What Justin Trudeau’s Liberals could learn from the Nova Scotia election campaign
HALIFAX — The election campaign in Nova Scotia may not be getting much attention on the national stage, but the federal Liberals in Ottawa are almost certainly keeping a close watch on the race.
With Justin Trudeau’s Liberals appearing poised to seek a third term in office — a feat their Nova Scotia cousins are now trying to accomplish — the federal party is keen to to discern how the electorate is feeling heading into what could be Canada’s first post-pandemic election, says Tom Urbaniak, a political science professor at Cape Breton University.
“A weak performance by the Nova Scotia Liberals would be somewhat concerning to the federal Liberals,” Urbaniak said in an interview Tuesday. “There seemed to be a high level of support going into the (Nova Scotia) election for the incumbent (Liberals). If that level of support is eroded, that would signal to the federal Liberals that the public is volatile.”
Voters in Nova Scotia go to the polls Aug. 17, and the low-key, midsummer campaign — now at the halfway point — hasn’t generated much of a buzz.