Trudeau Will Remain Prime Minister, but Without a
Stronger Mandate
By Ian
Austen
Sept. 21,
2021
Updated
2:14 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/21/world/canada/elections-trudeau.html
OTTAWA —
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s political gamble failed to pay off Monday when
Canadian voters returned him to office but denied him the expanded bloc of
power he had been seeking in Parliament.
Unofficial
election results on Monday indicated that while he would remain as prime
minister, it would again be as the head of a minority government.
In August,
with his approval ratings high, Mr. Trudeau called a “snap election,” summoning
voters to the polls two years before he had to. The goal, he said, was to
obtain a strong mandate for his Liberal Party to lead the nation out of the
pandemic and into recovery.
But many
Canadians suspected that his true ambitions were mere political opportunism,
and that he was trying to regain the parliamentary majority the Liberals had
until they lost seats in the 2019 election.
Whatever
his motive, it did not work.
With some
votes still being cast or uncounted, the preliminary results were a near repeat
of the previous vote. The Liberal Party won 156 seats on Monday — one fewer
than it acquired in 2019 — while its main rival, the Conservative Party, won
121 seats, the same as before.
“If you
missed the 2019 election, don’t worry, we just did a rerun for you,” said Duane
Bratt, a political scientist at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta.
The outcome
left Mr. Trudeau in a familiar situation. To pass any laws, he will once again
have to win members of the opposition over to his side. And, at least in
theory, his party’s shaky grip on power leaves his government vulnerable to
being overturned by Parliament.
In his
victory speech early Tuesday, Mr. Trudeau acknowledged the unpopularity of his
call for a snap election.
“You don’t
want us talking about politics or elections anymore; you want us to focus on
the work that we have to do for you,” he told a partisan crowd in a hotel in
downtown Montreal. “You just want to get back to the things you love, not worry
about this pandemic, or about an election.”
In calling
for the early election, Mr. Trudeau had argued that, like his predecessors in
the aftermath of World War II, he needed a strong mandate from voters to
vanquish the coronavirus and rebuild the national economy, badly damaged by the
pandemic.
But the announcement
was not well received by many Canadians.
Alarm that
the government was holding an election when it did not have to, even as the
Delta variant was straining hospitals in some areas, never abated for many
voters during the 36-day campaign. And Mr. Trudeau’s opponents were quick to
characterize his move as a reckless power grab. Erin O’Toole, the Conservative
leader, went so far as to call it “un-Canadian.”
In the end,
Mr. Trudeau not only failed to secure a majority in Parliament, according to
unofficial results, he may have also squandered the good will he had gained as
he led his nation through the coronavirus crisis.
“I’m
wondering if the Liberals, in their minds, are saying: ‘Dang it, why did we —
why did we call it?’” Kimberly Speers, a professor of political science at the
University of Victoria in British Columbia, said during the final week of
campaigning.
Now, she
said, it is unclear how long any Liberal minority government will be able to
hold together and what this will all mean for the party's leader. “How long is
Trudeau going to last?” Ms. Speers wondered.
When Mr.
Trudeau first ran for office as leader of the Liberals in 2015, few political
experts thought he could pull it off. He began that campaign in third place,
behind the incumbent Conservatives and the left-of-center New Democratic Party.
He won by
presenting himself as a new voice in politics with a different approach and
different ideas to go with it
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But that
fresh young politician was little to be seen this time around.
Mr.
Trudeau, 49, offered voters less a vision for the future than a warning,
sometimes explicitly. A return to the Conservative government under Mr.
O’Toole, he said, would wipe away his government’s achievements in a variety of
areas, among them gun control, gender equity, climate change, child care,
poverty reduction and, above all, fighting the pandemic and getting Canadians
vaccinated.
“Mr.
O’Toole won’t make sure the traveler sitting beside you and your kids on a
train or a plane is vaccinated,” he said at a campaign rally in Surrey, British
Columbia, last week. “This is the moment for real leadership. Mr. O’Toole
doesn’t lead — he misleads.”
But in Mr.
O’Toole, the prime minister was running against a different opponent than the
Conservative leaders he had encountered in the two previous campaigns.
“I am a new
leader with a new style,” Mr. O’Toole, who took over the party just over a year
ago, said at the outset of the campaign. “There are five parties but two
choices: Canada’s Conservatives or more of the same.”
A former
air force helicopter navigator and corporate lawyer from Ontario, Mr. O’Toole,
seeking to broaden Conservatives’ appeal, produced a 160-page campaign platform
that essentially turned the party’s back on many once-central positions, like
opposition to carbon taxes.
After
condemning Mr. Trudeau for running up large deficits with pandemic spending,
Mr. O’Toole issued a plan that forecast similar budget shortfalls.
He even
reversed a major campaign pledge — to repeal Mr. Trudeau’s ban on 1,500 models
of assault-style rifles — when it became apparent that it alienated voters who
were not core Conservative supporters.
Mr. O’Toole
did, however, maintain his opposition to mandatory vaccination and vaccine
passports.
Mr. O’Toole
also repeatedly attacked Mr. Trudeau’s personal integrity. He cited, as the
Conservatives have repeatedly in Parliament, several low points in the prime
minister’s career.
The federal
ethics commissioner found that Mr. Trudeau broke ethics laws when he and his
staff pressured his justice minister, an Indigenous woman, in 2018 to offer a
large Canadian engineering firm a deal allowing it to avoid a criminal
conviction on corruption charges. Last year a charity with close ties to the
Trudeau family was awarded a no-bid contract to administer a Covid-19 financial
assistance plan for students. The group withdrew, the program was canceled and
Mr. Trudeau was cleared of conflict of interest allegations.
And while
Mr. Trudeau champions diversity and racial justice, it came out during the 2019
vote that he had worn blackface or brownface at least three times in the past.
“Every
Canadian has met a Justin Trudeau in their lives — privileged, entitled and always
looking out for No. 1,” Mr. O’Toole said during the campaign. “He’ll say
anything to get elected, regardless of the damage it does to our country.”
Mr. Trudeau
returned the criticism, saying Mr. O’Toole’s willingness to ditch Conservative
policies and alter his platform mid-campaign showed it was he who would say or
promise anything to voters.
While many
voters eagerly bumped elbows and posed for selfies with Mr. Trudeau at campaign
stops, his campaign was often disturbed by unruly mobs protesting mandatory
vaccines and vaccine passports. One event was canceled out of safety concerns,
and Mr. Trudeau was pelted with gravel at another.
Mr. Trudeau
did have a strong political challenger on the left nationally with Jagmeet
Singh of the New Democrats. Mr. Singh, a lawyer and former provincial lawmaker
from Ontario, consistently had the highest approval ratings of all the leaders
before and during the campaign.
Mr. Trudeau
will most likely rely on the New Democrats as his primary source of support in
Parliament. But despite gaining three seats, the New Democrats’ total, 27, is a
long way from holding power.
In his
victory speech, Mr. Trudeau evoked his “sunny ways” remarks of 2015, but in a
very different context.
“You are
sending us back to work with a clear mandate to get Canada through this
pandemic into the brighter days ahead,” he said to cheers. “My friends, that’s
exactly what we are ready to do.”
A native of
Windsor, Ontario, Ian Austen was educated in Toronto and currently lives in
Ottawa. He has reported for The Times about Canada for more than a decade. @ianrausten

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