Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jagmeet Singh's Leadership Under Microscope As NDP MPs Prepare To Meet In B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Sep, 2018 07:02 PM
    OTTAWA — With almost a year under his belt as leader and an election nearly a year away, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh faces pressure to show a united team when he meets with caucus members for a strategy session beginning on Tuesday.
     
     
    Singh, who took over the helm of the beleaguered New Democrats last October, is facing calls from party stalwarts to lay out his vision for the 2019 election bid.
     
     
    He is also planning to run for a seat in the House of Commons held by the party, but one it snagged by just over 500 votes in 2015.
     
     
    NDP strategist Robin MacLachlan said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has opened the door for Singh to argue the Liberal government is failing progressive voters and the NDP leader needs to walk through the opening with a plan.
     
     
    "I am somewhat disappointed that his vision has not translated into a clear narrative that is cracking through what can often be the favoured two-party horse race," MacLachlan said. "It is up to Jagmeet Singh to prove that the NDP won't fail in owning that progressive space."
     
     
    Singh will have a chance to test drive his campaign narrative whenever Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sets a byelection date for the B.C. riding of Burnaby South. Singh announced in early August he would run in the seat being vacated by fellow New Democrat Kennedy Stewart who is taking a run at Vancouver's mayoralty.
     
     
    "No better place than Burnaby where the battleground over the (Trans Mountain) pipeline that has become, I would suggest, perhaps the bane of the Liberal government's existence," MacLachlan said, referring to the Federal Court of Appeal's decision to overturn Ottawa's approval of the pipeline expansion.
     
     
    NDP national campaign co-chair Marie Della Mattia said the byelection in Burnaby South, as well as other planned byelections, offer the party key opportunities to signal what the NDP stands for ahead of the 2019 election.
     
     
    "We have something to say and we believe that it connects with what people are feeling and what they want from their government," Della Mattia said.
     
     
    Singh was not available Monday for an interview.
     
     
    A byelection win could improve Singh's relationship with caucus, said McMaster University professor Peter Graefe, noting the NDP has recently garnered headlines for internal matters rather than what it offers voters.
     
     
    "They have to have find a way to work better," he said.
     
     
    Last week, Singh announced MP Erin Weir will not be able to run as a New Democrat in 2019 — a decision causing a rift between the leader and the party’s long-standing members in Saskatchewan.
     
     
    There is also grumbling about the party's finances.
     
     
    The party pulled in $4.86 million from 39,053 donors in 2017, a decline from the $5.39 million collected in 2016, and a steep drop from the $18.59 million in 2015.
     
     
    Until the party fares better financially, Singh has decided to forego his paycheque.
     
     
    Veteran NDP MP Nathan Cullen said he wishes his party was in a better place and the caucus meetings in Surrey offer a "natural reset moment."
     
     
    Cullen, who backed Singh's leadership bid last year, said he was impressed by the leader's energy and ability to relate to people during a visit to Cullen's B.C. riding this summer.
     
     
    "I was curious to see how he would be able to relate across a very wide spectrum of people," Cullen said. "He did really well and I'm saying that very objectively."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sister-In-Law Of Just For Laughs Founder Rozon Accuses Him Of Sexual Misconduct

    Sister-In-Law Of Just For Laughs Founder Rozon Accuses Him Of Sexual Misconduct
    MONTREAL — The latest woman to accuse Just For Laughs founder Gilbert Rozon of sexual misconduct is his sister-in-law, who alleges in an interview the businessman pulled down her underwear and assaulted her in the mid-1990s.

    Sister-In-Law Of Just For Laughs Founder Rozon Accuses Him Of Sexual Misconduct

    Lucky, Lucky: Man In Winnipeg Wins Second Million-Dollar Lottery Prize

    Lucky, Lucky: Man In Winnipeg Wins Second Million-Dollar Lottery Prize
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg man has won a $2-million lottery prize — five months after he won $1.5 million.

    Lucky, Lucky: Man In Winnipeg Wins Second Million-Dollar Lottery Prize

    As Proud Indians, We Want To Bring The Best To India: Consulting Perfumer Abdulla Ajmal

    As Proud Indians, We Want To Bring The Best To India: Consulting Perfumer Abdulla Ajmal
    Dubai-based Indian perfumer Abdulla Ajmal, who is the consulting perfumer to Ajmal India, says the label is ready for its "ghar wapsi" to offer the best in the country.

    As Proud Indians, We Want To Bring The Best To India: Consulting Perfumer Abdulla Ajmal

    Immigration Fuelling French-immersion Demand As Provinces Vie For Teachers

    Immigration Fuelling French-immersion Demand As Provinces Vie For Teachers
    VANCOUVER — Back-to-school buzz only led to worry for a Vancouver father fretting about his daughter's chances of getting into French immersion — a year before she starts kindergarten.

    Immigration Fuelling French-immersion Demand As Provinces Vie For Teachers

    B.C. Court Orders Bus Company To Rethink Rejection Of Anti-Abortion Ads

    B.C. Court Orders Bus Company To Rethink Rejection Of Anti-Abortion Ads
    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Appeal Court has overturned a decision by Metro Vancouver's transit authority that refused advertising space to an anti-abortion education group on its buses.

    B.C. Court Orders Bus Company To Rethink Rejection Of Anti-Abortion Ads

    Paramedic Spots Part Of Plane That Went Missing In B.C. 10 Months Ago

      REVELSTOKE, B.C. — Clear weather and "a split-second glimpse of something" that didn't belong among the trees led to the discovery of a plane that went missing last November in southeastern B.C., says a critical care paramedic who spotted the wreckage.

    Paramedic Spots Part Of Plane That Went Missing In B.C. 10 Months Ago

    PrevNext