Liberals lose cabinet ministers Bernadette Jordan, Maryam Monsef as bid for majority fails - Action News
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Liberals lose cabinet ministers Bernadette Jordan, Maryam Monsef as bid for majority fails

CBC is projecting the Liberals will retain power and appear to be holding most of their seats in Atlantic Canada, despite the fact that fisheries minister Bernadette Jordan appears to be headed for defeat.

'You are sending us back to work with a clear mandate to get Canada through this pandemic,' Trudeau says

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeaus full speech following 2021 election results

3 years ago
Duration 9:26
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau reacts to the 2021 election results from Montreal, Quebec.

The Liberals are projectedtoretain power in a minority government despitethe fact that two of theircabinetministers are headed for defeat.

"You are sending us back to work with a clear mandate to get Canada through this pandemic and to the brighter days ahead and my friends, that's exactly what we are ready to do," Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told supporters in Montreal on election night.

While Trudeau did not win themajority government he wanted,he retains his job as prime minister but will have to bring at least two new faces to the federal cabinet table.

LiberalBernadetteJordan was first elected in the Nova Scotia riding of South ShoreSt. Margarets in 2015. She was promoted to cabinet in early 2019 and was serving as minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard when the election was called.

She was defeated by ConservativeRick Perkins,who ran unsuccessfully in the riding in 2019.

Jordan's time as fisheries minister was marred by a dispute over Indigenous treaty rights to the lucrative lobster fishing industry that went unresolved, leaving her the focus ofwidespreadfrustration in a riding where many are employed in the fishing industry.

Maryam Monsef, the candidate for PeterboroughKawartha who served as the minister of rural economic development in the last Parliament,is projected to lose her seat toConservative candidate Michelle Ferreri.

At dissolution, the Liberals held 155 seats in the House of Commons, while the Conservatives had 119, the Bloc Qubcois 32, the New Democrats 24 and the Green Party two. Five seats were held by Independents.

After a 36-daycampaign,CBC is projecting that the Liberals will returnto Parliamentwith 156 seats, the Conservatives with 121, the Bloc with 32, the NDP with 27 and the Greens with two.

Votes are still being counted,many close races arestill in playand more than 1.2 million special ballots most of themmail-in have yet to be tallied.

Watch:'You are sending us back to work,' Trudeau says:

'You are sending us back to work,' Trudeau says

3 years ago
Duration 1:46
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau says he understands that voters want to get back to normal life and not worry about an election.

Since day one of the campaign, opposition leaders centred their critiques of Trudeau on the election call itself. They described the move to send Canadians to the polls as a cynical and self-interested effort to capitalize on a surging vaccination rate and his response to the pandemic.

When Trudeau announced the electioncall, he told reportersoutside Rideau Hall that Canadians deserve a chance to decide who should guide the country out of the pandemic.

'I hear you,' says Trudeau

Speaking to supporters early Tuesday morning, Trudeau said Canadians have chosen "a progressive plan" to end the pandemic, fightclimate change, introducesubsidizedchild care, implementa housing strategy and workon Indigenousreconciliation.

"I hear you when you say that you just want to get back to the things you love, not worry about this pandemic or about an election, that you just want to know that your members of Parliament of all stripes will have your backs through this crisis and beyond," Trudeau said.

Students wait in line to cast their ballot at a polling station at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Gerry Butts, the former principal secretary to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, said the results vindicatedTrudeau's decision to call the election despite his failure to win amajority.

"I think the message Canadians are sending loud and clear is that they like the direction the government is taking the country, but they are not quite sure they want to give anybody carte blanche," Butts said.

According to CBC's Poll Tracker, Trudeau's Liberals started off the campaign with a healthy lead of six points over the Conservatives, who sat at 29 per cent support.

As the delta variant of COVID-19 took holdand case counts rose, those numbersflipped around. By the middle of the campaign, Trudeau's Liberals were trailingErin O'Toole'sConservatives 34 to 31 per cent in CBC's Poll Tracker.

O'Toole misses chance

That trend started to turn around late in the campaign when Trudeaupromised torequire that federalcivil servants and those travelling byplanes, trains or ferries be vaccinated and Alberta, which opposed mandatory vaccines, was once again forced into lockdown.

O'Toole missed his chance to unseat a prime minister who has faced multiple ethics scandalsduring six years in office.

O'Toole ran on a plan to boost health care spending, fight climate change, shrink the deficit over 10 years and tighten ethics rules for politicians an attempt to offervoters a more moderate take on conservatism that ultimately fell short of expectations.

Trudeau offered voters a climate plan that was more ambitious than O'Toole's, a new federal transfer dedicated to mental health, a national child care plan that in five years will provide parents $10 a day child care and a strong stance on mandatory vaccinations and vaccine passports.

Despite those campaign promises, Trudeau's Liberals came up short in their bid to secure a majority government that would allow them to implement their agenda unchecked.

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