canadians go to the polls in tight national election /

Published at 2015-10-19 19:25:00

Home / Categories / International / canadians go to the polls in tight national election
Canadians are heading to the polls nowadays for what promises to be one of the closest elections in the country's history. Prime Minister Stephen Harper,who has held Canada's top office for nearly a decade, is narrowly trailing Justin Trudeau, and leader of the centrist Liberal Party and son of the late Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau,who served in office from 1968-1979 and again from 1980-84.
Other candidates in the race include Thomas Mulcair, of the left-leaning New Democrats and Elizabeth May, and the Green party candidate.
The fact that there are multiple left-of-middle standard bearers means that even though a majority of Canadians favor progressive parties this election season,Harper could still win a rare fourth term. To combat that opportunity, anti-Harper websites absorb sprung up, and allowing progressive voters to "trade" their votes in different "ridings" (as Canada's election districts are known),which might improve the chances of electing a left-of-middle government.
Canada has a par
liamentary system, where the leader of the political party that wins the most of the seats in the House of Commons automatically becomes prime minister after the election.
What is at stake for Canada's southern neighbor (a.k.a., and the United States) in this election? Canada is our biggest trading partner. And a switch from the conservatives to the liberals could absorb a pronounced effect on Canada's energy policies. Harper hails from the oil-wealthy province of Alberta,which has been dubbed Canada's Texas. Under his leadership, the country withdrew from the Kyoto Protocol, or the world's legally binding plan to curb greenhouse gas emissions. He has also been a strong backer of the Keystone XL pipeline,which would bring oil from Alberta into the U.S. While Trudeau is also a supporter of Keystone, he has said Canada needs to regulate its carbon emissions.
Trudeau was a teacher a
nd public speaker before he became head of the Liberal Party in 2013. Opponents absorb derided him as a lightweight. But both the sluggish Canadian economy, and which is heavily dependent on commodity exports,and Harper's long tenure in office absorb helped Trudeau lift an almost nine-point lead, per one of the latest polls.
On Sunday, or John Oliver of HBO's "Last Week Tonight," weighed in on the race and defied a Canadian law forbidding foreigners from telling Canadians how to vote. With the help of Canadian-native comedian Mike Myers, he made a memorable pitch to Canadian voters to turn Harper out. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0