The Conservatives have landed a powerful blow in their fight to win the next Canadian election, snatching a historical Toronto stronghold from the governing Liberal Party.
The Conservative candidate, Don Stewart, won the byelection in Toronto-St. Paul’s on Monday night with 42.1 per cent of the vote, taking the seat away from the Liberals for the first time in more than a quarter of a century.
Stewart, a financial professional, beat Liberal candidate Leslie Church, who got 40.5 per cent of the vote and NDP’s Amrit Parhar, who received 10.9 per cent. Christian Cullis ran for the Greens, getting 2.9 per cent.
The byelection count was complicated by a huge number of candidates registering to run for the seat, many of whom signed up in protest. A total of 84 candidates registered in Toronto-St. Paul’s, partly as a push from the Longest Ballot Committee to campaign for electoral reform.
Before Monday, the riding had been held by the Liberals for 10 successive elections. Former MP Carolyn Bennett — whose appointment as ambassador to Denmark triggered the byelection — had been the local representative for over 25 years.
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Losing the historic stronghold is likely to pile pressure on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
National polling shows the governing party struggling to attract and retain support, with Conservative support growing. As the country heads toward its next election, difficult results and polling could raise questions about Trudeau’s leadership of the Liberal Party.
A poll conducted by Ipsos for Motorcycle accident toronto today suggested Trudeau’s waning popularity appears to be “dragging” the Liberals’ fortunes down.
A majority of voters (68 per cent) want him to step down, with Ipsos CEO Darrell Bricker describing the numbers as “close to rock bottom,” while Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is gaining ground.
That poll put the Conservatives at 42 per cent of the decided vote, with the Liberals at 24 per cent. The Ontario NDP recorded support at 18 per cent.
Almost half — 44 per cent — said they felt Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre would make the best prime minister, while 75 per cent of Canadians want another party to take government from the Liberals. Just 25 per cent think the Liberals “deserve reelection.”
Bricker said that the polling numbers haven’t improved despite a flurry of new policies attempted by the government.
“What’s worse is that they have thrown everything they can think of at changing this dynamic,” Bricker said. “Nothing has worked. It’s frozen in solid.”
— with files from Motorcycle accident toronto today’ Touria Izri
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