
Carney, Singh stage duelling rallies in London as Liberals look to flip NDP stronghold
Singh's event on Friday evening at London Brewing Co-operative marked his second campaign visit to the core area riding of London Centre, while Carney's rally an hour later at Fanshawe College was his first to London—Fanshawe, the NDP stronghold that polling suggests will be a battleground riding on Monday.
"I think it's just really important that we show our support, and we get out there and talk to everybody to make sure that they vote. But I'm still nervous," said London resident Tiffany Hillman, one of several hundred people attending the Carney event, staged in an expansive room in the college's 'C' Building.
Carney arrived at the college at about 7:30 p.m. from Cambridge, after stopping in Georgetown and Sault Ste. Marie earlier in the day, and was introduced on the stage by his wife, Diana Fox Carney.
"We're at a college, a place of education, excitement, engagement, and ... empowerment. You get a quiz every once in a while, so I have a question," Carney told the crowd. "Who's ready? Who's ready to stand up for Canada with me?"
"I feel pretty confident" about Carney's chances, said Alex Harrington, a Western University student and first-time voter, acknowledging that, like Hillman, he's still a bit nervous about Monday.
"I know every time I look at the national polls, the lead narrows a little bit. I know [U.S. President Donald] Trump just made some more comments about the whole 51st state stuff, so that tends to help, at least with the Liberals."
Liberals targeting NDP ridings
As the election campaign nears the finish line, the Liberals have been targeting orange ridings to draw away NDP support and secure a majority. The New Democrats, meanwhile, have been working to shore up support to save existing seats and avoid potentially losing official party status.
London—Fanshawe, which has been represented by the NDP for nearly 20 years, appears to be one of the ridings the Liberals believe they have a shot at flipping in their quest for majority status.
NDP incumbent Lindsay Mathyssen, who is seeking a third term, won 43 per cent of the vote in 2021. However, recent polling suggests the race this time could be a toss-up between the NDP and Liberals, poll analyst Éric Grenier told CBC Radio's London Morning on Friday.
For Grenier, who runs CBC's Poll Tracker, the riding will be one to watch on election night.
"Whether it is an NDP vote, a vote for Mathyssen, or is it a vote that's just going to be an anti-Conservative vote, in which case the Liberals might pick it up," he said. "If the NDP is able to hold on, stay to official party status, 12 seats, it's probably because they won a seat like London—Fanshawe."
Grenier said he believes the New Democrats still have a good shot of holding the riding, something that can't be said of many other ridings the party holds, he added. As of Friday morning, CBC's Poll Tracker showed the party polling at 8.6 per cent, with victories projected in fewer than 12 seats if an election were held that day.
More red Liberal signs have been popping up in the London—Fanshawe neighbourhood of Becky and Mike O'Neil compared with previous years, when it would be mostly orange NDP signs.
"It's kind of crazy to think that she wouldn't be the MP there anymore, if, you know, the Liberals do get in. It's kind of nerve-racking," Becky said. "I do really support Lindsay, and I know she's very strong, and she has a lot of our support from our neighbourhood."
Singh makes case at rally
As the Liberals take aim at London—Fanshawe, Singh's focus on Friday was London Centre, formerly London North Centre, where he arrived after stops in Toronto and Hamilton. Liberal Peter Fragiskatos is looking for re-election there, having represented London North Centre since 2015.
"This is the last stretch of this campaign, and so we got to get a couple of things straight. Talk about the elephant in the room. I know a lot of people are wondering about strategic voting," Singh told the crowd.
"I get it, you're worried about Pierre Poilievre and the Conservatives. We are, too. We don't want them in. Here's the good news. Pierre is not winning this thing."
Voting for the NDP, Singh said, was the only way to prevent a Liberal majority and a Conservative opposition, which would be "the worst of Carney and the worst of Conservatives."
Singh has claimed the Liberals want to cut upwards of $28 billion in operating spending, money he said could come in part from provincial health transfers. Carney has said he doesn't plan to cut health-care spending, and the Liberal platform mentions maintaining provincial and personal federal transfers.
A supporter in every election since 1975, Londoner Susan Smith expressed confidence in the NDP, despite the lagging polls, and brought along her Canadian Dental Care Plan card for Singh to sign. "I turn 70 in a couple of months," she said. "I wouldn't dream of giving my vote to anybody else."
For Tari Ajadi, an assistant professor of political science at McGill University in Montreal, the decision by the NDP to hold a rally in London Centre instead of London—Fanshawe was interesting, given that projections from polling aggregator 338Canada.com suggest that it's a safe Liberal seat.
