With only a year to go before the next election, New Democrats have joined Conservatives in trying to knock Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau off his perch as the front-runner.
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair declared open season Thursday on Trudeau, mocking the "getting ready to lead" slogan used in the most recent Liberal ad.
"They won't tell us what they'll do but they think it's reassuring to tell us that their guy's getting ready," Mulcair said in a campaign-style stem-winder wrapping up a two-day NDP caucus strategy session.
"Yeah, right. Getting ready for what? I'm sorry, prime minister just isn't an entry level job."
Mulcair's jibe is similar to the Conservative refrain that Trudeau is "in over his head."
The NDP leader also accused Trudeau of having no concrete solutions and no ideas.
In contrast to the neophyte Liberal leader, Mulcair touted his own experience and his party's substantive policy planks to assert that the NDP is ready now to take over from Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives.
"After nine long years of Conservative policies, Canadians just can't afford to wait for someone who's getting ready to take on Stephen Harper," he said.
"We're taking on Stephen Harper and his policies right now. The NDP is ready to form a truly progressive government right now."
The podium from which Mulcair spoke was plastered with an NDP sign featuring the party's new slogan: "Change that's ready."
The NDP vaulted past the Liberals in the 2011 election to become the official Opposition for the first time in history, giving New Democrats confidence that they were on the cusp of finally taking power in the next election.
But since Trudeau took the helm 18 months ago, the Liberals have risen from their apparent death bed to take a healthy lead in public opinion polls, relegating New Democrats to their more familiar third-place position.
NDP strategists and MPs have been frustrated that a leader they consider a featherweight greenhorn has managed to eclipse the more seasoned and substantive Mulcair, who has been unveiling policy planks and has been lauded for his strong performance grilling Harper in the House of Commons.
In openly questioning Trudeau's fitness to govern, the NDP is echoing the Conservatives, who've been attacking him relentlessly from the moment he took over as Liberal leader.
However, the Tory attack ads have not so far made a dent in Trudeau's popularity. Indeed, Liberals maintain they've actually helped reinforce the perception that Harper is a bully and that Trudeau is a more hopeful, positive, sunny, different kind of political leader.
By joining the attack, Mulcair risks being seen as too much like Harper, the prime minister he wants to replace.
But Mulcair insisted Thursday that it's the Liberals and Tories who are identical twins. He accused both parties of overseeing a growing gap between rich and poor Canadians, of failing to deliver on promises to provide child care spaces and of preferring to cut taxes for rich corporations rather than preserve funding for health care.
Indeed, Mulcair said Trudeau himself has "complacently" argued that Liberals and Conservatives have broadly shared the same values and agenda over the past 30 years.
"I promise you, I don't share Stephen Harper's agenda," Mulcair said.
"But maybe it's because Liberals and Conservatives share the same agenda that the middle class is doing so poorly. Maybe we should do something about that.
"After nine years of Stephen Harper, there's no time to waste. Canadians need a team that's ready to work for them from day one and the NDP team is ready."
The NDP is promising to roll out this fall — a full year ahead of the next scheduled election — detailed planks from their eventual platform, including plans for a national child care program, a federal minimum wage and infrastructure investment. The aim is to further contrast Mulcair's substance with Trudeau's refusal to be nailed down on major policy before the campaign actually gets underway.