Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mulcair, Harper Take Aim At Trudeau, Remind Voters Of Sponsorship Scandal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Oct, 2015 11:36 AM
    OTTAWA — Despite having been cut loose from the Liberals, Dan Gagnier is still weighing down Justin Trudeau's campaign.
     
    Gagnier — the party's campaign co-chairman — quit Wednesday after an email surfaced that showed him providing lobbying advice to an oil pipeline company.
     
    Trudeau's rivals pounced, resurrecting the spectre of the sponsorship scandal as they cited the controversy as evidence of what NDP Leader Tom Mulcair calls "the same old Liberal party."
     
    Gagnier stepped down after The Canadian Press revealed he emailed officials at TransCanada Corp., the company behind the Energy East pipeline, with advice on how and when to lobby a new government — including a Liberal minority.
     
    Conservative Leader Stephen Harper says the culture of the Liberal party has not changed since they were in government and isn't about to.
     
    For his part, Trudeau says Gagnier's departure demonstrates that the Liberals "take ethical standards and responsibilities extremely seriously."
     
    The controversy has the potential to dramatically upend the narrative that had been taking shape during the campaign's final week — especially in Quebec, where Energy East is a divisive issue.
     
    Mulcair — hammered in his home province ever since he was forced to declare his opposition to a Conservative ban on the niqab during citizenship ceremonies — is seizing on the Gagnier story as a way of arresting Liberal momentum.
     
    With just three full days of campaigning left, a barrage of last-minute advertising is also underway, as was apparent during the broadcast of Wednesday's postseason game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Texas Rangers.
     
    One marketing company has calculated that the majority of attack ads that have run on Canadian television during the campaign have been Conservative spots targeting Trudeau.
     
    IPG Mediabrands says more than 9,800 political party ads ran on TV between Aug. 4 and Sept. 27, and one third of them were attack ads. Of those, a 65 per cent were Conservative ads aimed at Trudeau, while 15 per cent were Liberal ads attacking Harper and 11 per cent were NDP spots targeting Harper.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Jarrod Sidhu Joins Vancouver Police, To Work With Father Police Sergeant Tej Sidhu

    Jarrod Sidhu Joins Vancouver Police, To Work With Father Police Sergeant Tej Sidhu
    Jarrod Sidhu is one of the 13 new recruits who joined the department on Thursday and is posted under his father, Tej Sidhu, who is a sergeant with the Vancouver police department

    Jarrod Sidhu Joins Vancouver Police, To Work With Father Police Sergeant Tej Sidhu

    Toronto Police Hunt For Indian-Origin Uber Cab Driver Amritpal Singh For Molesting Woman

    Toronto Police Hunt For Indian-Origin Uber Cab Driver Amritpal Singh For Molesting Woman
    Listed as Amritpal with the cab service company, he is described as a young man between 26 and 30 years of age, short black spiked hair and a short chin-strap beard

    Toronto Police Hunt For Indian-Origin Uber Cab Driver Amritpal Singh For Molesting Woman

    Apple Security Breach Could Impact Canadians With iPhones And iPads

    Apple Security Breach Could Impact Canadians With iPhones And iPads
    Apple Inc. has removed some applications from its app store after developers in China were tricked into using software tools that added malicious code to their work.

    Apple Security Breach Could Impact Canadians With iPhones And iPads

    Hundreds Stranded, Others Without Power As Slides Hit Northeast Of Pemberton

    Hundreds Stranded, Others Without Power As Slides Hit Northeast Of Pemberton
    Officials with the Squamish-Lillooet Regional District hope to gain a better idea today of how long it will take to repair roads and reach people stranded northeast of Pemberton

    Hundreds Stranded, Others Without Power As Slides Hit Northeast Of Pemberton

    B.C. To Increase Wolf Cull, Says It's The Best Plan To Save Endangered Caribou

    B.C. To Increase Wolf Cull, Says It's The Best Plan To Save Endangered Caribou
    British Columbia is aiming to increase the number of wolves it kills this winter in the second year of a plan to save endangered caribou, prompting criticism from celebrities 

    B.C. To Increase Wolf Cull, Says It's The Best Plan To Save Endangered Caribou

    Dewdney Slough Bridge Near Mission, B.C., Partially Opened With Lower Speed Limit

    Dewdney Slough Bridge Near Mission, B.C., Partially Opened With Lower Speed Limit
    The Transportation Ministry says crews worked around the clock to replace a damaged steel cap in the weakened Dewdney Slough Bridge.

    Dewdney Slough Bridge Near Mission, B.C., Partially Opened With Lower Speed Limit