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Provincial Election

Federal leaders spar during French debate

Alex Ballingall 6 minute read Friday, Sep. 3, 2021

OTTAWA — Weeks after he pulled the plug on his own minority government, Justin Trudeau predicted Thursday that Canadians could be back at the polls within 18 months if they don’t elect a majority.

During Thursday night’s French debate in Montreal, the Liberal leader was the sole man on stage who said a minority government could fall within two years of the federal election on Sept. 20.

And for that, he blamed the Conservatives.

“The differences that we have with the Conservatives — on vaccines, on child care, on the environment — I think that we would maybe find ourselves in 18 months in another election if we had a minority government,” Trudeau said.

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O’Toole hits Tory talking points in town hall

Cody Sellar 3 minute read Preview

O’Toole hits Tory talking points in town hall

Cody Sellar 3 minute read Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2021

FEDERAL Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole was quick to remind participants of a telephone town hall Monday night that he had lived in Winnipeg for a year when he was in the Air Force.

As O’Toole answered calls from the Winnipeg-only audience and explained his party’s plans for the economy, he referred to his time in the city.

He denounced Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s decision to call an election, saying he put his own desire to win a majority government ahead of “focusing on the recovery, on fighting the delta variant, fires in British Columbia and the terrible chaos in Afghanistan.”

He said his party would enact strong anti-corruption laws “for transparency and to restore faith in Ottawa.”

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Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2021

Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole held a telephone town hall for a Winnipeg-only audience Monday night. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz

Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole held a telephone town hall for a Winnipeg-only audience Monday night. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz

Fate of Liberals’ push for official status in Tory hands

Dan Lett 4 minute read Preview

Fate of Liberals’ push for official status in Tory hands

Dan Lett 4 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2019

To be, or not to be, an official party, that is the question the Liberals have posed in the Manitoba legislature.

On Wednesday, the Liberals announced plans to introduce private member's legislation to modernize a nearly century-old rule that requires provincial political parties to have won at least four seats to be considered "official."

Official status affords additional caucus resources, including money for support staff and more space within the legislative building. It also guarantees a party gets to participate in question period; MLAs that belong to an unofficial party currently need the unanimous consent of the legislature to ask a question.

In support of their goal, the Liberals pointed out there is no national standard for official party status in Canada.

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Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2019

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES
Liberal leader Dougald Lamont and the Liberal party plan to introduce private member's legislation to change the rule that requires provincial political parties to have at least four seats to be considered an official party.

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES
Liberal leader Dougald Lamont and the Liberal party plan to introduce private member's legislation to change the rule that requires provincial political parties to have at least four seats to be considered an official party.

Not for Attribution podcast episode 5: Provincial election post-mortem (and federal lookahead)

1 minute read Preview

Not for Attribution podcast episode 5: Provincial election post-mortem (and federal lookahead)

1 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 17, 2019

In the fifth episode of our political podcast, Free Press columnists Dan Lett, Tom Brodbeck and Niigaan Sinclair, along with legislative reporter Jessica Botelho-Urbanski, unpack the highs and lows of the provincial election campaign. Then, they prepare for six more weeks of election coverage, pivoting to discuss the federal race.

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Tuesday, Sep. 17, 2019

Liberals ponder future without official party status

Jessica Botelho-Urbanski 4 minute read Preview

Liberals ponder future without official party status

Jessica Botelho-Urbanski 4 minute read Thursday, Sep. 12, 2019

Two days after the provincial election results poured in, Liberal Leader Dougald Lamont is taking stock of his office that may be soon boxed away.

He has several prints hung on the walls, including a Norval Morriseau painting and a graphic collage of Canadiana by Aaron Draplin. There's a portrait of his grandfather and former MLA, John S. Lamont, painted by his grandmother, and a newer acquisition he's not quite as fond of -- a Steven Fletcher bobblehead, which Fletcher asked his mother to give to Lamont when she packed up Fletcher's office a few doors down the hall this summer.

The Liberals lost official party status on Tuesday night, falling from four to three seats. It means a leaner budget, fewer staff and, possibly, less office space. The government clerk hasn't yet told the Liberals whether or where they will move.

“I may be back in a washer or broom closet again, but c’est la vie," Lamont said.

