Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tom Mulcair Shoulders Blame For Campaign In Letter To New Democrat Supporters

The Canadian Press, 10 Feb, 2016 12:24 PM
    OTTAWA — NDP Leader Tom Mulcair has written a personal letter to supporters taking full responsibility for the dismal results of the October election campaign and saying he could have done better.
     
    The note follows the release of an interim report from a post-mortem working group which says the campaign failed to resound with voters.
     
    Mulcair, who has been peppered with questions about his own political future after the Oct. 19 vote, said the report provides a convincing summary of some of the specific lapses in the campaign's preparation and execution.
     
    "I agree with the overarching assessment that our campaign came up short," he said. "As leader, I take full responsibility for these shortcomings. I could have done a better job."
     
    Rebecca Blaikie, the party's president who is leading the election post-mortem, told party faithful on Tuesday that many believe the NDP presented "cautious change" as opposed to "real change" that the Liberals claimed to offer.
     
    They feel the campaign lacked a strong, simple narrative that made it more difficult to present a co-ordinated national campaign, she added.
     
    A full report is expected to be released in March, just ahead of the party's April convention in Edmonton, where Mulcair will face a review to determine his future as leader.
     
    Mulcair maintains he is committed to staying at the helm and that he will make the changes needed to ensure the mistakes of the last campaign are never repeated.
     
    As the party continues to soul-search, there are several thorny questions that need to be addressed.
     
    For example, how did the party go into the election with its highest seat count in history, as well as richer coffers than ever before, and walk away with only 44 seats?
     
     
    One concern is that the party spent far too much energy trying to avoid mistakes in the lead-up to the election, Mulcair said in his Wednesday letter.
     
    "I believe this contributed directly to that sense of cautiousness that is referred to in the interim report," Mulcair said. "We must embrace a more proactive approach, one where caucus members are invited to initiate projects that help us reach out to the people we represent."
     
    Mulcair also acknowledged the party's balanced budget pledge was a problem during the campaign — a change from a televised interview on Tuesday, in which he would not concede this was a mistake.
     
    "We are addressing the important observation from the interim report that the campaign lacked an overarching narrative that could easily communicate our progressive proposals," he said. "This became apparent when our commitment to balancing the budget overshadowed our social democratic economic vision."
     
    Despite the disappointment, confidence in the NDP's core social democratic values remains rock-solid, Mulcair wrote.
     
     
    "I am inspired by that confidence and resolved to better articulate our vision and communicate it more effectively to all Canadians," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dozens Of Families With No-Fly List Hassles Contact Ontario Boy's Mother

    Dozens Of Families With No-Fly List Hassles Contact Ontario Boy's Mother
    OTTAWA — It turns out the little Ontario boy who's been having trouble boarding airplanes is far from alone.

    Dozens Of Families With No-Fly List Hassles Contact Ontario Boy's Mother

    From 90-Hour Work Week To Rising Before Dawn, Author Experiments With Productivity

    From 90-Hour Work Week To Rising Before Dawn, Author Experiments With Productivity
    Chris Bailey was so determined to find out that he turned down two lucrative job offers and devoted a year of his life to a quest for the holy grail of productivity.

    From 90-Hour Work Week To Rising Before Dawn, Author Experiments With Productivity

    Coastal Gaslink Pipeline Project Gets Ok From Two More B.C. First Nations

    TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) says the Nadleh Whut'en First Nation, west of Prince George, and the West Moberly First Nation north of Chetwynd, have signed project agreements.

    Coastal Gaslink Pipeline Project Gets Ok From Two More B.C. First Nations

    Opponents Of B.C.'s Controversial Wolf Cull Take Fight Against Province To Court

    Opponents Of B.C.'s Controversial Wolf Cull Take Fight Against Province To Court
    Pacific Wild and Valhalla Wilderness Society say they have filed an application for a judicial review that's intended to determine whether the cull constitutes proper wolf management.

    Opponents Of B.C.'s Controversial Wolf Cull Take Fight Against Province To Court

    One-Time Slasher Flick Queen Lenore Zann Seeks Role As Nova Scotia's NDP Leader

    One-Time Slasher Flick Queen Lenore Zann Seeks Role As Nova Scotia's NDP Leader
    Actor Lenore Zann thought she left Hollywood behind when she ran for the provincial NDP in Nova Scotia, but her welcome to politics was straight out of a celebrity gossip tabloid.

    One-Time Slasher Flick Queen Lenore Zann Seeks Role As Nova Scotia's NDP Leader

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Rate At 0.5% Even As Growth Outlook Dims For 2016

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Rate At 0.5% Even As Growth Outlook Dims For 2016
     The Bank of Canada is holding its benchmark interest rate at 0.5 per cent even as it downgrades its growth outlook for an economy hit by falling commodity prices.

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Rate At 0.5% Even As Growth Outlook Dims For 2016