Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario's Sikh Politician Jagmeet Singh To Shake Up Federal NDP Leadership Race

The Canadian Press, 15 May, 2017 11:15 AM
    OTTAWA — Jagmeet Singh, long a star among the NDP ranks of the Ontario legislature, embarks later today on a bid to replace Tom Mulcair as the party's leader in Ottawa — a quest that could make him the first non-Caucasian to helm a major federal party.
     
    Singh, who currently serves as the provincial party's deputy leader, is expected to launch his campaign tonight alongside supporters at an event at Bombay Palace in Brampton, Ont. — the same place he celebrated his 2011 provincial win.
     
    His supporters include Manitoba legislature member Nahanni Fontaine, party youth wing co-chair Ali Chatur, Quebec organizer and former Jack Layton speechwriter Willy Blomme and Peel school board trustee Harkirat Singh.
     
    Should he be successful, Singh — a turbaned Sikh — would break through a long-standing barrier at the federal level, one that really ought have been shattered long ago, said Karl Belanger, Mulcair's former principal secretary.
     
    "Having somebody from a different ethnic background than what we have seen over the past 150 years is something that needs to be applauded," Belanger said.
     
    The NDP has had trouble connecting with ethnic minorities both in Ontario and at the federal level, said Queen's University labour and history professor Christo Aivalis.
     
    Singh's leadership would send a strong signal to the party and to the Canadian public, Aivalis said.
     
     
    "While some people fear that his turban, his name, his skin colour ... could hurt him in certain parts of Canada, others say that in big cities where the majority of seats are, he speaks to a new Canada," Aivalis said.
     
    In the run-up to the 2015 election, the NDP campaign hit a brick wall when Mulcair got caught between a political rock — the question of whether to allow Muslim face coverings during citizenship ceremonies — and a hard place, that being Quebec.
     
    The NDP leader, who entered the campaign as the front-runner, saw his base of support in his home province bleed away after he came out opposing Conservative and Bloc Quebecois plans to ban the niqab during the oath of citizenship.
     
    That controversy highlights how secularism can be used by some to promote discriminatory policies, capitalize on identity issues and create divisions, Belanger said. "Quebec has a strong movement opposed to religious symbols."
     
    That could be an issue for Singh, he added, but to what extent is not yet clear.
     
    Born in the east Toronto community of Scarborough to Punjabi parents, Singh's upbringing included stints in St. John's, N.L., and Windsor, Ont.; he worked as a criminal defence attorney before making the jump to politics in 2011.
     
    He's also known as a fashion plate — he has graced multiple best-dressed and style-icon lists in the Toronto area over the years — and for his prowess as a mixed martial arts fighter.
     
     
    Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said Monday that Singh has been a help to the provincial party.
     
    "Jagmeet’s been an excellent member of our team," she said. "He's certainly done a lot of hard work to engage young people with our party, to engage folks in the broader GTA with our party."
     
    Singh's candidacy will undoubtedly bring a new dimension to the race, said Nathan Cullen, a veteran MP who sought the job in 2012 as one of several rivals to Mulcair.
     
    "I think it will likely change the dynamic for the good," Cullen said in an interview. "I've always been a fan; he's a compelling speaker and has solid progressive roots and I think would be a challenge for (Prime Minister Justin) Trudeau."
     
    Cullen said he believes the race is shaping up well — especially since at one point, it wasn't clear whether anyone really wanted to join what was sure to be a long and protracted race. Voting is scheduled to take place in October.
     
    Cullen, too, said it's high time there was some diversity on display in the offices of Ottawa's political leaders.
     
    "It will be a challenge to some people's perspective as well of what a Canadian political leader looks like and where they come from."
     
     
    The other official NDP leadership contenders are B.C. MP Peter Julian, Ontario MP Charlie Angus, Manitoba MP Niki Ashton and Quebec MP Guy Caron.
     
    Former veterans ombudsman Pat Stogran and Montreal consulting firm founder Ibrahim Bruno El-Khoury are also running, but are not yet considered official because they haven't submitted nomination paperwork or paid the fee.
     
    First-quarter results from Elections Canada show Angus is leading the campaign fundraising race.
     
    Between January and March 2017, Angus brought in $110,765, while Ashton collected $65,521, Caron received $57,235 and Julian raised $19,143. 
     
    The next leadership debate is scheduled for Sudbury, Ont., on May 28.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Kevin O'Leary To Quit Conservative Leadership Race, Support Maxime Bernier

    OTTAWA — Celebrity investor and reality-TV star Kevin O'Leary is quitting the federal Conservative leadership race and throwing his support behind Quebec rival Maxime Bernier.

    Kevin O'Leary To Quit Conservative Leadership Race, Support Maxime Bernier

    Wife Of Accused B.C. Polygamist Testifies About Life As A Sister-Wife

    Wife Of Accused B.C. Polygamist Testifies About Life As A Sister-Wife
    CRANBROOK, B.C. — The first legal wife of a man accused of polygamy has testified in B.C. Supreme Court about her marriage and life as a sister-wife with up to two dozen other women.

    Wife Of Accused B.C. Polygamist Testifies About Life As A Sister-Wife

    Terrorism Concerns Lead To Security Changes At Passport Offices

    Terrorism Concerns Lead To Security Changes At Passport Offices
    OTTAWA — The federal government has been quietly making changes to passport offices in a bid to improve security and address concerns that the facilities could be easy targets for a terrorist attack.

    Terrorism Concerns Lead To Security Changes At Passport Offices

    Premier Christy Clark Calls On Ottawa To Ban Coal Exports After Softwood Lumber Duties

    Premier Christy Clark Calls On Ottawa To Ban Coal Exports After Softwood Lumber Duties
      Clark says she has written to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asking Ottawa to act by stopping the export of the coal, including from the United States.

    Premier Christy Clark Calls On Ottawa To Ban Coal Exports After Softwood Lumber Duties

    Missing Sex Offender From B.C. Believed To Be Heading To Manitoba

    Missing Sex Offender From B.C. Believed To Be Heading To Manitoba
    Police issued the warrant for Joseph Davis, who is 46, after he failed to report at his halfway house in the city.

    Missing Sex Offender From B.C. Believed To Be Heading To Manitoba

    Sen. Patrick Brazeau Acquitted Of Charges Related To Drunk Driving

    Sen. Patrick Brazeau Acquitted Of Charges Related To Drunk Driving
    OTTAWA — Sen. Patrick Brazeau has been acquitted of drunk-driving charges that date back to 2014.

    Sen. Patrick Brazeau Acquitted Of Charges Related To Drunk Driving