What leverage will Layton’s much larger caucus have?
Tag Archives: Campaign 2011
NDP central is restrained, so far [UPDATED minutes later]
No wild partying here at Jack Layton’s headquarters. It’s odd, given what’s happened. New Democrats were cheering as the results flowed in, pushing them up into the triple digits. Since them, the din has died down. Perhaps the corresponding rise of the Conservatives into majority territory is what’s keeping them from cutting loose.
Good evening from Layton HQ
Greetings from NDP headquarters here in the basement of the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, down near Lake Ontario, where the chants of N-D-P, N-D-P have just broken out for the first time. The crowd has been a bit cautious, it seems to me, about letting a celebratory mood take hold prematurely, lest sky-high expectations be brought down to earth. Doesn’t seem like they have much to worry about, though. The room, capacity about 2,000, is only now starting to really fill up. More as the evening unfolds.
Probing the NDP surge: middle-class credibility and more
Jack Layton talked up pocketbook pressures on the middle class in every speech
Jack Layton in conversation: riding high, talking policy and politics
The NDP leader stops by Maclean’s in Toronto for a wide-ranging discussion
Harper on health care: hard to make it a vote-driving issue
The Liberals have been making a late-campaign push to turn Stephen Harper’s past remarks about health care into a big election issue, and it’s hard to blame them. Those painstakingly selected quotes from Harper are certainly more germane to an actual policy file than any of miscellaneous old Michael Ignatieff lines the Conservatives creatively cut and paste into their attack ads.
Ignatieff talks minority scenarios
It shouldn’t matter, but it probably will
Harper’s been pondering coalitions for longer than I thought
Flashback to late in the 2004 election campaign
Ignatieff tries to get a rise out of voters
All through this campaign, Michael Ignatieff has taken the dual risk of speaking without a prepared text and answering many questions that haven’t been scripted from individuals who haven’t been screened and just happened to raise a hand in the crowd that’s turned out to hear him.
The first debate: where they stood
Rarely has the geography of a leaders’ debate seemed so significant