Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Harper Enters French Debate With Political Allies But Bloc Backing On Niqab

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2015 12:20 PM
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper doesn't have a reputation as a gambler, but his 2015 federal election call is shaping up as an all-or-nothing bet on another Conservative majority.
     
    The prime minister heads into tonight's nationally televised, French-language leaders' debate with only Gilles Duceppe of the Bloc Quebecois as a potential supportive dance partner after the votes are counted on Oct. 19.
     
    NDP Leader Tom Mulcair and Green party Leader Elizabeth May both slammed the door this week on any prospect of propping up a Conservative minority government, joining Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau in their flat out disdain for keeping Harper in office if his party can't command majority support in the House of Commons.
     
    "There isn't a snowball's chance in hell," Mulcair said Wednesday on the campaign trail.
     
    "We would not ever collaborate or support Stephen Harper," May told The Canadian Press in an editorial board the same day. "It's critical that he be gone before the Paris negotiations (this December on climate change) for the health of those negotiations."
     
    "There are no circumstances in which I would support Stephen Harper to continue being prime minister of this country," Trudeau averred a day earlier.
     
    Harper won a majority government — his first — in the 2011 general election on the strength of a pitch that explicitly called for a majority mandate. He's avoided such talk during eight long weeks of campaigning this time around as most polls have had the three major parties deadlocked in a three-way tie.
     
    Asked about the absence of his majority pitch earlier this month during a campaign stop in Whitehorse, Harper warned voters of "some kind of unworkable coalition that ends up with an agenda nobody actually voted for."
     
    "So I don't know whether that's a choice, but I know the only choice to keep us moving forward is a strong, stable, national majority Conservative government and that's what's I continue to advocate," he said at the time.
     
    There were early signs Thursday that the logjam could be starting to break, with three different pollsters suggesting New Democrat support may be beginning to soften, to the benefit of both Conservatives and Liberals.
     
    "Overall, it's fragile," pollster Jean-Marc Leger said of NDP support. "It's really fragile in Quebec."
     
    That makes tonight's French debate in Montreal a critical milestone for Mulcair. It also makes him a target.
     
    When Parliament was dissolved for the election, the NDP held 54 of Quebec's 75 seats, with no other party in double digits. The Liberals held seven seats, five ridings were represented by Independents and five by Conservatives with a splintered Bloc Quebecois and Forces et Democratie splitting the remainder.
     
    Under new riding redistributions this election, the House of Commons increases to 338 seats from 308, including three new electoral districts in Quebec which will give the province 78 MPs.
     
    The debate is the third leaders' debate of the campaign but the first to be nationally televised by the major networks. It is also the first to include five party leaders, adding May of the Greens and the Bloc's Duceppe to the mix.
     
    It also marks the beginning of an intense nine-day period that will see three leaders' debates in all, two in French and one predominantly in English.
     
    The wild card tonight is the emotionally charged issue of religious face coverings and citizenship ceremonies.
     
    Harper and Duceppe will find themselves on one side of the issue, facing off against Mulcair, Trudeau and May.
     
    Both the Conservatives and the Bloc have put out campaign ads exploiting the divisive niqab debate, although the issue only touches a miniscule fraction of Canada's one million Muslims, who in total comprise just 3.2 per cent of the population according to the 2011 census.
     
    May had harsh words for both Harper and Duceppe this week when asked about the niqab debate.
     
    "Excuse me, this is not an issue," she said. "This is a cynical manipulation."
     
    The leaders kept a low profile in the hours before the debate, though Trudeau held a photo-op with his wife and their three children playing in a park.
     
    The Conservatives, meanwhile, announced they would buy the Neustadt, Ont., house where former Tory prime minister John Diefenbaker was born and establish it as a National Historic Site.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer
    EDMONTON — There appears to be a Canadian connection to a U.S. hunter at the centre of a social media storm for killing a protected lion in Africa.

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer

    Drought Prompts B.C. First Nations Group To Close Central Interior Fishery

    Drought Prompts B.C. First Nations Group To Close Central Interior Fishery
    KELOWNA, B.C. — Drought conditions in British Columbia have forced the closure of another fishery in the province's southern Interior.

    Drought Prompts B.C. First Nations Group To Close Central Interior Fishery

    Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh Holds Pakistan Responsible For Dinanagar Attack

      Holding Pakistan responsible for the July 27 Dinanagar terror attack, union Home Minister Rajnath Singh on Thursday said any attack by enemies will meet an effective and forceful response from the Indian security forces.

    Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh Holds Pakistan Responsible For Dinanagar Attack

    Dutch Police Release Edmonton Murder Suspect Omar. J. Elkadry From Caribbean Island Jail

    Dutch Police Release Edmonton Murder Suspect Omar. J. Elkadry From Caribbean Island Jail
    In early June, Dutch authorities on the island of Saba arrested the man as a suspect in the death of the woman, whose body was found in April.

    Dutch Police Release Edmonton Murder Suspect Omar. J. Elkadry From Caribbean Island Jail

    Trial Off Until Next May For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election-night Shooting

    Trial Off Until Next May For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election-night Shooting
    MONTREAL — There has been yet another delay in the trial for the man charged in Quebec's 2012 election-night shooting.

    Trial Off Until Next May For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election-night Shooting

    Kinder Morgan Pipeline Opponents Furious About 'Chaotic' Review Process

    VANCOUVER — Opponents of Kinder Morgan's plan to boost capacity of its Trans Mountain pipeline across southern B.C., accuse the National Energy Board of once again changing key dates in the review process.

    Kinder Morgan Pipeline Opponents Furious About 'Chaotic' Review Process