Vote-splitting, turnout key to 2019 election: Political science expert
Election season is here, and the time for door-knocking, lawn signs and regular doses of polling data begins.
Voters across Canada will head to the polls on Oct. 21 to choose which party forms government, whether that’s the incumbent Liberals, the Conservative Party, the NDP, the Green Party or the People’s Party of Canada.
University of Regina political science professor Jim Farney said that unlike the 2015 federal election, this year’s race really consists of “two races.”
“We’ve got the Liberals and we’ve got the Tories competing for first place nationally,” Farney told John Gormley on Wednesday. “And then we’ve got this really interesting slugfest, I think, between the Greens and the NDP for who’s going to be the third party in Parliament.”