Politics

O'Toole pitches election as a referendum on Trudeau, Liberal leader targets Conservatives on vaccines

As the polls tighten, and with time running out, Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole sharpened his attacks on the campaign trail today by calling on voters to make election day a referendum on his primary opponent.

The polls are tightening with just one week to go before election day

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau kicked off the final week of the federal election campaign on Monday with appearances in Ontario and British Columbia — and sharpened attacks on each other. (Adrian Wyld/Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

As the polls tighten, and with time running out, Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole sharpened his attacks on the campaign trail today by calling on voters to make election day a referendum on his primary opponent.

According to CBC's Poll Tracker, the Liberals have moved ahead of the Conservatives in national support for the first time in more than two weeks, but only by a marginal amount.

With election day just one week away, and with advance voting wrapping up Monday evening, there is little time left to win over voters.

O'Toole used this morning's announcement in Carp, Ont., just west of Ottawa, to frame a ballot box question on Trudeau's leadership and record.

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O'Toole was there to make an announcement on maternity and parental leave. He dedicated most of his prepared remarks to a verbal assault on Trudeau — attacking his role in the SNC-Lavalin affair, his handling of Indigenous issues and his decision to call an election during a fourth wave of the pandemic as Afghanistan fell to the Taliban.

"Every Canadian has met a Justin Trudeau in their lives — privileged, entitled and always looking out for number one. He was looking out for number one when he called this expensive and unnecessary election in the middle of a pandemic," he said.

"That's not leadership, that's self interest. And it's Justin Trudeau through and through."

WATCH: Conservative Party leader says difference between him and Justin Trudeau is 'stark': 

Conservative Party leader says difference between him and Justin Trudeau is 'stark'

3 years ago
Duration 0:34
At a campaign stop, O'Toole attacked Liberal Party Leader Justin Trudeau by drawing comparisons between their characters and leadership styles.

O'Toole pitched himself to voters as a non-celebrity who grew up in a blue-collar suburb.

"Where I grew up, you worked hard for everything you had. Your character and work ethic would earn the respect of your neighbours," he said. "That's my approach to leading Canada's Conservatives."

The Tories are running a TV and radio ad blitz in the final days of the campaign.

Trudeau attacks O'Toole's vaccine approach

Just a few hours later, Trudeau responded by going after Conservative policies — including O'Toole's promise to return Canada's 2030 greenhouse gas emissions targets to the ones first set by former prime minister Stephen Harper, his reversal on banning certain firearms and his approach to mandatory vaccination for travel.

"I'm not impugning his character. I'm not saying he doesn't love his kids," Trudeau said from Vancouver. "I'm saying he's wrong about how to ensure jobs and prosperity and a protected country for people in the future. But that's what Canadians get to choose.

"I'm going to let him and his proxies and the anti-vaxxer movement and the gun lobby and the anti-choice crowd ... continue to attack me, fine. I'm going to stay focused on Canadians."

WATCH | Trudeau attempts to tie Conservatives to anti-vax protests

Trudeau attempts to tie Conservatives to anti-vax protests

3 years ago
Duration 2:51
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau is pressed to offer evidence that Conservatives are involved in vaccination protests.

Trudeau was in Vancouver to announce that a re-elected Liberal government would make it a criminal offence to obstruct access to any building providing health services — including hospitals — or to intimidate or threaten any health care professional carrying out professional duties.

A number of anti-vaccine demonstrations are expected outside multiple Canadian hospitals today.

Trudeau has accused O'Toole of pandering to a "far-right, anti-vaxx fringe" by not requiring his candidates to be fully vaccinated and rejecting the idea of vaccine mandates. He pressed that line of attack during his appearance in Vancouver today.

"What we need is leadership that will be unequivocal that Canadians need to get vaccinated, not leadership like Mr. O'Toole who pretends that testing is equivalent to vaccination," Trudeau said.

 "Just ask someone in a ventilator in the ICU how testing helped them."

NDP Leader Singh, who is polling in third place, also used a campaign stop to criticize Trudeau's record in office since 2015.

"I want to talk to you about the cost of voting for Mr. Trudeau. The cost is people end up paying the price for these broken promises," he said from an airfield in Sioux Lookout, Ont. before flying to Neskantaga First Nation to discuss the state of drinking water in the community.

"I think that the exact opposite of Mr Trudeau, we need more zeal, we need more commitment, we need more passion. We need more courage to follow up on commitments with action and that's what we're about."

Speaking at his own press conference from Gaspé, Que, Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet said that O'Toole's shift in tone came as the polls changed and warned all leaders against personal attacks.

WATCH: Marketing guru breaks down effectiveness of negative campaign ads

Marketing guru breaks down effectiveness of negative campaign ads

3 years ago
Duration 6:49
Marketing expert Éric Blais dissects a string of new negative campaign ads released this week by the Liberal and Conservative parties in the homestretch of the campaign.

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