The New Democrats are firmly in "save the furniture kind of mode" and need to keep the east London riding and others from flipping if they want to maintain official party status, he said.
"Perhaps Singh is seeing something in his internal polling that suggests maybe the NDP has a shot in that riding. I'm not really certain, to be honest," Ajadi said. It's unclear why the party held the rally in London Centre, though the brewery is located near the riding's boundary with London—Fanshawe.
"Nevertheless, I still think that even if the rally is being held in one riding, the point is that, regionally speaking, a presence of Singh is important," he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
5 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Myanmar military courts sentence 12 to life for human trafficking, including Chinese nationals
BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar military courts have sentenced a dozen individuals — including five Chinese nationals — to life imprisonment for their involvement in multiple human trafficking cases, state-run media reported Saturday. According to the Myanma Alinn newspaper, the convictions stem from a range of offenses including the online distribution of sex videos and the trafficking of Myanmar women into forced marriages in China. In one case, five people — including two Chinese nationals identified as Lin Te and Wang Xiaofeng — were sentenced to life imprisonment by a military court in Yangon, the country's largest city, on July 29. They were found guilty under Myanmar's Anti-Trafficking in Persons law for producing sex videos involving three Myanmar couples and distributing the footage online for profit. In a separate case, the same court sentenced a woman and three Chinese nationals — Yibo, Cao Qiu Quan and Chen Huan. The group was convicted of planning to transport two Myanmar women, recently married to two of the convicted Chinese men, into China, the report said. Additionally, three other people received life sentences from a separate military court for selling a woman as a bride to China, and for attempting to do the same with another woman. In another case, a woman from Myanmar's central Magway region was given a 10-year sentence on July 30 for planning to transport two Myanmar women to be sold as brides to Chinese men, the report said. Human trafficking, particularly of women and girls lured or forced into marriages in China, remains a widespread problem in Myanmar, a country still reeling from civil war after the military seized power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021. The persisting conflict in most areas of Myanmar has left millions of women and children vulnerable to exploitation. A 2018 report by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Kachin Women's Association Thailand (KWAT) — which works to prevent and respond to trafficking in northern Kachin and Shan states bordering China — estimated that about 21,000 women and girls from northern Myanmar were forced into marriage in China between 2013 and 2017. In its latest report published in December, KWAT noted a sharp decline in the number of trafficking survivors accessing its services from 2020 to 2023. It attributed the decline to the COVID-19 pandemic and border closures caused by ongoing conflict following the army takeover. However, it reported a resurgence in 2024 as people from across Myanmar began migrating to China in search of work. Maj-Gen Aung Kyaw Kyaw, a deputy minister for Home Affairs, said during a June meeting that the authorities had handled 53 cases of human trafficking, forced marriage and prostitution in 2024, 34 of which involved China, according to a report published by Myanmar's Information Ministry. The report also said that a total of 80 human trafficking cases, including 14 involving marriage deception by foreign nationals, were recorded between January and June this year.


Canada News.Net
6 hours ago
- Canada News.Net
Ottawa joins growing global push for Palestinian statehood
TORONTO, Canada: In a landmark policy shift, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney announced this week that Canada will officially recognize a Palestinian state during the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly in September 2025. The decision aligns Canada with a growing number of Western nations moving to respond to the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza and reframe the global approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Carney convened a special Cabinet meeting to deliberate on the crisis in Gaza, following recent discussions with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who made a similar commitment earlier in the week. "The level of human suffering in Gaza is intolerable," Carney said. "Canada cannot remain a bystander. The international community must act to preserve the prospect of peace." According to Carney, Canada's recognition will be conditional. The Palestinian Authority must commit to holding free and fair general elections in 2026, with Hamas excluded from participation, and begin a process of demilitarizing the future Palestinian state. "Much has to happen before a viable democratic state can be established," he acknowledged. "This will not be easy or immediate — but the alternative is continued despair and endless conflict." The announcement comes amid mounting international outrage over the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Gaza. Global leaders face increasing domestic and diplomatic pressure as images of hunger and devastation continue to emerge. Carney said he had also spoken with French President Emmanuel Macron, whose government declared last week that France would become the first G7 nation to recognize Palestine this September. The cascade of recognitions marks a notable shift in Western policy. Starmer warned on July 29 that the United Kingdom will move forward with recognition unless Israel agrees to a ceasefire, takes tangible steps to alleviate conditions in Gaza, and re-engages in meaningful peace efforts. "The window for a two-state solution is rapidly closing," Starmer said. Carney echoed this concern, warning that developments on the ground — including ongoing Israeli settlements, land seizures, and civilian deaths — are making a negotiated resolution increasingly remote. "We must not allow the facts on the ground to harden into a permanent reality," he said. "Canada is working with like-minded nations to keep alive the only viable path to peace: two states living side by side in security and dignity." Israel's current government, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, firmly opposes the two-state solution, citing both nationalist and security concerns. In response, many Western nations are now bypassing Israel's consent and moving unilaterally toward recognizing Palestinian statehood. Though largely symbolic in immediate effect, Canada's recognition will carry diplomatic weight. It follows the lead of more than 140 countries, including a growing number in Europe. France's announcement last week made it the first significant Western power — and the most prominent EU member — to formally endorse Palestinian statehood. Canada has historically supported the idea of a Palestinian state existing peacefully alongside Israel, but has previously insisted that recognition should result from a negotiated settlement. Carney's decision signals that Ottawa now sees direct recognition as a tool to revive meaningful negotiations rather than waiting for them.
