Tuesday, June 16, 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

    Jagmeet Singh Tries To Rally His Troops As NDP Struggles To Gain Traction

    Singh spoke to NDP staffers who gathered in Ottawa from across the country for the federal party's annual staff forum.

    Jagmeet Singh Tries To Rally His Troops As NDP Struggles To Gain Traction

    Mother Weeps For Her Son: Trial Hears How Calgary Stampeder Mylan Hicks Died

    Mother Weeps For Her Son: Trial Hears How Calgary Stampeder Mylan Hicks Died
    CALGARY — A mother's anguish was evident at the opening of a second-degree murder trial for the man accused of killing a Calgary Stampeders player.

    Mother Weeps For Her Son: Trial Hears How Calgary Stampeder Mylan Hicks Died

    Fake Website Launched In New Brunswick To Educate Investors About Real Scams

    Fake Website Launched In New Brunswick To Educate Investors About Real Scams
    FREDERICTON — People who fell for a website hyping a too-good-to-be-true investment opportunity for New Brunswick's coastline got lucky: The scam wasn't intended to trap potential investors, but to teach them.

    Fake Website Launched In New Brunswick To Educate Investors About Real Scams

    Ottawa Announces $50M To Support Survivors Of Gender-Based Violence

    Ottawa Announces $50M To Support Survivors Of Gender-Based Violence
    Status of Women Minister Maryam Monsef has announced $50 million for programs across Canada that support survivors of gender-based violence, saying more people than ever are coming forward to seek support and tell their stories.

    Ottawa Announces $50M To Support Survivors Of Gender-Based Violence

    How 2019 Could Bring Canada's First Green Government - On Tiny P.E.I.

    Tiny Prince Edward Island has long embraced the politically unusual: it had the first premier of non-European heritage, the first elected woman premier and the first openly gay male premier.

    How 2019 Could Bring Canada's First Green Government - On Tiny P.E.I.

    Saskatchewan Introduces Minimum Semi-Truck Driver Training After Broncos Crash

    Saskatchewan Introduces Minimum Semi-Truck Driver Training After Broncos Crash
    REGINA — The Saskatchewan government is introducing mandatory training for semi-truck drivers almost eight months after the Humboldt Broncos bus crash.

    Saskatchewan Introduces Minimum Semi-Truck Driver Training After Broncos Crash