Election Campaign In Full Swing, Mark Carney, Jagmeet Singh And Polioor Make Promises To Albertan

Canada Global(Web News)The Conservatives and NDP spent the weekend seeking votes in British Columbia. The election campaign could offer Conservative Leader Pierre Poliore his best shot at victory. Both Poliore and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh spoke about Canadian concerns about the cost of living at campaign events in B.C.
He said during a campaign stop in Victoria on Sunday that he is telling people to vote for what they care about most and that if they want to stop the Conservatives on Vancouver Island, the best way to do that is to vote New Democrats. Singh also said Canadians concerned about cuts under a Liberal government should send a New Democrat to Ottawa to fight for them. The NDP won the 2021 federal election. BC The NDP won 13 of 43 seats, but polls suggest the incumbent New Democrats could be weakened this time.
Angus Reid Polling BC was released on April 14. The poll predicts a two-party race in the 2019 election, with the Liberals and Conservatives on 42 per cent, the NDP on 30 per cent. 11 per cent and the Greens on just three per cent.
In Metro Vancouver, the Liberals, led by Leader Mark Carney, have a 49 per cent lead, although the Conservatives and NDP are also trailing. Both have fallen behind in the latest poll. The Angus Reid poll was conducted online between April 10 and 13. Angus Reid president Shachi Coral said the BC NDP is one of the CPP’s last federal strongholds because the party has done so well provincially. Singh himself is a resident of B.C.’s Burnaby Central. He is running in the riding. He said some of the B.C. areas Polly has campaigned in recently have large populations of people of Asian or South Asian descent. Coral said the Conservatives’ path to victory is in B.C. It’s through the NDP and that maintaining pride or party status is one solution.
Carney himself is running in the Ottawa region of Nepean and held a campaign rally there on Sunday afternoon. In Victoria on Sunday, Singh reiterated his campaign promises to cap the prices of essential food items and introduce legislation to protect against price gouging at grocery stores. Poilever was born in Surrey, B.C. The day began with another announcement about inflation at a grocery store… Poilever said inflation is when governments spend money they don’t have, so they just print money. More money bids on a fixed supply of goods equals higher prices for everything.
Statistics Canada reported Tuesday that the national annual inflation rate eased slightly in March to 2.3 per cent while food prices rose 3.2 per cent year-on-year. Poilever also opposed the Liberals’ campaign platform, released Saturday, which proposes $129 billion in new spending over the next four years on top of current commitments. Carney presented his platform as an investment to make Canada more self-reliant in response to the trade war with the United States. The NDP also released its spending campaign promises on Saturday, while the Conservatives have said their platform is coming soon.