Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Federal Liberals Launch 'Choose Forward' As Election Campaign Slogan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2019 07:54 PM

    OTTAWA - The federal Liberals have decided on a slogan they hope will resonate with voters and best represent their political brand as they roll out their campaign for the October election.

     

    A release from the party says "Choose Forward" is the official campaign theme that will be stamped on a series of national ads featuring Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

     

    The party says the ads, which begin airing on television this week, will be part of "a comprehensive and digitally-integrated campaign that also includes featured stories from Canadians."

     

    One shows a smiling Trudeau engaging with constituents in his working class Montreal riding of Papineau and delivering his campaign message while riding a transit bus.

     

    He talks about things he says the Liberals have done to help average Canadians, such as cutting taxes for the middle class, creating the Canada Child Benefit and their climate change plan — and he fires a broadside at Andrew Sheer's Conservatives, whom he accuses of trying to block such initiatives.

     

    "The Conservatives like to say they're for the people but then they cut taxes for the wealthy and cut services for everybody else," Trudeau says.

     

    That's become the main theme of the Liberal camp, and it's a refrain Canadians will no doubt hear repeated countless times during the coming campaign.

     

    The ad concludes with the prime minister facing the camera and saying that "in October we've got a choice to make — keep moving forward and build on the progress we've made, or go back to the politics of the Harper years. I'm for moving forward for everyone."

     

    Canadians are expected to head to the polls on Oct. 21.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sell Regulated Heroin To Drug Users To Reduce Overdose Deaths: B.C. Group

    Sell Regulated Heroin To Drug Users To Reduce Overdose Deaths: B.C. Group
    The BC Centre on Substance Use is proposing a policy to sell legally regulated heroin as part of an urgent response to reduce opioid overdose deaths from a toxic drug supply that is profiting organized crime groups.

    Sell Regulated Heroin To Drug Users To Reduce Overdose Deaths: B.C. Group

    Few Incentives In Spending-Heavy B.C. Budget, Global Downturn Worries Business

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's budget pays too little attention to the potential impacts of a slowing global economy and a shifting housing market, business leaders say.

    Few Incentives In Spending-Heavy B.C. Budget, Global Downturn Worries Business

    Proposed Edible Pot Rules Are Wasteful, Would Leave Products Tasteless: Critics

    Proposed Edible Pot Rules Are Wasteful, Would Leave Products Tasteless: Critics
    Canada's proposed edible pot regulations would result in tasteless products wrapped in wasteful packaging, shutting out medical patients and fuelling a continued black market, critics say

    Proposed Edible Pot Rules Are Wasteful, Would Leave Products Tasteless: Critics

    Man Arrested, Charged In String Of Four Bank Robberies Over Four Hours In Surrey

    Man Arrested, Charged In String Of Four Bank Robberies Over Four Hours In Surrey
    Richard Orr, 24, Is Charged With Four Counts Of Robbery And Remains In Custody Following The Four-Hour Spree On Feb. 12.

    Man Arrested, Charged In String Of Four Bank Robberies Over Four Hours In Surrey

    Alcohol Policies Fizzle For Canadian Governments As Harms Overflow: Reports

    Alcohol Policies Fizzle For Canadian Governments As Harms Overflow: Reports
    VICTORIA — Two new studies say the federal and provincial governments must do more to reduce alcohol consumption after determining damages from drinking have surpassed tobacco use.

    Alcohol Policies Fizzle For Canadian Governments As Harms Overflow: Reports

    B.C. Review Board Says Man Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids A Threat, But Outings To Be Mulled

    Schoenborn, who's now 50 years old, has been held at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital since before a 2010 court decision that found him not criminally responsible for killing his daughter and two sons.    

    B.C. Review Board Says Man Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids A Threat, But Outings To Be Mulled