Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Prime minister's gone fishing for votes, in very particular voter ponds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2014 12:39 PM

    OTTAWA - Stephen Harper is fishing for voters, and he's going back to familiar ponds.

    Groups that have long been regarded as the Conservative Party's base of support have been getting extra attention as the 2015 election grows nearer.

    Take Sault Ste Marie, where the prime minister is today, taking part in a Q-and-A session moderated by the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters — an event organized inside the Prime Minister's Office. The government's record on wetlands conservation and support for gun owners will not escape mention.

    On Thursday, for example, Fisheries Minister Gail Shea announced the latest phase in a $25 million recreational fishing conservation program.

    Part of the Conservative success story has been speaking to Canadians that the other federal parties have tended to overlook. On social issues, the party has no competition on the right side of the spectrum. It recently used the phrase "traditional family values" in an email survey sent out to members, and has balked at the NDP's proposal for a national child-care program.

    "Our government believes that parents know what is best for their children. The NDP disagree," Social Development Minister Candice Bergen tweeted this week.

    Policies that resonate in rural ridings in particular have helped send a number of MPs to Ottawa. Support in those constituencies is being rallied again.

    The party unveiled a separate website last month entitled "Safe and Sensible Firearms Policies," featuring a photo of two men in jeans walking through a field with rifles slung on their shoulders.

    "We’re proud to be the government that stopped treating hunters and farmers as criminals, and we’re proud to be the only party that promotes safe and sensible firearms legislation," the website says. The government recently introduced legislation to ease some of the restrictions around firearms licensing.

    The government recently directed the RCMP to reverse its decision to replace muskrat-fur hats with wool tuques.

    "Our government will always stand up for Canada’s hunters and trappers," Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq told the Commons.

    Bob Sexton, managing editor of Outdoor Canada, said the Conservatives have managed to display a level of understanding of the history and traditions that are tied up in hunting and fishing.

    "A lot of our readership is in a rural part of Canada. Often, a lot of these issues are city versus country, or rural versus urban," said Sexton.

    "Maybe politicians who don't really connect with that rural element don't do as well in an outdoors community...There's also a disconnect between what people in cities think happens in the fishing and hunting world."

    But in order to secure another majority, the Conservatives must win over more than just their core supporters — pegged at somewhere around 30 per cent.

    To make up the next eight to ten per cent, Harper is treading familiar ground with an economic message that is focused on job creation, tax cuts and overall stability.

    Last week, Harper chose Whitby, Ont., to announce the government would double the tax credit families can claim if their children are in sports. At the beginning of the month, he sat down with the Mississauga and Brampton boards of trade.

    Voters in those ridings in the coveted 905 region around Toronto helped the Conservatives secure a majority in 2011.

    Sandra Buckler, a former director of communications for Harper, says his recent travel is just an example of an activist prime minister at work.

    "I know from direct experience that he likes to get out and talk about a lot of issues that matter to a lot of Canadians — for me, I know it's jobs, I know it's the economy... and standing up for Canada and Canadian values at home and away," said Buckler, vice-president of Bluesky Strategy Group.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour
    WINNIPEG - A man who was himself mauled when he saved a woman attacked by a polar bear has received one of Manitoba's highest honours.

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad
    New Democrats and Liberals refused Friday to support Harper's decision to join in airstrikes against the extremist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which has been committing atrocities in northern Iraq.

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself
    VICTORIA - The allegations were serious, a stern-faced British Columbia health minister announcing that seven employees had been fired and the RCMP had been called in to investigate a collection of data breaches.

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself

    Brain-damaged B.C. Man Alleges RCMP Officer Who Assaulted Him Was On Steroids

    Brain-damaged B.C. Man Alleges RCMP Officer Who Assaulted Him Was On Steroids
    VANCOUVER - A British Columbia man has filed a lawsuit alleging he sustained permanent brain damage at the hands of an RCMP officer whose violence was fuelled by steroids.

    Brain-damaged B.C. Man Alleges RCMP Officer Who Assaulted Him Was On Steroids

    Aladdin Ramadan Homicide: Surrey Teen Charged With Second-degree Murder

    Aladdin Ramadan Homicide: Surrey Teen Charged With Second-degree Murder
    RCMP say a 16-year-old boy has been arrested and charged with second-degree murder after a man was shot near Lougheed Highway in Burnaby, B.C.

    Aladdin Ramadan Homicide: Surrey Teen Charged With Second-degree Murder

    RCMP arrests 20-year-old man in Surrey in June Sex Assault on Vancouver Island

    RCMP arrests 20-year-old man in Surrey in June Sex Assault on Vancouver Island
    LANGFORD, B.C. - Mounties have arrested a 20-year-old man in Surrey, B.C., for a summertime sexual assault on a popular southern Vancouver Island walking trail.

    RCMP arrests 20-year-old man in Surrey in June Sex Assault on Vancouver Island