Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Singh Puts On Brave Face One Year In As NDP Faces Existential Questions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Oct, 2018 12:47 PM
    OTTAWA — One year ago, Jagmeet Singh was being hoisted into the air at a packed Toronto hotel as NDP leadership results rolled in.
     
     
    The Queen's Park politician was billed as a charismatic, dynamic injection of energy desperately needed for the federal wing of his party following two years of political losses.
     
     
    He even took his victory party to a dance floor following his slam-dunk win.
     
     
    Much has changed over the last 365 days.
     
     
    This week, Singh conducted interviews from the vacated Centre Block office of the man he replaced — Tom Mulcair — where personal belongings have been stripped, vines hang over a fireplace and ginger candies sit on an unused desk.
     
     
    Singh might be NDP leader, but he doesn't have his own office on Parliament Hill yet due to lacking a seat in the House of Commons.
     
     
    Nonetheless, the 39-year-old politician isn't rattled — on the outside, anyway — even if longtime New Democrats have concerns about his leadership, the party's future, poor morale and slumping fundraising figures.
     
     
    Singh said he has never chosen "an easy path."
     
     
    "Often, I didn't have a choice," he said in an interview.
     
     
    "I've obviously faced a lot of challenges, but I'm looking forward to how I can overcome them all."
     
     
    One of the party's central challenges is turning around the amount of money flowing into its coffers, considering it pulled in $4.86 million from 39,053 donors in 2017, a decline from the $5.39 million collected in 2016, and a steep drop from $18.59 million in 2015.
     
    Is he worried about that? Apparently not.
     
     
    Singh said he knew what he was getting himself into after two years of poor fundraising following the 2015 election, noting he is confident the numbers are heading in the right direction.
     
     
    "The reason I'm not worried about it is because we put in a plan and things are turning around," he said.
     
     
    "That's what I've got to do, sort of turn the ship around ... things are getting better and more importantly, we're putting out really meaningful ideas that are connecting with people."
     
     
    Singh does have the potential to generate much-needed excitement and hope, said former NDP MP Peggy Nash, but she said there is "no question" things seem to be much tougher for expected.
     
     
    "My view from very far away is that this is a tougher job than candidates running for leader expect it will be," Nash said, recalling when the late Jack Layton first became leader and how challenging he found it to grow into the job.
     
     
    "I think there's probably a lot of disappointment in how things have been going for the first year."
     
     
    As he turns his mind toward the 2019 election — as well as a byelection bid for the federal B.C. riding of Burnaby-South — Singh is focusing on evergreen NDP files like affordable housing, pharmacare and Indigenous rights.
     
     
    He's also pushing for the decriminalization of drugs to address the opioid crisis, though he said he hasn't touched them.
     
     
    "I don't believe in drugs," Singh said while noting he's witnessed addiction "up close" and its impacts on a family.
     
     
    "I've seen the pain and I want to reduce that pain and reduce addictions."
     
     
    And as for that criticism he has faced in the last year, Singh is letting it roll off his back.
     
     
    "I've always faced criticism — it's kind of been a part of my life," he said. "There is criticism you can learn from, and there's criticism you just kind of ignore."
     
     
    Beyond the responsibility he has to his party, Singh said he's propelled by wanting to help people.
     
     
    "I was only able to be here because people supported me and because social programs lifted me up," he said.
     
     
    "I know that many people need help and they need that support the same way I needed it. I'm only here because I got some of it."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New BC App Alerts Bystanders Trained In CPR To Nearby Cardiac Arrests

    New BC App Alerts Bystanders Trained In CPR To Nearby Cardiac Arrests
    B.C. has launched the first provincewide smartphone app aimed at turning bystanders into potential lifesavers of heart attack victims.

    New BC App Alerts Bystanders Trained In CPR To Nearby Cardiac Arrests

    Shooting At Chilliwack Home, Believed To Be Targeted, Kills 1 Man

    Shooting At Chilliwack Home, Believed To Be Targeted, Kills 1 Man
      Police Says 28-year-old Was Found With Gunshot Wounds And Later Died Hospital

    Shooting At Chilliwack Home, Believed To Be Targeted, Kills 1 Man

    Grande Prairie Man, 34, Charged After Teenage Boys Lured Over Social Media

    Grande Prairie Man, 34, Charged After Teenage Boys Lured Over Social Media
    Police say an Alberta man accused of posing as a teenage girl to lure teenage boys on social media has also lived in Kelowna.

    Grande Prairie Man, 34, Charged After Teenage Boys Lured Over Social Media

    Man In Stable Condition After Being Shot In Head At Quebec Courthouse

    Man In Stable Condition After Being Shot In Head At Quebec Courthouse
    MANIWAKI, Que. — An 18-year-old man was in stable condition on Thursday after he was shot in the head following an altercation with a special constable at a courthouse in Maniwaki, Que.

    Man In Stable Condition After Being Shot In Head At Quebec Courthouse

    'That Pipeline Is Going To Get Built:' PM Dismisses B.C.'s Trans Mountain Move

    'That Pipeline Is Going To Get Built:' PM Dismisses B.C.'s Trans Mountain Move
    EDMONTON — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the Kinder Morgan oil pipeline expansion will happen despite British Columbia's latest attempt to hinder the project.

    'That Pipeline Is Going To Get Built:' PM Dismisses B.C.'s Trans Mountain Move

    Justin Trudeau Holds Town Hall Meeting In Winnipeg, Faces Questions About Immigration

    Justin Trudeau Holds Town Hall Meeting In Winnipeg, Faces Questions About Immigration
    Trudeau was asked by some people whether he would boost the number of immigrants accepted into Canada every year.

    Justin Trudeau Holds Town Hall Meeting In Winnipeg, Faces Questions About Immigration