Liberal Party
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau held several in-person and virtual press conferences throughout the day on Sept. 19, addressing supporters in Alberta, Atlantic Canada, British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec.A key focus for Trudeau on the last day of the campaign has been to call on progressive voters to choose him and his Liberal Party over other left-wing candidates.
Conservative Party
At a campaign stop in Markham, Ont., on Sept. 19, O'Toole touted his party’s platform, reiterating his promises to address issues such as job creation, corruption, mental health, domestic vaccine development, and affordability.“The most important thing I learned is when you have a mission, when you need to bring a team together to accomplish that mission, you need a plan for the mission and we’ve got the plan in Canada, a recovery plan,” he said.
O'Toole also promised to “clean up the mess of corruption in Ottawa with accountability and transparency law,” adding that “the toughest anti-corruption laws in our history” are needed “because we’ve got the most corrupt government in our history.”
The Conservative leader said he will prepare for future crisis by building up domestic capacity in developing vaccines and medical equipment.
NDP
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh campaigned in British Columbia on Sept. 19, kicking off the day with a press conference in Burnaby, before making stops in Surrey, Maple Ridge, the Tri-Cities, and then returning to Burnaby North-Seymour in the evening.“A lot of people that voted for the Liberals are switching over and saying we’re gonna vote for the Democrats,” Singh said.
“In B.C., particularly in the Lower Mainland, the housing crisis is raging, people cannot find a place, a home to afford with their budget. And when Mr. Trudeau promises to [deal with] the housing crisis and doesn’t, young people suffer, young people pay the price, they cannot find something that’s in their budget, they can’t find a place they can ever imagine owning, they can’t even find a place that’s affordable to rent. And so those broken promises mean people end up paying the price,” he said.
People’s Party
Speaking at a rally in Westlock, Ont., People’s Party of Canada Leader Maxime Bernier told supporters on Sept. 19, that he will continue serving as the “real opposition” in Parliament even after the election.“As the only real opposition, we will oppose everything that is against our Charter of rights, and we will work for Canadians, for the sovereignty of our country, we will do that every day,” Bernier said.