Toronto Star

Liberals have every right to be relieved, but not triumphal. Delacourt,

Outcome nearly mirrors 2019 result, reflecting ambivalenc­e toward PM

- TONDA MACCHARLES OTTAWA BUREAU

OTTAWA—Canadian voters handed Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau a third term in government in an outcome that nearly mirrored the electoral result in the 2019 election and reflected ambivalenc­e if not anger toward the prime minister who triggered a snap election in a pandemic.

After an uninspired and uninspirin­g campaign that failed to catch voters’ imaginatio­n, preliminar­y results showed the Liberal party leading or elected in 158 seats, while the Conservati­ves were leading in 120. Just after midnight, the Bloc Québécois was at 32 seats and the NDP at 26.

The Greens had two MPs elected, but saw their Leader Annamie Paul defeated in Toronto-Centre where she placed fourth. People’s Party of Canada Leader Maxime Bernier lost his bid to regain a Commons seat.

Broadcast networks projected a Liberal win around 10:25 p.m.

Trudeau’s minority may turn out to be slimmer than the 157 that he won in 2019, and it is a far cry from the majority that pollsters had once suggested was within grasp earlier in the summer — and that Trudeau and his strategist­s had dared to hope for. Trudeau never uttered the word majority from day one of the campaign, and by print deadline he had not yet emerged to speak publicly at his Montreal election night headquarte­rs.

The question now is how the Liberal leader, who remains prime minister until he resigns or loses a confidence vote, will secure allies among the other smaller but progressiv­e parties — the New Democrats, Bloc Québécois, and Greens — to support his agenda, and at what cost to his own plans.

New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh said on the weekend his priority in order to support another party is to ensure the wealthiest “ultra-rich” pay higher taxes, but late Monday, a top New Democrat strategist told the Star that is not a condition of support, and that those kinds of conversati­ons and negotiatio­ns would likely only come closer to a throne speech once the dust on this divisive election settles.

No matter what the result, NDP campaign director Jennifer Howard said all parties’ MPs have spent the past five to six weeks “hearing from their constituen­ts, hearing real stories about how people need their elected people” to go back to work. “There is a discipline that comes as a result of that … People go back and, you know, you can’t mess around. People are scared. They need to get through this pandemic, they need to get to the other side. That’s our job now.”

Trudeau lost two cabinet ministers, Fisheries Minister Bernadette Jordan and Gender Equality Minister Maryam Monsef.

There were long lineups at many voting stations due to pandemic precaution­s and a reduction of poll locations in many ridings. Isolated disruption­s were reported across the country as well. As the evening wore on, Elections Canada officials said voters should stay in the lineups and they’d be permitted to vote, even as closing hours loomed. Nearly 1 million mail-in ballots must still be counted, starting Tuesday, and there may be recounts in many tight races.

The People’s Party of Canada, the conservati­ve splinter party led by Bernier, was the disrupter in this election. He didn’t win his seat, but his libertaria­n populist appeal grew as a fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic rolled over parts of Canada and premiers imposed vaccinatio­n passports, and Bernier ate into Conservati­ve support. He told CBC News that “this party is there for the long term.” He said voters who are “real fiscal conservati­ves” were drawn to his pledge to balance the budget.

Neverthele­ss, on Monday, Trudeau’s supporters claimed a win was a win.

It is a narrow victory, and the second rebuke in a row by Canadian voters, who in 2019 knocked the Liberals’ majority government down to a minority.

The other big question is what the result means for Trudeau’s grip on his leadership and whether he will face internal criticism for having called an election, with little to show for it.

One of his close advisers, and an MP who won his seat Monday, said no chance. “This is still Justin Trudeau’s party,” said the source who spoke on condition he not be identified in order to discuss internal party affairs. Trudeau, he said, took the Liberals from third place in 2015 and while he may not have returned with a majority, “it’s still three victories.”

A second senior Liberal told the Star at some stage, the party will have to look “beyond” Trudeau, “but I would think he will leave on his own terms” and is unlikely to face immediate pressure from within.

Trudeau said it was time that Canadians weighed in on what he called “big consequent­ial decisions” to be made in the coming months. The Liberals want to vaccinate Canada’s way out of the pandemic and to implement an economic recovery plan based on national child care, climate action, and housing affordabil­ity measures.

All are proposals the NDP had said they would have supported without an election.

Any majority hopes appeared to slip away in the first 10 days, after the fall of the Afghan government stranded thousands of interprete­rs and human rights activists who’d supported Canada’s wartime mission there, and Trudeau himself failed to offer a convincing argument for why he broke his promise not to hold an election before the end of the pandemic.

O’Toole ran a discipline­d and strategic campaign that combined stinging attacks on Trudeau as “unethical,” a “phoney” and a “liar” with an appeal to Canadians’ desire for change and pocketbook concerns, and aggressive­ly courted centrist voters.

However, to broaden his appeal O’Toole dropped pledges to eliminate Trudeau’s hated carbon pricing scheme, to relax gun control measures, and to protect “conscience rights” for pro-life medical profession­als — all core tenets for a conservati­ve voting base.

O’Toole’s close advisers were already preparing to face down his internal critics.

Before polls closed, several senior Conservati­ve sources told the Star’s Alex Boutilier that victory would be holding Trudeau to a minority.

“I think Erin O’Toole has already won. We have advanced the dialogue between the Conservati­ve party and Canadians. And candidates and caucus members across the country are very pleased with the important advancemen­t of that dialogue. And in that regard I think we’ve already succeeded in earning the respect of Canadians,” said Walied Soliman, chair of the Conservati­ve party’s 2021 election campaign

Campaign 2021 was nasty, brutish and short. And before the final result, few political observers expected Canada’s 44th Parliament to be anything different.

How will Trudeau secure allies among the smaller progressiv­e parties to support his agenda?

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau watches election results on Monday evening with wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau and children (from left) Xavier, Hadrien and Ella-Grace at Liberal headquarte­rs in Montreal.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau watches election results on Monday evening with wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau and children (from left) Xavier, Hadrien and Ella-Grace at Liberal headquarte­rs in Montreal.

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