Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Calls Quebec Byelection Days After Visit, $60M Funding Pledge In Riding

The Canadian Press, 14 May, 2018 12:17 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has called a byelection for the Quebec riding of Chicoutimi-Le Fjord, only days after pledging $60 million in federal funding for an aluminum-smelting project in the area.
     
    Voters there will head to the polls on June 18 to elect a new member of Parliament, after first-term Liberal MP Denis Lemieux announced his resignation due to family reasons late last year.
     
    Federal parties have been waiting for the byelection as the riding has changed hands several times and was hotly contested in the last election, as Lemieux narrowly beat out incumbent NDP MP Dany Morin by 600 votes.
     
    That equated to a 1.37 per cent margin of victory.
     
    But opposition parties have criticized the prime minister for making the funding announcement only days before he was due to call the byelection, saying the move smacks of cheap political tricks.
     
    Trudeau announced the byelection on Sunday, three days after visiting the riding with Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard, where the two offered financial support for a $558-million prototype aluminum smelter.
     
    The project, a joint venture between aluminum giants Alcoa and Rio Tinto, has been billed as the first carbon-free smelter in the world.
     
    Several Liberal cabinet ministers and MPs have also visited the riding in recent weeks to distribute millions of dollars in interest-free loans to local businesses.
     
    "It's not a coincidence that suddenly the prime minister and the Liberal government are paying a lot of attention to this riding when he did absolutely nothing in the last two and a half years," Conservative MP Gerard Deltell said Sunday.
     
    However, Deltell added: "People realize that and recognize that, and you just have to speak to people about that. They will not be fooled by the prime minister."
     
    New Democrats have also questioned the timing of the prime minister's funding announcement.
     
    The Liberal party and Prime Minister's Office did not specifically respond to questions about the timing of the funding announcements.
     
    "We are proud of this new partnership with Rio Tinto, Alcoa, Apple and the province of Quebec," Trudeau spokeswoman Chantal Gagnon said in an email.
     
    "This project is the most significant innovation in the aluminum industry in more than a century, and marks a decisive step forward in the fight against climate change."
     
    The Liberals have won the last two byelections in Quebec, which included stealing a seat from the Conservatives, but both the Tories and the NDP are hoping to make gains in the province.
     
    The Conservatives have nominated popular junior hockey coach Richard Martel to carry their flag in the byelection, whom Deltell described as the right person to reverse the Tories' fortunes in the riding after placing fourth in 2015.
     
    The Liberals have nominated local businesswoman Lina Boivin, while trade unionist Eric Dubois will represent the NDP.
     
    Former NDP national director Karl Belanger said the byelection has special importance for New Democrats, given that the party held the seat before, but has struggled to make any waves in Quebec since the last federal election.
     
    "There is a need for a good showing by the federal NDP if we are to be taken seriously in the next federal election," Belanger told The Canadian Press on Sunday.
     
    "It's a seat we held. So symbolically, we need to regain some of our electoral footing. It seems unlikely for the Liberals to lose given the poll numbers and the fact that they held the seat, but you have to be competitive."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Close Stock-option Loophole, Put Savings In National Pharmacare Plan: NDP

    OTTAWA — The federal NDP is demanding the Trudeau government close a controversial tax loophole for stock options and crackdown on tax havens in the coming federal budget — and redirect the savings towards a national pharmacare program.

    Close Stock-option Loophole, Put Savings In National Pharmacare Plan: NDP

    PM Justin Trudeau Says Time To Recognize Anti-black Racism Exists, Work To Ensure Equality

    Justin Trudeau says it's time Canadians acknowledged that racism and unconscious bias against black people exist in this country.

    PM Justin Trudeau Says Time To Recognize Anti-black Racism Exists, Work To Ensure Equality

    Vancouver Man Mokua Gichuru Banned From Dance Club Fails In Bid For Human Rights Hearing

    Vancouver Man Mokua Gichuru  Banned From Dance Club Fails In Bid For Human Rights Hearing
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Human Rights Tribunal won't reconsider its refusal to hear a Vancouver man's complaint that his dance club banned him for being "creepy," and discriminated against him on the basis of age, sex and race.

    Vancouver Man Mokua Gichuru Banned From Dance Club Fails In Bid For Human Rights Hearing

    Ontario Woman Ticketed For Driving With A Parrot On Her Shoulder, Police Say

    Ontario Woman Ticketed For Driving With A Parrot On Her Shoulder, Police Say
    STRATFORD, Ont. — A driver in southern Ontario was charged with a fairly unusual traffic violation last week — travelling with a large, unrestrained parrot in her car.

    Ontario Woman Ticketed For Driving With A Parrot On Her Shoulder, Police Say

    Snowmobiler Dead Following Collapse Of Snow Ledge Near Whistler, B.C.

    A snowmobiler has died after a snow ledge fell from under him near Whistler, B.C.

    Snowmobiler Dead Following Collapse Of Snow Ledge Near Whistler, B.C.

    Rachel Notley Says She Wants Progress Within Days From Feds On B.C. Pipeline Dispute

    Rachel Notley Says She Wants Progress Within Days From Feds On B.C. Pipeline Dispute
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says she wants progress within days from Ottawa in resolving a pipeline dispute with British Columbia, or her government will look at further retaliatory measures.

    Rachel Notley Says She Wants Progress Within Days From Feds On B.C. Pipeline Dispute