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Manitoba

3 federal party leaders visit Manitoba on same day to campaign in byelections

The leaders of three federal parties visited Manitoba on Friday to bolster campaigns in byelections in two vacant ridings.

Poilievre, Singh and Bernier speak in Winnipeg, Winkler

A group of people standing on a lawn on a  sunny day. One is holding a sign for candidate Damir Stipanovic.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, centre, addresses party volunteers in Winnipeg's Linden Woods neighbourhood on Friday prior to door-knocking with Winnipeg South Centre candidate Damir Stipanovic. (Walther Bernal/CBC)

The leaders of three federal parties visited Manitoba on Friday to bolster campaigns in byelections in two vacant ridings.

Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre visited Winnipeg and Winkler to campaign for candidates in Winnipeg South Centre and Portage-Lisgar, where byelections will be held on June 19.

In Winnipeg, Poilievre spoke to reporters in the morning at the Victoria Inn near the city's airport, where he blamed runaway inflation and high crime onPrime MinisterJustin Trudeau and his Liberal government.

In the afternoon, Poilievre went door-knocking in Winnipeg's Linden Woods neighbourhood, which lies withinWinnipeg South Centre, in support of Conservative candidate Damir Stipanovic, an air traffic controller born in the Balkans.

"You really represent the Canadian dream. You came as an immigrant from a family that wanted to live out freedom in this wonderful country of ours," Poilievre told Stipanovic on the grounds of Linden Woods Community Centre.

The Conservatives have only won Winnipeg South Centre once since the seat was created via boundary redistribution in 1988. Liberal candidates have won every other election in the riding.

Poilievre told reporters Stipanovic still has a shot.

"Even in Liberal strongholds like this one, people are frustrated with and disappointed with Justin Trudeau," he said.

One day earlier, Conservative deputy leader Melissa Lantsman, a Toronto-area MP, also visited Winnipeg South Centre.

The same day, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland spoke in Winnipeg to supportBen Carr, the Liberal candidate in the riding, just one week after a visit by the prime minister himself.

"I'm not surprised the leaders of all the major parties have made their way to Winnipeg in an attempt to support their candidates," said Carr,an educator who's vying to fill the seat held by his late father Jim, who died in December.

A man in a bkue suit and a pink turban standing in a newsroom.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said he wants to remind voters his party has been effective at influencing policy decisions by the Liberal minority government. (Travis Golby/CBC)

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh also visited Winnipeg on Friday to support Julia Riddell, his party's candidate in Winnipeg South Centre.

"She's a psychologist. Someone who has a lot to offer. She's working really hard and I really want to make the case to Manitobans that New Democrats deliver," said Singh, referring to his party's influence over policy decisions made by the minority Liberal government.

Green candidate Doug Hemmerling, People's Partycandidate Tylor Baer andindependent candidateTait Palssonare also running in Winnipeg South Centre, along withdozens of additional independent candidates who signed up as part of aLongest Ballot Committeeeffort to lengthen the ballot.

In Portage-Lisgar, People's Party Leader and byelection candidate Maxime Bernier held a morning news conference to urge right-wing voters to choose him over Conservative rival Branden Leslie.

A man playing with a dog.
Liberal Winnipeg South Centre candidate Ben Carr greets a loyal campaign volunteer in his office on Pembina Highway. (Walther Bernal/CBC)

"It is a two-horse race between the CPC candidate and me," Bernier said in a conference broadcast online.

In Winnipeg, Poilievre compared Bernier to Trudeau, claiming both support Quebec separatism.

Liberal Kerry Smith, NDP candidate Lisa-Tessier Burch and Green Nic Geddert are also running in the Portage-Lisgar byelection.

Back in Winnipeg, Singh joked the presence of multiple party leaders in Manitoba warranted moving Parliament to the west.

"We're all here, right? We might as well hold questionperiod from Manitoba," he said.

3 federal party leaders visit Manitoba on same day to campaign in byelections

1 year ago
Duration 1:49
The leaders of three federal political parties were in Manitoba today. They were working to gain support in two federal byelection campaigns now underway.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story stated dozens of candidates joined the ballot as part of a Rhinoceros Party initiative. In fact, the effort was headed by the Longest Ballot Committee with support from the Rhinoceros Party.
    Jun 04, 2023 6:41 PM CT