Halfway into Manitoba's election, are the PCs and NDP running out of material? - Action News
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ManitobaAnalysis

Halfway into Manitoba's election, are the PCs and NDP running out of material?

After nearly two weeks of mining the same territory health care for the NDP and tax cuts for the PCs both parties run the risk of turning campaign consistency into campaign fatigue.

The NDP is all about health care, while the PCs focus on tax cuts. But are voters still paying attention?

A man standing in front of a hospital.
Manitoba NDP Leader Wab Kinew in front of St. Boniface Hospital this week. He also made health-care announcements outside Victoria and Concordia hospitals. (Bartley Kives/CBC)

Nearly halfway intoManitoba's2023election campaign,theNew Democrats and Progressive Conservatives have made it clear what they want votersto think about before they cast their ballots.

For the NDP, it's health care and very little else. Since the start of the formal campaign, the only thing party leader Wab Kinewappears to want to speak about is the state of health care. All the promises he's made save for one involving former premier Gary Doer have involved health.

The NDP has promised to reopen emergency wards,improve cardiac care andmake it easier for international nurses to work in Manitoba, among other health-care promises.

Theparty appears to be banking on the notion voters are so fed up with the PC government's restructuring of health care they will vote for change on Oct. 3. It is a very simple strategy.

The PCs appear to be doing everything they can to change the channel.

Most of the Tory announcements to date have involved tax cuts and tax incentives, including promises to eliminate the payroll tax, remove the PST from restaurant meals and cut the taxation rate in half on the first $47,000 every Manitoban makes.

A woman speaks behind a podium, on the second-floor of an outdoor terrace as downtown skyscrapers are seen behind.
Progressive Conservative Leader Heather Stefanson and other PC candidates have mostly promised tax cuts so far in this election. (Ian Froese/CBC)

"It's a game that every party plays," said Royce Koop, a political studies professor at the University of Manitoba.

"The dynamic that we've seen so far isthe NDP focused relentlesslyon health carethe issue that's going to help them and the Tories are focusing on new issues that aren't health care.I think we're going to see that for most of this campaign."

The problem is, this might not be sustainable for either party. After nearly two weeks of mining the same campaign territory, both the NDP and PCs run the risk of turning campaign consistency into campaign fatigue.

Diminishing returns

Some of the NDP health-care pledges, forexample,have been difficult to distinguish from each other, such as separate promisesissued two days apart to create new community clinics and help family doctors expand their practices.

Likewise,the PCs followed up big-ticket taxation pledges from the first week of the campaign with more incremental measures, such as promises to remove taxes from trees or top up the provincial film tax credit for movies that use Manitoba music for at least half their soundtracks.

The PCs also went off script in a very odd way when leader Heather Stefanson promised to grow Manitoba from 1.4 million people to two million in six years, effectively pledging to triple the annual population growth rate.

There may be a series of diminishing returns in store for both parties, Koop said.

"It does seem the Tories are energetic, but sometimes youdon't know where does energetic stop anddesperation begins?I think they're just, like, throwing all this stuff out there," he said.

And whilehealth care may be important to Manitobans, the NDP, he added, are beginning to sound like a one-note opera singer.

"It's agood strategy. I know what they're doing. But how do you sustain that? How many announcements can you make? It's already pretty thingruel."

Parallel campaign on social media

On Thursday, Kinew acknowledged the specifics of each NDP pledge may not reach every voter.

"I understand that folks aren't going to hear every single health announcement that we make," he said, while insisting the daily ritual of hammering home the same subject health care, health care and more health care will ensure voters are aware his party hasa plan to improve it.

Stefanson, similarly, suggested her party's steady offering of tax cuts will drive home a perceived PC strength.

"These measures will leave more money in Manitobans' pockets each and every year, powering the economy and making life more affordable for Manitobans," she said during a Wednesday morning address to the Manitoba Chambers of Commerce.

There is, however, a campaign runningparallel to the party platform announcements. The PCs are using social media to herald themselves as protectors of "parental rights" whatever voters deem those rights to be and to drive home their opposition to spending public funds to search the Prairie Green landfill for the remains of First Nations homicide victims.

Facebook logo
Meta has scrubbed Canadian news from Facebook, changing the dynamics of electioneering. (CBC/Radio-Canada)

Similarly, theNDPare using social media to remind voters of Stefanson's performance as Manitoba's health minister during the deadly third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic and specifically how she responded to a question about the death of a Brandon ICU patient.

As this is the first provincial election followingMeta's decision to blot out Canadian news from Facebook and Instagram,this parallel campaign clearly matters quite a bit.

Mainstream media coverage of election campaign promises still matters, but nowhere near as much as it did in the days when a morning newspaper headline or 6 p.m. TV news lead was the only things campaign managers cared about.

The days when mainstream media coveragedrove the fate of elections ended in 2016, when Donald Trump won the U.S. presidency with the help of a sophisticated social media campaign that was unprecedented inits use of psychometric data.

The mantra during elections is campaigns matter. The question in the coming weeks will be which campaign: the one you hear about through so-called legacy media or the one being waged in a more unfiltered manner on socials.

With files from Cameron MacIntosh