Party leaders back on campaign trail after back-to-back election debates
Federal party leaders are back on the campaign trail Friday after locking horns in two back-to-back leadersâ debates.
It remains to be seen whether either Wednesdayâs French debate or Thursdayâs English debate moved the public opinion needle, with just 10 days to go before election day on Sept. 20.
Heading into the debates, polls suggested the Liberals and Conservatives were locked in a dead heat, with smaller parties poised to determine which of the main parties emerges victorious.
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The English debate was fractious, its format widely panned for giving leaders little time to engage substantively with one another or to respond to barbs from rivals.
Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet took umbrage with moderator Shachi Kurl, a pollster with the Angus Reid Institute, for a question he said suggested Quebec is racist and he later criticized Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau for not coming to the provinceâs defence.
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Trudeau, who had rounded on Blanchet in Wednesdayâs French debate for questioning his devotion to Quebec, told reporters the format didnât give him a chance to respond.
3:25 Federal leadersâ debate: OâToole claims Liberals will tax primary home sales, Trudeau says itâs untrue Federal leadersâ debate: OâToole claims Liberals will tax primary home sales, Trudeau says itâs untrueHe reiterated his opposition to Quebecâs secularism law _ which Kurl had called âdiscriminatoryâ because it bans public servants in positions of authority from wearing religious garb or symbols _ but said Quebecers are not racist.
Quebec, with 78 seats, is a key battleground that could determine the outcome of the election.
At dissolution, the Liberals held 35 seats in the provinces, the Bloc 32, the Conservatives 10 and the NDP just one.
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Hours before Thursdayâs debate, Premier Francois Legault all but endorsed Erin OâTooleâs Conservatives, saying theyâd be easier to work with than the Liberals or NDP, whom he accused of wanting to intrude on Quebec jurisdiction over health care and other matters.
OâToole has promised to transfer billions to the provinces for health care with no strings attached.
The English debate represented the leadersâ last best chance to sway millions of voters. It came just as four days of advance polls are set to open Friday.
© 2021 The Canadian Press
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