Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

WATCH Jagmeet Singh's ‘Cool Way’ To Lure Youngsters For Canada Polls - TikTok Videos

Darpan News Desk, 21 Oct, 2019 06:38 PM

    New Democratic Party (NPD) leader Jagmeet Singh, a contender in Monday's Canadian general elections and also the first turban-wearing Sikh to sit as a provincial legislator in Ontario, has reached out to young voters in the country via TikTok, the video sharing app.

     

    Singh has made it a priority to try to connect with young voters through his campaign, using tools and strategies other political leaders either cannot or have chosen not to try, CBC News reported on Sunday.

     

    Last week, Singh posted two 15-second videos on TikTok highlighting his campaign's key messages with rap music and they quickly went viral. The videos have been collectively viewed over three million times.

     

     

    Singh said the TikTok videos were a way to "show what I'm for, who we're in it for as a team," before adding it was a "cool way" to share his campaign message.

     

    A practicing Sikh, Singh is known for donning colourful turbans. His campaign's main focus is climate action and a government-funded drug programme for all.

     

    On Sunday, the NDP leader said that young voters have told him they often feel ignored by political parties and by government decision-makers.

     

    That's why, Singh said, that he has made it a big part of his campaign to reach out to younger voters in ways that were relevant to them and on platforms they regularly use.

     


     

    "One of the things I've realized throughout the campaign and throughout my life is that you've got to speak to people where they are," CBC News quoted Singh as saying on the eve of his first general election as a federal leader.

     

    "Wherever they are, if you can speak to them and find them and you have a message that can actually make their life better, then use that platform."

     

    Recent polls have suggested that Singh's efforts to pull some of that youth support in his favour may be working, with the NDP first or second choice among the youngest cohort of eligible voters.

     

    Singh opted for a light schedule for the final day of campaigning on Sunday.

     

    The NDP leader had only three events, all in the Vancouver area, and wrapped things up by mid-afternoon - a stark difference from Prime Minister and ruling Liberal Party leader Justin Trudeau, who is seeking a second term, and Conservative candidate Andrew Scheer, who spent the day in multiple ridings or seats in British Columbia.

     
     

    Besides the three frontrunners, the other candidates in the fray are Green leader Elizabeth May, Yves-Francois Blanchet from the Bloc Quebecois party and the People's Party of Canada's Maxime Barnier.

     

    Monday's polls which will take place for 338 ridings or seats are the 43rd Canadian general elections to elect members of the House of Commons.

     

    The Liberals under Trudeau are trying to retain the majority (184 seats) they won in the 2015 polls.

     

    But last month Trudeau came under fire where he had to apologize for not just for wearing blackface during a school event nearly two decades ago, but admitting that he had no idea how many times he had chosen to do so.

     

    The results are expected by Monday night.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Charge Man With Break And Enter, Arson In Emily Carr University Fire

    The Vancouver Police Department says Nathan MacLeod was arrested on Friday and remanded into custody.

    Vancouver Police Charge Man With Break And Enter, Arson In Emily Carr University Fire

    Final Debate Behind Them, Federal Leaders Begin Sprints To Oct. 21 Voting Day

    OTTAWA - Party leaders entered the home stretch of the federal election campaign Friday, picking up the pace of cross-country travel and cramming more events into their days.

    Final Debate Behind Them, Federal Leaders Begin Sprints To Oct. 21 Voting Day

    RCMP Negotiate With Wanted Suspect After He Fled To Cabin In Remote Area Of B.C.

    RCMP Negotiate With Wanted Suspect After He Fled To Cabin In Remote Area Of B.C.
    The Mounties say the incident began unfolding at about 7 p.m. Thursday near the north end of Kootenay Lake, close to the small community of Argenta.    

    RCMP Negotiate With Wanted Suspect After He Fled To Cabin In Remote Area Of B.C.

    Lesser V. Least: No Right To 'Comb The Past' For Favourable Penalty, Court Says

    Lesser V. Least: No Right To 'Comb The Past' For Favourable Penalty, Court Says
    However, the guilty party does not have a constitutional right to the least severe penalty that might have been in effect between those two points.    

    Lesser V. Least: No Right To 'Comb The Past' For Favourable Penalty, Court Says

    Power Out, Highways Closed: Blast Of Early Winter Cripples Southern Manitoba

    Power Out, Highways Closed: Blast Of Early Winter Cripples Southern Manitoba
    WINNIPEG - An early blast of winter-like weather knocked out power and made travel nearly impossible in many parts of southern Manitoba on Friday.    

    Power Out, Highways Closed: Blast Of Early Winter Cripples Southern Manitoba

    More Than 5,000 Coast Mountain Bus Workers Approve Strike Mandate

    More Than 5,000 Coast Mountain Bus Workers Approve Strike Mandate
    VANCOUVER - Unifor says more than 5,000 Metro Vancouver transit operators at the Coast Mountain Bus Co. have voted in favour of a strike mandate.    

    More Than 5,000 Coast Mountain Bus Workers Approve Strike Mandate