Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Windsor

Candidates hit the campaign trail in WindsorTecumseh

The racetorepresent the WindsorTecumseh riding southwestern Ontario in the next session of Parliament is underway.

Affordable housing, child care, pandemic relief and recovery are hot topics for voters

Liberal Irek Kusmierczyk and Cheryl Hardcastle of the NDP are competing for the WindsorTecumseh riding once again. Kusmierczyk won the seat over Hardcastle in 2019. (CBC)

The racetorepresent the WindsorTecumseh riding southwestern Ontario in the next session of Parliament is underway.

Incumbent Liberal candidateIrek Kusmierczyk and the NDP candidate, former MP Cheryl Hardcastle, were knocking on doors Tuesday, talking to potential voters in the riding.

There currently are no candidates from the Green or Conservative parties in the riding.

The local Conservative riding association says a candidate will be named at a later date. The People's Party has nominated Victor Green, Laura Chesnik is running for theMarxist-Leninist Party of Canada, and James Wray is running for the Rhino Party.

Kusmierczyk said a large number of families he's spokenwith are concerned about child care, affordable housing, infrastructure investments and jobs.

"I think a lot of folks are talking about the recovery and building back better. Those are really the main issues a lot of folks are talking about at the door."

On Sunday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau requested Parliament be dissolved, which triggered a snap election. Political candidates have until the Sept. 20 voting dayto appeal to voters.

As of 2019, there were 95,004 registered voters in the WindsorTecumseh riding. Hardcastle was defeated by Kusmierczyk that year after serving one term in office. The election was decided with a margin of just642 votes.

'Hit the ground running'

Prior to the last election, theNDPhad held onto the riding for over two decades.Hardcastlehopes to win it back.

"I hit the ground running regardless of who's in the race."

Following two years of a minority Liberal government, Hardcastle said the NDP should have more of a say in Ottawa.

"If it wasn't for the NDP, we wouldn't have any of the supports that we needed. So you do need us to stand up for people."

She saidtheNDP can bring thingsthat the other parties have not delivered on.

"Pharmacare, health care, dental care, elder care, child care. These are promises that keep coming up to entice voters at election time but they're not the things that we see any follow through on, except from the NDP."

Kusmiercyzk brought up the pandemic when pressed onhis party's decision to call a snap election.

"The challenges that we're facing and the opportunities as well as coming off a pandemic requires a strong government that's going to be able to deliver strong programs that Canadians need, Canadian workers, families, seniors, businesses," he said.

"That's why we're going and asking for Canadians' opinions at this time."

With files by Jacob Barker