NDP unveils campaign slogan as election call looms - Action News
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Politics

NDP unveils campaign slogan as election call looms

The main federal parties have all shored up their campaign slogans now that an election call is imminent. Today the NDP, the last party to officially unveil a slogan, announced they're going with "In it for you."

Slogans already hint at what the parties hope to gain, former strategists say

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh makes an announcement in Toronto on Monday, Sept. 2, 2019. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press)

The main federal parties all have shored up their campaign slogans now that an election call is imminent.

Today, the NDP the last party to officially unveil a slogan announced they're going with "In it for you."

"It's about showing the difference between the Liberals and Conservatives. The NDP are not for wealthy executives and web giants," said Melanie Richer, the party's media director.

"Jagmeet Singh is for the everyday people and this will be at the front and centre of the campaign."

The NDP'snew TV and online ad begins with a shot of Singh in a park.

"People tell me I'm different from the other leaders, and I am. I don't work for the wealthy and well connected," he says.

Different spot for Quebec

The ad cuts to shots of Singh walking with young families outdoors and playing soccer with young kids, spliced together with close-ups of a factory worker and a health care professional.

"Not just saying the right things, but actually doing them now that's different," Singh tells viewers, repeating a dig he's often directed at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The party also released a different French-language ad with the tagline"On se bat pour vous."

It begins with an image of Singh putting on his turban, cutting to a shot of him wrapping his hands before a boxing match.

"Like you, I take pride in my identity," says Singh in the voiceover.

The party is struggling to make inroads in Quebec. According to the CBC's Canada Poll Tracker, an aggregation of all publicly available polling data, New Democrats are polling at about 13per cent nationwide and under 10 per cent in Quebec.

The NDP has nominated candidates in28of the province's 78 seats so far.

"You'll see that the ad is focused on the leader and our Quebecteam. Jagmeet will lead our presence in Quebec during the election campaign," saidRicher.

The Liberal campaign unveiled its slogan last week, going with"Choose Forward" as its slogan. The Conservatives have opted for "It's time for you to get ahead."

The Greensare going with "Not left. Not right. Forward together." Maxime Bernier's People's Party of Canada is going with "Strong and free."

What do slogans tell us?

The NDP already has run ads targeting key issues like health care andtrying to paint the Liberals and Conservatives with the same brush.

Former Liberal adviser Scott Reid, who now runs his own communications firm, said the NDPfaces an existential threat in this campaign.

"It's heavy on issues and it's heavy on trying to consolidate left-of-centre voters,"hetold CBC Radio's The House on the weekend, before the NDP officially launched its slogan.

"If the Greens leap ahead of them, they are in real peril of not existing in thefuture."

Which election campaign slogan is better? | Sunday Scrum

5 years ago
Duration 5:58
The Liberals and Conservatives unveiled their new slogans in television ads this week, with a shared focus on offering to make everyday life more affordable for Canadians.

The Green Party is sitting about two percentage points behind the NDP, according to the CBC'sPoll Tracker.

Former Conservative strategist Dennis Matthews said that,given how much information voters are bombarded with during an election campaign, campaign slogans should beas simple and direct as possible.

"You've got to boil your entire campaign down to one sentence and put it on repeat, or you're never going to be able to get that message to sink into voters," he said.

Both former politicos said the slogans already hint at what the parties hope to gain.

For example, Reid said, the Liberals' slogan points to their fear of splitting the vote with the NDP and Greens.

"First of all, I think slogans suck. It's a bit of a monkey's game, but I think it's clever in the sense that the challenge for the Liberals fundamentally in this election is to consolidate votes," he said.

Matthews said the Conservatives' campaign is directed at Canadians who are anxious and feel they're not getting ahead.

"There's a large portion of the public who feel pinched. They're looking around the world and they're working harder and not getting ahead.From a message perspective, they're hitting at that group," he said.

The election call is expectedat some point between now and Sept. 15.

Challenges facing Canadian federal leaders ahead of election

5 years ago
Duration 9:25
An in-depth look at the challenges facing Justin Trudeau, Andrew Scheer, Jagmeet Singh, Elizabeth May, Maxime Bernier and Yves-Franois Blanchet ahead of the federal election campaign.

With files from the CBC's Hannah Thibedeau

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