Justin Trudeau fires starting gun for Canada's general election

  • Justin Trudeau to request dissolution of parliament
  • ‘Divisions have never been starker’ before 21 October polling day

Campaigning for Canada’s federal election on 21 October formally began on Wednesday, as Justin Trudeau seeks a second parliamentary majority from an increasingly divided electorate.

The prime minister met the governor general, Julie Payette, to officially request the dissolution of parliament, and formally start the election campaign, which will see party leaders crisscrossing the vast country to pitch to voters.

“We’ve done a lot together these past four years, but the truth is, we’re just getting started. So Canadians have an important choice to make. Will we go back to the failed policies of the past, or will we continue to move forward?” Trudeau told reporters gathered outside Payette’s residence, Rideau Hall.

The prime minister also used his speech to make sharp distinctions between his administration and a potential government led by the Conservative party.

“It’s going to be different from elections we’ve seen over the last couple of decades. There’s deep polarisation in the country,” said Frank Graves, president of the polling company EKOS Research. “On issues such as climate change, immigration and attitudes towards public institutions, the divisions have never been starker.”

The upcoming campaign will last nearly six weeks: half the length of the marathon campaign of 2015, when voters endured almost 80 days of mudslinging by political leaders – a brief dash compared to US elections, but a marathon for Canada.

Trudeau, who swept to office in November 2015 promising “sunny ways” and stressing the importance of gender equality and the environment, faces an electorate which will be much more focused on the economy.

The country’s 43rd election also comes against the backdrop of protracted political scandal for the incumbent prime minister.

For months, Trudeau has faced accusations – including from the country’s ethics commissioner – that he acted improperly when he requested his attorney general to halt criminal prosecution of the Quebec-based engineering giant SNC Lavalin.

Trudeau and his Liberals are widely expected to use the election to shore up support for his government’s climate change policies, including a nationwide carbon tax. His main opponent, the Conservative leader, Andrew Scheer, has pledged to repeal the Liberals’ marquee environmental legislation.

Scheer, the youngest federal leader and running in his first federal campaign as head of the party, has consistently used the prime minister’s ethical lapses to paint the government as unable to govern effectively.

Polling suggests Trudeau and Scheer are deadlocked in the popular vote, but the Liberals hold an edge when it comes to winning seats in parliament.

Jagmeet Singh, leader of the leftwing New Democratic party, is also running his first federal campaign as a party leader. Despite initial excitement around his role as the first major party leader from a racial minority, the NDP’s finances have collapsed and the party is likely to sustain heavy electoral losses throughout the country. “They are in danger, if they were to slip any more – which I would not rule out – of not forming official party status,” said Graves.

Meanwhile, the Green party, led by Elizabeth May, has experienced a surge in support as the climate crisis increasingly rates as an important issues for voters.

The official start of the campaign comes a day before a highly anticipated leaders’ debate, in which Scheer, Singh and May will spar for the first time on stage. But the televised debate, hosted in Toronto, will have a glaring omission: Trudeau has opted to skip the event, leaving his rivals without a foil.

Contributor

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
God Save Justin Trudeau: film uses boxing as metaphor for Canada's election
Film-makers Eric Ruel and Guylaine Maroist depict Trudeau’s spectacular victory in October as a fight, showing it was exquisitely planned from the start

Nicky Woolf

02, Apr, 2016 @11:05 AM

Article image
How will Justin Trudeau's blackface photos affect Canada's election?
Incident has landed the prime minister in hot water as his Liberal party fights to secure another term in a tightly contested election

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

19, Sep, 2019 @9:01 PM

Article image
Justin Trudeau and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau announce separation
Canadian PM’s office says in statement that pair ‘remain a close family’ and have signed a legal agreement

Tracey Lindeman in Ottawa

02, Aug, 2023 @5:16 PM

Article image
Activists urge Justin Trudeau to phase out Canada's failing seal industry
The government claims the seal-fur industry is lucrative, but protesters argue it costs more to monitor the practice than the hunts generate in revenue

Oliver Milman

09, Mar, 2016 @9:46 PM

Article image
Tru love: Canada's year of Justin Trudeau has been a honeymoon, but will it last?
The optimistic prime minister has charmed Canadians, and the world, during his first year in office. Now the challenge is to prove he’s a change maker

Ashifa Kassam in Toronto

04, Nov, 2016 @10:45 AM

Article image
Justin Trudeau secures a third victory in an election ‘nobody wanted’
Canadian prime minister will stay in power but has not won the majority he hoped for after calling a snap election

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

21, Sep, 2021 @5:02 PM

Article image
Justin Trudeau seeks to repeat 2015 surge as Canada braces for election
The prime minister is likely to call a vote for next month in which the environment, populism and Trump are all expected to feature

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

04, Sep, 2019 @10:00 AM

Article image
Justin Trudeau: 'Globalisation isn't working for ordinary people'
Exclusive: The Canadian prime minister tells the Guardian why, in a world where populism, divisiveness and fear are on the rise, he’s taking the opposite approach

Ashifa Kassam and Laurence Mathieu-Léger in Ottawa

15, Dec, 2016 @10:30 AM

Article image
Trudeau warns Canada's coronavirus shutdown likely to remain for weeks
Prime minister said ‘we’re going to have to remain vigilant’ until vaccine is found as infections climb across the country

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

14, Apr, 2020 @4:52 PM

Article image
Justin Trudeau apologizes for Canada's program targeting LGBTQ civil servants
From the 50s to the 90s, the government monitored and interrogated civil servants in what the prime minister calls ‘state-sponsored, systemic oppression’

Staff and agencies

28, Nov, 2017 @9:42 PM