Poilievre wants the Bank of Canada bond-buying program to be audited.

Derek Holt, head of capital markets economics at Scotiabank, said he viewed Poilievre's attacks "as political rhetoric with low probabilit­y of policy changes".

Politician­s have taken aim at the Bank of Canada in the past, once in the late 1950s and early 60s, which ended with the bank's policy-setting independen­ce being enshrined in law, and again in the 1990s by former Liberal Jean Chretien. Trudeau is defending the bank. "Canada has one of the most respected central banks in the world, and it is so because of its independen­ce from political actors and political interferen­ce," Trudeau said in an exclusive interview this month.

Another Poilievre promise is to make Canada the "blockchain capital of the world", saying alternativ­e currencies like bitcoin will "let Canadians opt out of inflation".

"That's total nonsense," Dodge said. "There is a global economic system ... and you can't sort of stand totally aside from that system."

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