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Thursday, Sep. 12, 2019

"I think there was a certain expectation of people waiting for us to fall on our face and we didn’t at all," Dougald Lamont said. (John Woods/ Canadian Press files)

Property tax promise will be hardest pledge to keep

Tom Brodbeck 4 minute read Preview

Property tax promise will be hardest pledge to keep

Tom Brodbeck 4 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

The majority of the promises made by Brian Pallister and the PC party in the provincial election campaign were modest ones. Most should be easy to implement.

The pledges, including spending $2 billion more on health care over four years, building 20 schools and working closer with police to fight crime, are largely continuations of what government was already doing.

This election was more about Pallister seeking approval for his government’s agenda – especially in health care – than getting a new mandate.

But there was one surprise election commitment – phasing out education property taxes – that will be far more difficult and controversial to implement.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister wasn’t backing away from his campaign promise to phase out education property taxes when he sat down with reporters during his first post-election press conference, Wednesday.

JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister wasn’t backing away from his campaign promise to phase out education property taxes when he sat down with reporters during his first post-election press conference, Wednesday.

Kinew leadership to ‘begin fresh’ with 11 new MLAs

Larry Kusch 3 minute read Preview

Kinew leadership to ‘begin fresh’ with 11 new MLAs

Larry Kusch 3 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

If NDP Leader Wab Kinew sounded like he was doing a victory lap Tuesday night — after his party suffered a resounding defeat — it may be because of all the new faces that will join him on the Opposition benches in the legislature.

The 42nd Manitoba general election produced 13 first-time MLAs — 11 of them are New Democrats, an astonishing number for a party that got thumped at the polls.

Once the new MLAs are sworn in, the NDP caucus will have 18 members in the 57-seat legislature — four more than it had following the 2016 election, and six more than it had when the 2019 election was called.

Kelly Saunders, a Brandon University political scientist, said Kinew's enthusiasm Tuesday seemed genuine, and not just a politician putting on a brave face. She said the new blood on the NDP team gives Kinew's leadership new life.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

DANIEL CRUMP / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Union Station NDP candidate Uzoma Asagwara, along with Jamie Moses, were elected as the first two black MLAs in Manitoba history Tuesday evening.

DANIEL CRUMP / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Union Station NDP candidate Uzoma Asagwara, along with Jamie Moses, were elected as the first two black MLAs in Manitoba history Tuesday evening.

Pallister to unveil ‘100-day game plan’ for government departments, Crown corporations

Larry Kusch 3 minute read Preview

Pallister to unveil ‘100-day game plan’ for government departments, Crown corporations

Larry Kusch 3 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

Promising an ambitious fall agenda, Brian Pallister says he's negotiating with the Opposition NDP to reconvene the legislature this month.

"What I'd prefer to see is that we come back sooner rather than later," Pallister told reporters on Wednesday, a day after winning a second majority government.

The premier said he will unveil a "100-day game plan" next Wednesday for government departments, Crown corporations and other government entities.

"There's a variety of projects that we have underway that I want to move ahead on ambitiously," he said.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Manitoba PC Leader Brian Pallister invites the media into his office in the legislative building a day after winning a second straight majority government to announce he will soon unveil a "100-day game plan" outlining a number of new and continuing initiatives.

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Manitoba PC Leader Brian Pallister invites the media into his office in the legislative building a day after winning a second straight majority government to announce he will soon unveil a

NDP makes gains but city still wears PC blue

 Ben Waldman 4 minute read Preview

NDP makes gains but city still wears PC blue

 Ben Waldman 4 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

More than three years later, Winnipeg is still blue — only the hue is a little lighter.

After the Progressive Conservatives stormed Winnipeg to take the Manitoba legislature in 2016 (claiming 17 seats to the NDP’s 12), the capital city’s ridings were once again key Tuesday in the Tories’ retention of power.

Of 32 city-linked ridings in the 2019 provincial election, the PCs captured 15, enough to once again edge out the NDP (14), which, for nearly two decades, had successfully covered Winnipeg with its trademark orange shade.

