Ottawa: Canadians returned Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to power Monday in hotly contested elections against a rookie conservative leader, but he did not gain an majority , consistent with projections by television networks.
Trudeau called the snap election last month, hoping to parlay a smooth Covid-19 vaccine rollout — among the simplest within the world — into a replacement mandate to steer the nation’s pandemic exit and pass his agenda without opposition support.
But after a bumpy five weeks of campaigning, his voice was raspy and he appeared set for a repeat of the close 2019 election that resulted within the one-time wonder boy of Canadian politics clinging to power yet weakened after losing his majority in parliament.
At 49, Trudeau had faced tougher political bouts and still came out unscathed.
After six years in power, however, his administration is showing signs of fatigue, and it had been an uphill battle for him to convince Canadians to stay together with his Liberals after falling in need of high expectations set in his 2015 landslide win.
Trudeau ‘lied to us’
Throughout the day, long lineups outside polling stations were observed by AFP journalists in several major cities.
Douglas O’Hara, 73, casting a ballot in Trudeau’s Montreal electoral district of Papineau, said earlier that he was “very disappointed” with the prime minister.
Although he believes Trudeau “did a half-decent job” managing the pandemic, he recalled that the leader had pledged to not attend the polls until the outbreak had subsided.
“Then as soon as he gets an opportunity (when) he thinks he’s getting to get a majority, he calls an election,” O’Hara said. “I really believe he lied to us.”
In Ottawa, Kai Anderson, 25, said Canada’s pandemic response was her “number one” issue. “I think the prime minister did an honest job managing the pandemic,” she said.
Liz Maier, 72, of Vancouver said she too hoped for a Trudeau win for “consistency in leadership” during the general public health crisis.
Entering the ultimate stretch of the competition , Liberals and Conservatives — the 2 main political parties that have ruled Canada since its 1867 confederation — were virtually tied, with about 31 percent support each publicly opinion polls, and 4 smaller factions nipping at their heels.
Pollster Tim Powers predicted a Liberal minority win.
“But is that a win for him?” he said, noting that Trudeau had hoped for quite just a plurality of seats.
“In the top , this election was ultimately for nothing,” University of Winnipeg politics professor Felix Mathieu told AFP, pointing to the projected seat count for every party as being almost like the split within the last parliament, with most incumbents re-elected.
‘Anti-vaxxer mobs,’ China ‘counterstrikes’
The campaign saw the contenders spar over climate actions, indigenous reconciliation, affordable housing, mandatory Covid-19 inoculations and vaccine passports.
At rallies, Trudeau was dogged by what he described as “anti-vaxxer mobs,” including one that threw stones at him.
The 48-year-old Conservative leader Erin O’Toole, meanwhile, was knocked for his backing of Alberta and two other Tory-led provinces’ loosening of public health restrictions timely , with Covid outbreaks now forcing their overwhelmed hospitals to fly patients across Canada for care.
He also fumbled over regulation and was warned by Beijing, consistent with Chinese state media, that his proposed position on China — Canada’s second-largest trading partner, with whom relations have soured over its detention of two Canadians — would “invite counterstrikes.”
Overall, commented Max Cameron, a politics professor at the University of British Columbia , “this hasn’t been a polarizing election. There’s actually tons of clustering round the middle.”
O’Toole, a relative unknown who became Tory leader only last year, had tracked his party to the political center, forcing the Liberals to compete for votes on the left with the New Democrats and Greens, also because the separatist Bloc Quebecois.
The Conservatives, however, also saw their support clawed by former secretary of state Maxime Bernier’s far-right People’s Party .