The prime minister is the problem
“We need people to be more engaged. We need people to understand what’s at stake in this upcoming election. Obviously, it would have been nicer to win and hold Verdun, but there’s more work to do and we’re going to stay focused on doing it.”
The arrogance is breathtaking. If only the deplorables could understand! Let me lecture them some more, and perhaps they will.
Actually, people fully understand what’s at stake in the upcoming election. The LaSalle byelection was about Trudeau, the St. Paul’s byelection was about Trudeau, and the general election will be about Trudeau. Voters don’t want four more years, or even two more years of him. It’s been fun, please exit the ride now sir, your time is up.
None of these things help win votes. And none of these things happen if a leader has the respect of his party.
Meanwhile, the Bloc Québécois benefitted from the rise of Parti Québécois fortunes in the province. They also mined the newfound clout the Bloc has in Ottawa since NDP leader Jagmeet Singh ripped up the party’s Supply and confidence agreement with the Liberals. Bloc leader Yves François Blanchet promised to deliver for Quebec by holding the Liberals to ransom — and now he has one more foot soldier to do it.
That clout may have saved the day for the NDP in Elmwood—Transcona, however. There, the party was fighting the Conservatives for a seat held by two generations of Blaikies. The Tories’ aggressive “sellout Singh” ads prompted the NDP leader to cut the cord with the Liberals to put some daylight between him and the government, and it worked — the NDP vote held, dropping only 1.6 per cent from 2021.
Which bring us to the other important story in these byelections: just which voters switched, and to whom? The answer lies in part with the collapse of two other parties: the People’s Party of Canada and the Green Party.
In 2021 both parties took just over three per cent of the vote in LaSalle. In 2024, their scores plummeted to 0.5 per cent and 1.8 per cent votes, respectively. In Elmwood—Transcona, the PPC won 5.82 per cent, the Greens 1.62 per cent in 2021. This time, they got 1.2 per cent and 1.3 per cent, respectively.
Where did those votes go? In the absence of an exit poll, the numbers hold a clue. In LaSalle, the Conservative vote grew from 7.45 per cent to 11.8 per cent, equal to the PPC’s loss plus a smattering of other voters. In Elmwood, the Conservatives made a gain of 15.9 per cent while the Liberals dropped by 9.9 per cent and the PPC fell by 4.6 per cent.
What does this mean for the Tories? It appears that their “woo the union vote” did not work on NDP voters in Winnipeg. Instead, they cannibalized the Liberals and won the PPC vote both there and in Quebec. While there is limited PPC vote left to pull nationally, there is plenty of fertile ground still in the Liberal camp, so that’s where they should focus their efforts for the general election.
What does this mean for the Liberals? It means that unless Trudeau quits, Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre will become prime minister. For three elections, the Liberal brand has been synonymous with Trudeau, who rescued them from the doldrums of 2011, brought them a crushing majority in 2015, and two successive minority governments. But those days are gone. Canadians have soured on the PM and unless he reads the tea leaves, he will take his party with him. It’s not clear who could right the sinking ship, or who would want to, but the iceberg is looming, Celine Dion is singing, and the race to the lifeboats has begun.
Postmedia News
Tasha Kheiriddin is Postmedia’s national politics columnist.