Though both front-running parties made efforts to exert their influence in rural Manitoba, much of the campaign focus remained fixated on Winnipeg, where the majority of the province’s 57 seats and potential voters reside. In the lead-up to election day, the civic battleground was a dead heat: the PCs led the NDP amongst decided and leaning voters by only a one-point margin, a late-August Probe Research poll showed.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press
Union Station NDP candidate Uzoma Asagwara arrives at the Goodwill to celebrate with her voters.

Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press
Union Station NDP candidate Uzoma Asagwara arrives at the Goodwill to celebrate with her voters.

Most diverse legislature ever elected in province

Ryan Thorpe 2 minute read Preview

Most diverse legislature ever elected in province

Ryan Thorpe 2 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

When the 42nd Manitoba Legislature opens in the coming weeks, it will be historic.

With the first black MLAs — as well as the greatest number of visible minorities — headed to work at Broadway, Manitobans have elected their most diverse legislature in the province’s history.

Uzoma Asagwara, who is black and queer, will represent the NDP in the Winnipeg riding of Union Station.

“Running in this election had a lot to do with the fact I never saw myself in the television shows I watched, in the books I read,” Asagwara said at NDP campaign headquarters Tuesday.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press
Union Station NDP candidate Uzoma Asagwara watches as Manitoba NDP Leader Wab Kinew concedes defeat.

Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press
Union Station NDP candidate Uzoma Asagwara watches as Manitoba NDP Leader Wab Kinew concedes defeat.

Pallister plays the odds, wins again

Tom Brodbeck 4 minute read Preview

Pallister plays the odds, wins again

Tom Brodbeck 4 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

When Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister decided to call an early election, he knew the odds were in his favour.

Voters in Canada rarely punish politicians for going to the polls early, even when it’s obvious the motivation is self-serving.

There have been exceptions to that rule. Ontario premier David Peterson was famously defeated in 1990, after calling an early election while riding high in the polls. Voters saw through the Liberal leader’s opportunism and denied him a third term in office. He even lost his own seat.

Jim Prentice suffered a similar fate in Alberta after calling an early vote in 2015, a year before the province’s fixed-date election. But the Tory leader’s defeat was likely due to other factors: the PC party was plagued by scandal under former premier Alison Redford, and the right-leaning Wildrose Party continued to bleed away traditional conservative support. After more than 40 years in government, the time-for-a-change dynamic finally caught up with the Alberta Tories.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

Brian Pallister counted on voter indifference when he called an early election. His calculations proved right.

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

Brian Pallister counted on voter indifference when he called an early election. His calculations proved right.

Despite election defeat, NDP does victory lap

Jessica Botelho-Urbanski 4 minute read Preview

Despite election defeat, NDP does victory lap

Jessica Botelho-Urbanski 4 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

The New Democratic Party didn’t pull off an election win Tuesday night, but it pulled itself up from a crushing defeat three years ago to win back at least six seats in Winnipeg and the north, including taking down a cabinet minister — and to cement the leadership of Wab Kinew.

Kinew said he felt "proud" and "enthused" after his party formed the Official Opposition again after winning at least 17 seats by press time. An NDP source said the party had hoped to win 17.

New Democrat Jamie Moses defeated PC cabinet minister Colleen Mayer in St. Vital. Moses is one of the province's first black MLAs. Uzoma Asagwara, the NDP candidate in Union Station, is the first black and queer MLA elected in Manitoba's history.

Party headquarters, the Metropolitan Entertainment Centre, was packed as Kinew made his concession speech, which sounded more like a victory speech. Afterward, he strolled into the crowd of supporters, who wanted selfies taken with their leader, to the tune of Curtis Mayfield's Move On Up.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
NDP Leader Wab Kinew delivered an upbeat speech despite his party remains in opposition.

PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
NDP Leader Wab Kinew delivered an upbeat speech despite his party remains in opposition.

Tough love delivers impressive victory

Tom Brodbeck 3 minute read Preview

Tough love delivers impressive victory

Tom Brodbeck 3 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

The results of the 2019 provincial election tell us two things: Manitobans want a government that lives within its means, and they’re willing to give the Progressive Conservatives time to reform health care.

The PC party was re-elected with a strong majority Tuesday, winning in 36 of 57 constituencies. It’s down from the modern-day record of 40 seats the Tories won in 2016. It’s still one of the largest majority governments in recent decades. There was no expectation, not even among the most optimistic Tories, that they would keep all 40 seats.

