Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Political Fate Of Jagmeet Singh, NDP, On The Line In Federal Byelections

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2019 07:11 PM

    OTTAWA — Jagmeet Singh's political fate — and the fortunes of the New Democratic Party as a whole — are in the hands of voters today in a British Columbia riding.


    The NDP leader is running for a seat in the House of Commons in Burnaby South, one of three federal ridings holding byelections today.


    Many New Democrats believe it's a do-or-die contest — that Singh cannot lead his party in this fall's general election if he can't get himself a seat in Parliament.


    Singh is hoping a victory tonight will give him much-needed visibility in the Commons in the run-up to the national vote in October, and put to rest grumbling within the NDP about his underwhelming performance since being chosen leader almost 18 months ago.

     


    But Singh's problems go well beyond his lack of visibility on the main stage of federal politics. The former Ontario provincial politician has faced criticism about his seeming unfamiliarity with federal issues and his handling of internal caucus matters — particularly his decision to kick Saskatchewan MP Erin Weir out of caucus for alleged misconduct, which has infuriated many NDP stalwarts in the province seen as the cradle of the party.


    Under his leadership, the NDP has plunged to its lowest standings in public opinion polls since 2000, when it won just 13 seats. The party is mired in debt and its fundraising is sluggish. At least 11 of the 44 MPs who won seats for the party in 2015 have announced they won't seek re-election this fall.


    While many NDP eyes will be glued to Burnaby South tonight, an arguably better gauge of the party's election-year viability will be going on in Outremont — the Montreal riding vacated last summer by Singh's predecessor, Tom Mulcair.

     


    The riding had been a Liberal stronghold until Mulcair scored an upset in a 2007 byelection. His victory turned Outremont into a beachhead for the NDP, which helped to launch the so-called orange wave that swept the province in 2011 and boosted the party to official Opposition status for the first time in its history. While the party held onto just 16 Quebec seats in 2015, Quebec MPs still make up more than a third of the NDP caucus.


    The betting among political insiders is that the Liberals will retake Outremont, which would be a welcome boost for the governing party's morale in the midst of the SNC-Lavalin controversy — and a particularly bitter loss for the NDP. The symbolism of losing their erstwhile beachhead would only reinforce polls suggesting New Democrats are in danger of being wiped out altogether in Quebec this fall.

     


    But the blow would be softened, at least, if Singh is able to capture Burnaby South.


    It's no sure thing. The B.C. riding is not a natural home for Singh, who formerly represented Brampton in the Ontario legislature. Nor is it a safe NDP riding: New Democrat Kennedy Stewart, who resigned to become mayor of Vancouver, took the riding in 2015 with just over 600 votes more than his Liberal opponent, with the Conservative candidate not far behind.


    While the byelection is thought to be a three-way race, being a party leader should give Singh an edge. The fact that the Green party has chosen not to run a candidate should also help.


    Moreover, the Liberals did themselves no favours by dumping their original candidate amid controversy over her suggestion that Singh being of "Indian descent" could help her win.

     

    The current Liberal contender, Richard T. Lee, could face headwinds of a different kind, created by the ongoing furor over allegations that the Prime Minister's Office pressured former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould — who represents a nearby Vancouver riding — to halt a criminal prosecution of SNC-Lavalin.


    The third byelection is being held in the Ontario riding of York-Simcoe, left vacant by the retirement of Peter Van Loan, who had held the seat for the Conservatives since 2004. He won with a healthy 50 per cent of the votes in 2015, and the Tories are expected to easily hang on tonight.

     


    All three contests will give the Conservatives a glimpse of what, if any damage, they might sustain from the advent of the breakaway People's Party of Canada, formed by one-time Tory leadership contender Maxime Bernier. The byelections mark the first time Bernier's fledgling party will actually be put to an electoral test.

     

    PHOTO: Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nature Conservancy Recommends A Better Fate For Your Christmas Tree

    Now, the Nature Conservancy of Canada is suggesting that people should instead haul their tree to the backyard, to help nature and learn a bit about ecology.    

    Nature Conservancy Recommends A Better Fate For Your Christmas Tree

    Thousands Remain Without Power Nearly A Week After B.C. Windstorms

    Thousands Remain Without Power Nearly A Week After B.C. Windstorms
    BC Hydro says more than 900 crewmembers are working to repair the system, and they hope to have all the lights back on by New Year's Eve.

    Thousands Remain Without Power Nearly A Week After B.C. Windstorms

    House In Nanaimo, B.C., Broken Into And Gifts Stolen On Christmas Day

    House In Nanaimo, B.C., Broken Into And Gifts Stolen On Christmas Day
    Police say grinches broke into a home in Nanaimo, B.C., on Christmas morning and stole "gifts and memories."

    House In Nanaimo, B.C., Broken Into And Gifts Stolen On Christmas Day

    Targeted Christmas Day Shooting Leaves 25-Year-Old North Vancouver Man Dead

    Police say they found Rock Habib-Joumaa of North Vancouver with gunshot wounds, and he was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Targeted Christmas Day Shooting Leaves 25-Year-Old North Vancouver Man Dead

    Spread Of Invasive Species In Canada Costs Billions, Changes Environment

    Purnimia Govindarajulu, a small mammal and herpetofauna specialist at B.C.'s Ministry of Environment, said disease and invasive fish already mean the endangered frogs aren't thriving as they should be in a wetland in Creston.

    Spread Of Invasive Species In Canada Costs Billions, Changes Environment

    Transgender Canadians Say Death Certificates Don't Reflect Their Lived Identity

    "It's the final 'screw you,'" says Callum Tate, a Toronto transgender man in his mid-30s. "It erases them without their voice here to say, 'You made a mistake.'"

    Transgender Canadians Say Death Certificates Don't Reflect Their Lived Identity