Singh admits holding NDP seats in Quebec won't be easy - Action News
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Politics

Singh admits holding NDP seats in Quebec won't be easy

Success in Quebec has proved elusive for the NDP, and that has the federal leader preparing to roll up his sleeves and get to work as a by-election approaches in the riding held by the party's former leader.

Party finished third in Quebec byelection on Monday, prompting warning from former leader Tom Mulcair

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the party has to work hard to keep seats in Quebec. (Patrick Doyle/Canadian Press)

Winning in Quebec seems to be getting harderfor the federal NDP which is why leader JagmeetSingh is vowingto roll up his sleeves and get to workas a byelection approaches in the riding held by the party's former leader.

Speaking toCBC Radio's The House on Thursday, Singh acknowledged that the outcome of Monday's byelection inChicoutimi-LeFjord which saw the Conservative candidate claim the seat was a blow to his party, which once dominated the federal landscape in Quebec.

TheNDPvote suffered an almost total collapse in Chicoutimi-LeFjord, pulling in just 8.6per cent of the voteafter winning the riding with 37.7 per cent in 2011 and narrowly losing in 2015 with 29.7 per cent of the vote.

"The results are disappointing," Singh said.

"It means that we've got to make sure that we work really hard in Quebec and I'm committed to doing that."

Tom Mulcair's riding up next

With one Quebec byelection over, theNDPis turning its attention to the next one in the fall in formerNDPleader TomMulcair'sseat inOutremont.

That Montreal seat a splash of orange in a sea of Liberal red became the cornerstone of theNDP'ssuccess in the 2011 election whenMulcairsnatched it from Liberal control in 2007.

Singh didn't rule out the possibility of running in that riding, as he currently doesn't hold a seat in the House of Commons, but said there are many factors to consider as he decideswhere to run.

He acknowledgedOutremonthas "significant history" for his party, givenMulcair'ssuccess.

Earlier in the week, Mulcairhad some words of warning for the party as he wraps up his political career: Start worrying.

"I am worried about a score like that, what it means for the future, no doubt," Mulcair told host VassyKapeloson CBCNews Network's Power & Politics on Wednesday.

With a shout out to Drake, Mulcair leaves politics

6 years ago
Duration 1:42
Former NDP Leader Tom Mulcair ends his time as an MP to become a professor at Universite de Montreal

TheNDPfinished in third and fourthplace in the past two Quebec byelections quite a change from its strong second-place showings in the last general election.

"All seats in Quebec, any time we've had a great showing, means it's an important region," Singh said.

Tax havens, relations with the U.S. and regulating web giants like Netflix are all issues that have troubled Quebec voters, and Singh said those are the subjects on which the party will focus going forward.

"There's issues that have resonated with people inQuebecand we're going to continue to double down on those issues."

When asked about a recent Radio Canada report about the Liberal Party attempting to convince NDPMPsto crossthe floor, Singh said that his caucusmembers said no.

Trans Mountain a 'violation' of government promises

Singh also spoke to The House about his opposition to the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

Last month, the federal government announced its intention to buy the pipeline from Kinder Morgan for $4.5 billion.

The NDP leader said he'd always been opposed to the project because of what he sees as problems with the consultation and environmental review processes, but the bid to nationalize the pipeline was the last straw.

"The turning point was when the government decided to use public resources. And that, to me, is completely a violation of the commitments of this government."

Singh said heinitially avoided weighing in on the dispute, as British Columbia and Alberta the two provinces the pipeline runs through are both led by NDP premiers.

An unsafe third country?

Immigration issues also havebeen a hot topic for Singh's party during this session of Parliament.

New Democrats have called for the suspension of the Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA) with the United States, which forces migrants to claim asylum in the first 'safe' country they land in.

Singh and his caucus renewed their calls for a suspension of the STCA after the U.S. started separating illegal migrants from their children at the border as part of a widely-condemned "zero tolerance" strategy.

Singh calls U.S. treatment of refugee children 'heinous'

6 years ago
Duration 1:12
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the treatment of children torn from their parents is heinous, and that the safe third country agreement should be suspended.

"If that does not clearly indicate that the United States under the Trump administration is no longer a safe country for asylum seekers, I don't know what will," he said.

Singh saidCanada has a responsibility to act although he didn't say what actions he would take beyond suspending the STCA.