Montreal Gazette
8 hours ago
- Montreal Gazette
Libman: Much at stake for Quebec party leaders in Arthabaska byelection
Many Gazette readers might have trouble locating the largely rural Arthabaska riding on a map, but we'll be hearing a lot about it in the days ahead. Located between Montreal and Quebec City, advance voting begins there this weekend for an Aug. 11 byelection to replace Coalition Avenir Québec MNA Eric Lefebvre, a recently elected federal Conservative MP. The byelection is a critical test for Quebec's main political parties and their leaders. Over the past 25 years, the riding has shifted between the Parti Québécois, Liberals, Action démocratique and CAQ. And this byelection offers the possibility of a breakthrough for the provincial Conservatives, with party leader Éric Duhaime potentially making his grand entrance into the National Assembly. The Conservatives finished second here in the 2022 vote with an unknown candidate. Duhaime is the standard bearer this time, and polls show his party neck and neck with the PQ. At a candidates debate last week, he was the centre of attention and primary target of the others, usually the sign of a front-runner. The former radio shock jock has the gift of the gab and would light things up in the assembly. This is Duhaime's best shot. If he doesn't win, the Quebec Conservative Party he has resurrected over the past few years will likely go back in hibernation. For the PQ, anything short of a win will be interpreted as a stalling of the party's momentum, after leading in the polls for almost two years now and having won the last two byelections (Jean-Talon and Terrebonne). PQ Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon is as confident now as Pierre Poilievre was a year ago in the federal campaign — looking in the mirror, and believing the person staring back at him is the future premier ministre. The byelection will also be the first electoral test for the Liberals since choosing former MP Pablo Rodriguez as leader. There are genuine concerns about his ability to make inroads in the regions. If they fare poorly in Arthabaska — a 97 per cent francophone mother-tongue riding — questions may bubble up as to whether they made a mistake in not opting for Charles Milliard or Karl Blackburn. When asked about the regions, Rodriguez, who was a child refugee from Argentina, talks about growing up in Sherbrooke — which happens to be just south of Arthabaska. We'll see. At last week's debate, the Liberal candidate in the riding also had to fend off criticism about Rodriguez's role in the Justin Trudeau regime regarding the exaggerated influx of newcomers. As for the CAQ, it has won this riding convincingly in all five elections since the party's founding in 2012. It will likely be a very different story this time. This week's news that Quebec's auditor general is probing millions in provincial subsidies to the electric battery industry (Northvolt and Lion Electric) is another blow to a government that appears to be falling apart at the seams amid other financial fiascos like SAAQclic and Santé Québec. It's too early to call this byelection a foreshadowing of the general election that's still over a year away. Nonetheless, the results could unleash internal party tensions at the CAQ. François Legault's leadership hasn't yet been challenged from within, but you can bet his MNAs are hearing considerable grumpiness from voters during the summer break as they spend more time in their ridings. Legault seems desperately hoping for a Hail Mary with a cabinet shuffle in the fall, which he (oddly) advertised well in advance. If the byelection goes sour in a riding his party has dominated for over a decade, and his rearranging of the cabinet chairs doesn't prompt any meaningful bump in support, he will soon have an important decision to make about his future. For a seemingly nondescript byelection in the dog days of August, there are certainly many moving parts, with potentially consequential spinoffs.