Justin Trudeau goes on the offensive ahead of Canadian election

Liberal leader’s team is seeing signs of hope after PM was hit by a series of scandals

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau attends a rally in Winnipeg, Canada. Photograph: Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau attends a rally in Winnipeg, Canada. Photograph: Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP

Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau, hit by scandals and locked in a near dead-heat ahead of Monday's election, has taken his campaign on the offensive.

Ahead of a federal election that looked as though it could spell the end for one of the world’s last remaining progressive leaders, the Trudeau team is seeing signs of hope.

Surveys of public opinion still indicate that Mr Trudeau will lose his majority in parliament and be forced to rely on the support of smaller parties.

But talk of an outright loss to the main opposition Conservative Party of Andrew Scheer is fading and a weekend of bad headlines for the Conservatives has energised aides for Mr Trudeau's Liberals.

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The Globe and Mail reported that Mr Scheer's team had hired a company to "seek and destroy" the campaign of the People's Party of Canada (PPC), a new splinter movement that threatens to split the conservative vote. The PPC is now threatening legal action and accused the party of "dirty politics".

Two senior aides on Mr Trudeau’s plane even said it might still be possible to win a majority of the 338 seats in the House of Commons, which is unlikely if opinion polls and the Liberals’ own forecasts are accurate.

The party’s current slim majority of seven is expected to be wiped out by losses in Quebec, Atlantic Canada and the West, according to the party’s internal projections, and the prospects for making up the difference are unclear.

The mood though is much more upbeat than in the days after photos emerged on September 18th of Mr Trudeau in blackface at an Arabian-Nights-themed party in 2001 when he was a 29-year-old teacher. More such images emerged the next day from the 1990s.

Some campaign aides were deeply unhappy, two sources said, and felt obliged to have uncomfortable conversations with their children about racism for the first time. The malaise spread to the campaign tour in the days afterward and Mr Trudeau, who repeatedly apologised for the images, gave flat performances to subdued supporters.

Change in atmosphere

Last Thursday on a cold, wet evening in Montreal, the atmosphere was very different. Two legislators and Mr Trudeau’s wife Sophie whipped up the crowd before the Liberal leader appeared and spoke freely, for the first time ditching his electronic aides.

The next night, on the outskirts of Toronto, Mr Trudeau told a rally that his father – former Liberal prime minister Pierre Trudeau – had been born 100 years ago that day, October 18th, and that he had been a fighter. His father, Mr Trudeau said, would not have worried about encountering rough weather while paddling a canoe because his approach was to "sing louder and paddle harder".

In the last 10 days of the campaign, Mr Trudeau’s team started visiting parliamentary constituencies held by opposition legislators, signalling that he was on the attack.

He put in a 21-hour day on Friday, making four stops in Ontario before flying two hours west for an event in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

Liberal voter Heather Stanus said she was not bothered by the blackface incident since “everyone has things in their past they wish they had done differently”.

But she added there were still some undecided voters who could opt for minority parties that compete with the Liberals for the left-leaning vote. This is one potential problem for the Liberals. A second is low turnout, which tends to favour the Conservatives, who have a more committed base.

"There's so many seats that are still toss-ups, especially in Quebec and Ontario," said Darrell Bricker, chief executive of pollster Ipsos Public Affairs. "We also know that about 10 per cent of voters make up their mind in the voting booth." – Reuters