Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Get Ready! Federal Party Leaders Set To Face Off In Debate Tonight

The Canadian Press, 06 Aug, 2015 11:11 AM
    TORONTO — Green party Leader Elizabeth May wants to improve the quality of the conversation at tonight's leaders debate.
     
    May, who has not been invited to participate in a debate since 2008, says she thinks it is especially important to engage Canadians in this election .
     
    She said she is concerned a 11-week "nasty campaign" will turn voters off.
     
    The Green leader has been preparing privately for the event and she says she does not stage mock debates like the other leaders. 
     
    "It may be my experience as a lawyer," May said. "I never practised my arguments before a judge in front of a mirror before going into court ... it is a personal comfort level with knowing my material and then speaking from the heart."
     
    May will join Conservative Leader Stephen Harper, NDP Leader Tom Mulcair and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau at the two-hour debate organized by Maclean's magazine.
     
    The economy, which has dominated the early days of the election campaign, is expected to be a major topic.
     
    May said she was the only leader in the 2008 debate prepared to say Canada was going into a recession.
     
    She said Harper's economic record has been "pumped and spun by his own spin doctors" but is not very good.
     
    "As a matter of fact, it is one of the worst of any prime minister," May said. "Stephen Harper is supposedly a fiscal Conservative, but he added $150 billion to our federal debt. That is a significant expansion. Now we are at $611 billion national debt."
     
    May said a lot of people focus on the deficit which she said is really " a political problem" as opposed to a fiscal issue.
     
    "Particularly, if our economy is shaky, which it is, I think it is appropriate to run a small deficit," she said.
     
    "Now is not the time for austerity measures and that's exactly the route Stephen Harper has gone."
     
    The debate will also address the environment, energy and foreign policy and security.
     
    The magazine has not released details on the format of the debate, but it is said to include individual question-and-answer periods between the leaders and political editor Paul Wells, as well as free discussion and final statements.
     
    The other party leaders kept a low profile in the run-up to the debate.
     
    Mulcair visited the office of NDP candidate Jennifer Hollett in the Toronto riding of University-Rosedale, saying he's ready for the showdown.
     
    "I am not afraid to stand up to Stephen Harper," Mulcair said. "This is my first debate, I am looking forward to it."
     
    Party insiders say Mulcair, who was praised for his prosecutorial approach in question period during the throes of the Senate scandal, will not try to emulate that style in the debate.
     
    Trudeau allowed to the media to snap his picture as he hit a boxing gym in Toronto this morning.
     
    The Liberal, who famously defeated former Conservative senator Patrick Brazeau in a charity boxing match in 2012, is hoping to showcase his political footwork in the debate.
     
    Conservatives have tried to paint Trudeau as a lightweight and spokesman Kory Teneycke went as far as to say he will exceed expectations "if he comes on stage with his pants on."
     
    "We know that the prime minister will be the focal point of most of the attacks and questions coming from the other party leaders," Teneycke said Tuesday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Takata Airbag Recall Affects 1.2 Million Vehicles In Canada

    Takata Airbag Recall Affects 1.2 Million Vehicles In Canada
    Transport Canada says the recall affects models from Honda, BMW, Ford and Chrysler from the years 2001 to 2014.

    Takata Airbag Recall Affects 1.2 Million Vehicles In Canada

    Christy Clark's Liberals Adjourn Legislature Dreaming About $36-Billion LNG Project

    Christy Clark's Liberals Adjourn Legislature Dreaming About $36-Billion LNG Project
    Clark singled out the progress on BC Hydro's $9-billion Site C hydroelectric dam and the proposed $36-billion, Petronas-backed liquefied natural gas plant as the government's top accomplishments in the spring session.

    Christy Clark's Liberals Adjourn Legislature Dreaming About $36-Billion LNG Project

    Union Leader Unsure Of Plan To Put RCMP In Charge Of Parliament Hill Security

    Union Leader Unsure Of Plan To Put RCMP In Charge Of Parliament Hill Security
    OTTAWA — Will putting the Mounties in charge of security for all of Parliament Hill actually make it safer? The head of the union that represents the existing internal security team thinks not.

    Union Leader Unsure Of Plan To Put RCMP In Charge Of Parliament Hill Security

    As Parties Feud Over Canada Pension Plan, One Constant: We're Not Saving Enough

    OTTAWA — Federal political parties may be quarrelling over how best to expand the Canada Pension Plan, but they seem to agree on one thing: Canadians should be saving more for retirement.

    As Parties Feud Over Canada Pension Plan, One Constant: We're Not Saving Enough

    Polls Show NDP In Three-way Tie But Pollsters Warn Voters Not Yet Engaged

    Polls Show NDP In Three-way Tie But Pollsters Warn Voters Not Yet Engaged
    For newshounds watching the CBC's national newscast on May 13, 1987, anchor Knowlton Nash's declaration raised the prospect of a seismic shift in federal politics.

    Polls Show NDP In Three-way Tie But Pollsters Warn Voters Not Yet Engaged

    Fewer Manitoba Foster Kids In Hotels, But Might Still Have To Be Used: Minister

    Fewer Manitoba Foster Kids In Hotels, But Might Still Have To Be Used: Minister
    WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government says fewer foster children are being put up in hotels, but the accommodation may still have to be used occasionally.

    Fewer Manitoba Foster Kids In Hotels, But Might Still Have To Be Used: Minister