This was an impressive victory, considering what the Pallister government was up against in its first term in office.

Tackling a $932-million deficit and trying to stabilize the province’s credit rating after three costly downgrades is not always an easy sell to voters. There is pain and sacrifice involved. Mistakes get made when deciding where to reduce spending. And there is always a debate about the appropriate timeline to balance the books.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

JASON HALSTEAD / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister, the Progressive Conservative candidate for Fort Whyte, celebrates his victory at the Progressive Conservative Party's election night headquarters at Canad Inns Polo Park.

JASON HALSTEAD / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS  
Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister, the Progressive Conservative candidate for Fort Whyte, celebrates his victory at the Progressive Conservative Party's election night headquarters at Canad Inns Polo Park.

Pallister’s victory an ‘I told you so’

Dan Lett 5 minute read Preview

Pallister’s victory an ‘I told you so’

Dan Lett 5 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

He didn’t actually say it, but as he looked out over the jubilant crowd of election night supporters packed into a Polo Park hotel ballroom, you could easily imagine what Progressive Conservative Leader Brian Pallister would have liked to have said.

“I told you so.”

This was the election that almost no one — both inside and outside of his Progressive Conservative government — thought was a good idea. In almost all respects, there were many more reasons for not holding an election now than there ever were in favour of a launching a re-election bid.

The Tories had only been in office for three years and were very much a work in progress. Their controversial reorganization of Winnipeg hospitals is really only half done. Nearly 100,000 civil servants are currently without a contract, or soon will be without one. Infrastructure funding has been cut in half. Funding increases for health care and education has been meagre, at best.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Manitoba Progressive Conservative leader Brian Pallister arrives at his party's election headquarters at the CanadInns Polo Park and gives his acceptance speech after his party won the 2019 provincial election with a majority.

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Manitoba Progressive Conservative leader Brian Pallister arrives at his party's election headquarters at the CanadInns Polo Park and gives his acceptance speech after his party won the 2019 provincial election with a majority.

Liberals drop all-important fourth seat, lose official status

Maggie Macintosh  3 minute read Preview

Liberals drop all-important fourth seat, lose official status

Maggie Macintosh  3 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

Just over a year after being elected in a byelection that gave Manitoba’s Liberals four seats and official party status in the legislature, leader Dougald Lamont and the party are back on the outside, looking in.

Lamont held onto his St. Boniface seat Tuesday night, joining only longtime River Heights MLA Jon Gerrard and Cindy Lamoureux in the redrawn Tyndall Park at the legislature.

The party suffered a fatal blow in the massive eastern Manitoba riding of Keewatinook, where NDP candidate Ian Bushie obliterated Jason Harper with nearly 80 per cent of the vote.

Former Liberal MLA Judy Klassen set the stage for the crippling turn of events when she announced in April she'd be leaving provincial politics to run under the Liberal banner in next month's federal election. Klassen won the riding in 2016, beating former NDP cabinet minister and longtime MLA Eric Robinson.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Dougald Lamont, leader of the Manitoba Liberal Party, walks into the Liberal party gathering at the Norwood Hotel as supporters cheer him on.

RUTH BONNEVILLE  /  WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Dougald Lamont, leader of the Manitoba Liberal Party, walks into the Liberal party gathering at the Norwood Hotel as supporters cheer him on.

Greens’ best shot falls short

Katie May 2 minute read Preview

Greens’ best shot falls short

Katie May 2 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

Aiming for a historic victory to vault its first MLA into a seat in Manitoba's legislature, Green hopes were dashed Tuesday, as the party's grasp on Winnipeg's granola belt slipped away.

Wolseley has been an NDP stronghold for 29 years — and first-time candidate Lisa Naylor continued the run with a win over Green runner-up David Nickarz. Naylor had 2,944 votes and Nickarz had 2,258, with 36 of 43 polls reporting.

Nickarz's candidacy had been widely considered the Green Party of Manitoba's best chance at winning a seat in 2019, after he came close in 2016.

“This is a great stepping stone for this election and elections across Canada,” Nickarz said, conceding just before 10 p.m. and offering his congratulations to Naylor on her win.

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Wednesday, Sep. 11, 2019

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