Bloc Qubcois win longtime Liberal seat and deliver stunning blow to Trudeau in Montreal byelection
NDP's Leila Dance narrowly wins in Elmwood-Transcona
Voters have dealt Prime Minister Justin Trudeau another devastating byelection loss, this time picking a Bloc Qubcois candidate in a Montreal riding that's been held by the Liberals for most of the last century.
The defeat in LaSalle-mard-Verdun is Trudeau's second byelection loss in a safe Liberal seat in the last three months and it raises questions about his long-term viability as party leader.
Bloc candidate Louis-Philippe Sauv very narrowly beat Liberal Laura Palestini a stunning upset given the governing party's past strength in this part of southwest Montreal. NDP candidate Craig Sauv finished third.
Itwas one of the tightest three-way electoral battlesin recent memory with the leading candidates trading places throughout the count and a final result only knownafter 2:45a.m. ET.
In the end, the Bloc's Sauv took 28per cent compared to 27.2per cent for Palestini and 26.1per cent for the New Democrat. Fewer than 250 votes separated the Bloc and Liberal candidates.
While the other parties squabble with one another and take on an increasingly nasty tone in the House of Commons, the Bloc "presented ourselves to voters as the adults in the room," said Bloc MP Christine Normandin from Sauv's victory party.
"We're working for the people of Quebec. The voters here are telling us, 'Please continue to fight for us.' They're sending a message to the government. The Bloc has the support of the population and we will make more gains for Quebecers," she said.
Before Monday's byelection, there were few seats safer than LaSalle-mard-Verdun for the federal Liberals in Quebec. This loss is a sign ofhow far the party has fallen.
Former prime minister Paul Martin previously represented parts of this riding, and a non-Liberal candidate hasn't won here since the historic Orange Wave of 2011 when Quebec voters elected dozens of NDP MPs.
The outgoing Liberal MP, David Lametti, beat his Bloc opponent by some 20 points in this riding in 2021. Palestini lost by less than one percentage point.
If that same sort of vote swing was applied to other Liberal ridings in Quebec,more than a dozen MPs could lose their seats at the next election.
"We are very proud of the campaign we ran," said Tourism Minister Soraya Martinez Ferrada, who also represents aMontreal riding.
"It's a good dry run for the general election that's what matters, that's where voters are going to be electing the next government," she told CBC News before the final result was known.
Separatist resurgence
The Bloc victory is the latest sign that separatist parties are enjoying a bit of a resurgence in Quebec after years in the wilderness.
The Parti Quebecois (PQ), the provincial party that essentially launched the modern Quebec independence movement and twice led the campaign to separate from Canada, is seeing an upswing in support asPremier Franois Legault's Coalition Avenir Qubec stumbles after six years in office.
The PQ leader, Paul St. Pierre Plamondon, campaigned in the riding for Sauv and praised the Bloc for its work in Ottawa, a city he said is a "hostile environment" where Quebecers are always on the defensive.
The Liberal defeat in Montreal comes weeks after Conservative candidate Don Stewart bested his Liberal opponentin Toronto-St. Paul's. Before that June loss, the riding had been held by the Liberals for more than 30 years.
This month, the Liberal party's campaign director quit and the NDP pulled the plug on the supply-and-confidence agreementthat gave the government some breathing room in a minority Parliament.
While there have been calls for him to step aside after a tumultuous period, Trudeau has said hewill carry on as prime minister and take the Liberals into the next federal election no matter what happens.
He has said he can't leave now because he wants to make sure Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre doesn't winand take the country in a radically different direction.
"I'm not going anywhere," Trudeau said Saturday in an interview on the Montreal radio station CJAD 800.
"I've got a fight to lead against people who want to hurt this country," he said.
NDP win in Winnipeg-area seat
Further west, NDPcandidateLeila Dancewon the Winnipeg seat ofElmwood-Transcona.
The result isn't much of a shock because this working-class community in the city's east end has been represented by a New Democrat for most of the last 45 years.
Elmwood-Transconais one of theNDP'ssafest seats. Only seven seats across the country were safer for the party in the last general election, according to aCBCNews analysis of voting data.
But the margin of victory is narrower this time than in yearspast a sign that while theNDPpulled in enough votes to win again, the party's brand has taken a hit.
Dance, a small business advocate, bested Conservative candidate and electricianColin Reynolds by aboutfour percentage points a fraction of what outgoing MP DanielBlaikieposted in this riding last time.
Dance told reportersshe wants to focus oncost of living issues while working in Ottawa.
"We used to be able to buy a cart of groceries for a hundred dollars and now it's two small bags. That is something that will affect everyone in this riding," she said.
Polls suggest the NDP have beenstruggling to make a breakthrough with voters even as their main progressive opponent, the governing Liberal Party, is on a downward slide.
To this point, the biggest beneficiary of Liberal weakness has beenPoilievre.
But Poilievre couldn't pull off a win in Winnipeg, despite optimism from some of the party's MPs that the Conservatives would take it with the NDP stuck in neutral nationwide.
The Conservatives, however, performed much better here than they did in the 2021 general election, which suggests Poilievre's popularity in opinion polls is translating into some success at the ballot box.
The NDP victory could be interpreted as a vindication of Singh's decision to back out of a deal to prop up the Liberal government just days before this byelection.
NDP ends agreement with Liberals
Singh initiated the breakup to show voters he's not beholden to Trudeau.
The decision to step away fromthe deal gave the party the opportunity to tell voters that a vote for the NDP is a vote for change.
Singh ripped up theagreement, saying the Liberals are out of new ideas and too soft on "corporate greed."
Liberals, in turn, have accused Singh of abandoning progressive policies that haven't yet cleared Parliament, including the promisedpharmacare program.
Singh has also walked back his past support for the government's carbon tax, saying he wants to propose an alternative that's less punitive for consumers. Trudeau said Monday Singh caved in the face of Conservative criticism.
Liberal vote collapses in Winnipeg
The Liberal vote in Elmwood-Transcona collapsed.
The Liberal standard-bearer, Ian MacIntyre, is on track to post one of the worst byelection results for a candidate from the governing party in Canadian history.
The party was not expected to be competitive given it finished a distant third in the 2021 general election and polls suggest Liberals are a lot less popular now than they were then.
But the drop was still notable with the Liberal candidate taking less than five per cent of the vote down about 10 percentage points from last time.