Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday the party he leads has to take stock after voters handed the Liberals another humiliating byelection loss, this time in Montreal.
Speaking to reporters before meeting with his cabinet after the LaSalle-Émard-Verdun defeat, Trudeau said he’s reflecting on why voters turned on the party and why some former Liberal supporters stayed home.
He said it isn’t “fun” to come so close to a win and come up short.
“Obviously, it would have been nicer to be able to win and hold Verdun, but there’s more work to do and we’re going to stay focused on doing it,” Trudeau said.
Bloc Québécois byelection candidate Louis-Philippe Sauvé beat Liberal Laura Palestini by a very narrow margin — a stunning upset, given the fact that this Montreal riding has been held by the Liberals for most of the last century.
Sauvé took 28 per cent of the vote, compared to 27.2 per cent for Palestini and 26.1 per cent for NDP candidate Craig Sauvé. Fewer than 250 votes separated the Bloc and Liberal candidates.
That third-place finish is a disappointment for NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, who was a frequent presence in the riding throughout the campaign.
The NDP held its caucus retreat in Montreal last week and some MPs took turns knocking on doors in an attempt to win a seat in a province that hasn’t been fertile ground for the party in recent years.
But Singh’s candidate narrowly won Elmwood-Transcona — a longtime safe NDP seat — after holding off a surging Conservative candidate in that working-class riding.
Singh told reporters the party’s result in Winnipeg was a big win because it “showed Canadians we can beat Conservatives.”
“People are done with the Liberals. They are done with Justin Trudeau. They are finished,” Singh said while calling on all progressive voters to coalesce around his party.
“We’ve got a big fight in front of us but we can stop Conservative cuts,” Singh added, while dodging questions about whether he will try to trigger a federal election this fall.
The Liberal standard-bearer in Winnipeg, Ian MacIntyre, posted one of the worst byelection results for a candidate from the governing party in Canadian history.
He got less than five per cent of the vote — a result too low to qualify him for an Elections Canada rebate of eligible campaign expenses.
Trudeau suggested turnout may have played a role in the party’s loss. He said in French the party needs to “increase participation so that people can understand…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at CBC | Top Stories News…