Canada’s Trudeau calls snap elections

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Sunday announced snap elections for September 20 to seek a new mandate to steer the nation's pandemic exit, much to the dismay of his rival parties.

Canada’s Trudeau calls snap elections
Canada's Trudeau calls snap elections. Photo: AFP

Despite rolling out massive pandemic aid, passing a federal budget and other key legislation with opposition backing over the past year, Trudeau, who is in office since 2015, has lamented that parliament has become dysfunctional.
The prime minister met Governor General Mary Simon on Sunday to ask her to dissolve parliament, triggering a general election that polling shows is likely to return his Liberals to power.

Trudeau was re-elected to office in 2019 but lost his majority in his second term, amid scandals. To regain a majority on September 20, the Liberals must win at least 170 of the 338 seats in the House of Commons, up 15 seats from its current standing. 
"Canadians need to choose how we finish the fight against Covid-19 and build back better, from getting the job done on vaccines, to having people's backs all the way through to the end of this crisis," Trudeau said after the meeting.
All five parties currently holding seats in parliament are gearing up for a fierce battle at the ballot box.

Campaigning is to last only 36 days and is largely expected to revolve around pandemic management, the government's broad emergency aid programs, and a three-year CAN$101.4 billion (US$80.9 billion) post-pandemic stimulus plan.

Most Canadians approve of Trudeau's pandemic response. But if a fourth wave of Covid-19 infections strikes during the campaign, it could hurt his backing.
Despite rising vaccination rates, that are among the highest in the world, with almost 62 percent of Canadians fully inoculated, nearly 1,000 new daily Covid-19 cases have been reported across Canada recently.