Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal Party Leaders Kick Off Election Campaign For The Oct. 21 Election

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Sep, 2019 05:20 PM

    OTTAWA - The latest developments as federal party leaders officially kick off campaigning for the Oct. 21 election (all times Eastern):

     

    12:30 p.m.

     

    Green party Leader Elizabeth May says the Oct. 21 vote is the most important election in Canadian history.

    Speaking to a packed room in Victoria, where many gathered very early in the morning on the West Coast, May says her party will talk about the scope of the climate emergency not to scare voters, but to inform them.

     

    Her party is hoping to capitalize on interest in tackling climate change, as well as a growing number of Green politicians elected in recent provincial votes.

     

    May says her party is also going to talk about free tuition for post-secondary students, child care and pharmacare, among other issues, during the campaign.

     

    Facing questions from reporters, she says the Green party won't trample on women's right to safe and legal abortions.

     

    She also says her party doesn't support Quebec separatism, adding that NDP-turned-Green candidate Pierre Nantel is not a separatist despite his comments to an internet radio show that he would vote in favour of the province leaving Canada in a referendum.

     

    11:35 a.m.

     

    Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Fancois Blanchet says voters in Quebec have flirted with three parties in recent years none of whom has done enough for the province.

     

    The Bloc are hoping to improve on the 10 seats they have in the House of Commons after watching voters back the Conservatives, NDP and Liberals over the last three elections.

     

    Blanchet rolls through a list of federal issues in the province: a single tax rate in Quebec that the federal government has rejected, concerns about the amount of work the Davie shipyard has received, and secularism.

     

    The province's secularism law, which prevents public workers from wearing religious symbols, has taken on a larger presence in the election and Blanchet touches on it in his campaign kickoff speech.

     

    Earlier in the day, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said he didn't believe it was productive for the federal government to get involved in a legal challenge of Bill 21, while Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer said such a bill is not something his party would ever consider at the federal level.

     

    Trudeau and Scheer also said they would stand up for Canadians' rights.

     

    11:15 a.m.

    Jagmeet Singh says the election comes down to a clear question for voters: Who can you count on?

     

    The NDP leader believes the answer is him, telling supporters he plans to talks about providing services like pharmacare and dental care, vision care and mental health services, but only by taking on "lobbyists" and "corporate interests."

     

    Singh says Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer will say one thing on the campaign trail, but then do something else behind closed doors once in office.

     

    The bulk of the NDP platform has been out for months, including putting a tax on the super wealthy to pay for some of the party's promises.

     

    Singh is in London, Ont., and speaking about his time in the city and some of the difficulties he faced and the people who helped him through it, reminding him that Canadians believe in taking care of each other.

     

    He also says how as a child, he never imagined that someone who looked like him could one day run to be prime minister and now he has kids coming up to him saying they believe they can do anything.

     

    10:55 a.m.

     

    Justin Trudeau says Canadians get to vote for the kind of Canada they want to live in next month — by giving his party another term, or taking a step back with the Conservatives.

     

    After emerging from Rideau Hall, the Liberal leader spoke about how poverty rates have dropped and job creation is on the rise and attributes both to his party's policies, including the Canada Child Benefit.

     

    He says politics is, at the end of the day, about people, and voters deserve a real plan for their future.

     

    Trudeau began his first remarks of the campaign by recalling the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States.

     

    But in taking questions, the SNC-Lavalin affair took top billing.

     

    Asked what his government is hiding, Trudeau says his office gave the largest waiver of cabinet confidences in Canadian history but added nothing more.

     

    10:05 a.m.

     

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has arrived at Rideau Hall with his wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau to meet with Gov. Gen. Julie Payette and formally start the campaign.

     

    Trudeau will ask Payette to dissolve Parliament and call for a general election, which the law says must be held Oct. 21.

     

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is in London, Ont. to launch his party's campaign, while Green Leader Elizabeth May is joining candidates for an early-morning rally in Victoria, B.C.

     

    In a statement, May says the campaign comes at a "pivotal point in history," adding that climate change is on the minds of many voters.

     

    She makes a pitch for voters to back her party and elect MPs who won't "back down, compromise or waffle."

     

    There also appears to be the first hiccup of the campaign: the weather has forced Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer's campaign plane to fly instead to Quebec City and bus to Trois-Rivieres, Que., for his first rally.

     

    9:30 a.m.

     

    Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer is taking aim at Justin Trudeau over the SNC-Lavalin affair ahead of the prime minister's visit to Rideau Hall to officially launch the federal election campaign.

     

    Scheer is calling Trudeau a "liar," arguing the Liberal leader has lost the moral authority to govern and saying his goal for the next five weeks is to convince Canadians of that.

     

    Much of his attack arises from a report in the Globe and Mail that cabinet confidentiality is preventing people from speaking to the RCMP as the force considers a possible investigation into obstruction of justice.

     

    With the Conservative campaign plane behind him, Scheer also says he plans to spend the next five weeks or so talking to Canadians about the Tories' platform.

     

    Scheer is now off to Trois-Rivieres, Que., for his first campaign event.

     

    Trudeau is scheduled to arrive at Rideau Hall at 10 a.m. to ask the Governor General to dissolve Parliament and call for a general election.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Community Sets Guinness World Record For Largest Human Maple Leaf

    Nearly 4,000 people participated in forming a maple leaf in a park in Trenton, Ont., on Saturday.

    Ontario Community Sets Guinness World Record For Largest Human Maple Leaf

    Garbage-hauling Ship Arrives In Canada After Journey From Philippines

    VANCOUVER — An infamous load of Canadian trash that had been rotting in the Philippines for more than five years has come full circle, arriving by ship at a port south of Vancouver on Saturday morning.

    Garbage-hauling Ship Arrives In Canada After Journey From Philippines

    Bison In Prince Albert National Park Declining From Overhunting: Study

    Bison In Prince Albert National Park Declining From Overhunting: Study
    Research into free-roaming plains bison in Saskatchewan's Prince Albert National Park says the herd could go extinct from overhunting in fields outside the protected area.

    Bison In Prince Albert National Park Declining From Overhunting: Study

    Americans Head To Canada To Buy Cheap Insulin; Some Worry About Supply Here

    Americans Head To Canada To Buy Cheap Insulin; Some Worry About Supply Here
    The soaring cost of insulin in the United States prompted a group of American diabetics to head to Canada on Friday to buy the non-prescription drug at a fraction of the price.    

    Americans Head To Canada To Buy Cheap Insulin; Some Worry About Supply Here

    Health Canada Warns Diabetics Some Insulin Pumps At Risk For Cyberattacks

    Health Canada Warns Diabetics Some Insulin Pumps At Risk For Cyberattacks
    Health Canada is warning diabetics and health-care providers that some insulin pumps could be susceptible to cyberattacks.    

    Health Canada Warns Diabetics Some Insulin Pumps At Risk For Cyberattacks

    Cyclist Dies In Burnaby, B.C., After Collision With Car, Rcmp Say

    Cyclist Dies In Burnaby, B.C., After Collision With Car, Rcmp Say
    BURNABY, B.C. — Police say a cyclist has died after being struck by a vehicle in Burnaby, B.C., on Saturday afternoon.

    Cyclist Dies In Burnaby, B.C., After Collision With Car, Rcmp Say