Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Age Not A Consideration As NDP Leader Tom Mulcair Eyes 2019 Election

The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2016 11:39 AM
    MONTEBELLO, Que. — Tom Mulcair may be 17 years older than Justin Trudeau, but he's not about to let his age keep him from leading the New Democrats into the 2019 election.
     
    The NDP leader, who continues to face questions about his own political fate in the wake of October's election defeat, will be days shy of his 65th birthday the next time Canadians head to the polls.
     
    That's not holding him back.
     
    "Are you saying that my friend Bernie Sanders is too old to be running for the White House?" Mulcair said in an interview with The Canadian Press on the sidelines of his party's caucus retreat in Montebello, Que.
     
    "I think that passion keeps us young and I'm very passionate about what I do and what the NDP can accomplish."
     
    Mulcair wants to continue to lead the party, which now has 44 seats in the House of Commons. To do so, he'll need to see a strong show of support from delegates at the upcoming NDP convention in April.
     
    Later this week, Mulcair is scheduled to meet with members of the NDP executive as the party continues to sift through the wreckage of the October election, which reduced it from front-runner to third-party status.
     
     
    Mulcair said he also held his own meetings immediately after the campaign with organizers, community groups and others who played a role in the race.
     
    "It was an extraordinary experience," he said.
     
    "For me, it was just sitting there and listening, reacting a little bit, but mostly just listening, taking notes to what people had experienced on the ground.  What had gone right with the campaign, what had gone wrong. What lessons we had to learn going forward."
     
    In his discussions, Mulcair said he also learned there is an "incredible resource" in the ridings of supporters who are often in their mid-30s and have been connected to the NDP since they were teens.
     
    "They wear the NDP's values of fairness and solidarity and justice in everything they do in their lives ... that's what has brought to them to the party," he said.
     
     
    "What we are doing now is connecting with that base."
     
    It is important to ensure that support at the riding level is also connected to the party apparatus and the NDP's parliamentary wing, Mulcair added.
     
    "That all has to be one from now on, and it wasn't," he said. "I take responsibility for the fact that that came up short, but that's a top priority for me ... to work on that and to get that mix right."
     
    New Democrats also need to spend more time talking about what they stand for, such as tackling inequality in Canadian society, Mulcair added.
     
    "We believe in a positive, proactive role of government in reducing inequality."
     
    Mulcair and his team plan to press the Liberal government to pursue a progressive agenda in Parliament when they return to Ottawa next week.
     
     
    NDP MPs are meeting in Montebello for a second day of strategy sessions as the party tries to carve out its road map to rebuild and move forward.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Workers, Families Take WorksafeBC To Court Over 2012 Mill Explosions

    Workers, Families Take WorksafeBC To Court Over 2012 Mill Explosions
    The separate fires in Burns Lake and Prince George killed a total of four workers and injured 42 others.

    Workers, Families Take WorksafeBC To Court Over 2012 Mill Explosions

    Lululemon Athletic ups Q4 guidance; shares soar in after-hours trading

    VANCOUVER — Shares in Lululemon Athletica inc. (Nasdaq:LULU) rose sharply in after-hours trading Monday after the Vancouver-based activewear retail announced improved guidance for its fiscal fourth quarter.

    Lululemon Athletic ups Q4 guidance; shares soar in after-hours trading

    Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia

    Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia
    Dion is responding to the growing clamour over the government's decision to allow an Ontario company to sell $15 billion worth of light armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia in spite of its questionable human rights record.

    Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia

    Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed

    Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed
    In a video that has been widely shared, Prince Moulay Hassan snatches his hand away every time someone tries to kiss it.

    Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed

    B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador

    B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador
    The Public Health Agency of Canada says a B.C. resident who recently travelled to El Salvador has contracted a dengue-like virus transmitted through mosquito bites.

    B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador

    Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau

    Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau
    ill Morneau told several hundred people attending a Halifax Chamber of Commerce luncheon that his department's projections on growth since the 2015 budget have fallen due to oil prices that are less than half those of 2014. 

    Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau