OTTAWA – Election campaign events of the Conservative and Liberal Leaders will cross paths in B.C.’s Lower Mainland on Sunday.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper is pulling out of the Vancouver area after targeting key ridings earlier this weekend where the Tories believe seats are ripe to move to the right.
Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff is carrying the words of some political star power with him as he campaigns in Vancouver, North Vancouver and Victoria.
At a campaign event in Edmonton Saturday, former prime minister Paul Martin weighed in with his opinion on Stephen Harper’s plans to slash $11 billion from the federal budget.
"They can’t find that money without major cuts," he stated.
One area that is clearly in danger is health care, Martin said, because Harper doesn’t think health care is a federal responsibility.
It’s not believable that Harper would present a budget and then two weeks later have a whole new set of cuts in order to chop the deficit even faster, said the former Liberal finance minister.
He said the Conservatives aren’t prepared to identify where the cuts will come, because they know it will be to the services Canadians need and want.
"I don’t think they can do it," Martin concluded.
At an Edmonton rally later, Martin told a crowd that the Conservatives took the country into deficit long before the recession hit.
"The messed up the economy, they took away our margin of error, they took away this country’s ability to deal with the changes. Not only that then they missed the signals of the global recession,"Martin said to chants of "shame, shame" from the crowd.
Harper is aiming at both the Liberals and the NDP on his trip through B.C.’s Lower Mainland.
At a campaign event in Burnaby, B.C., Saturday night, Harper warned the crowd against both NDP Leader Jack Layton and Ignatieff.
"Mr. Layton and Mr. Ignatieff savagely opposed us lowering the federal sales tax from seven, to six, to five per cent. And be under no illusion they will raise it back up should they get the chance," he said. "Only the federal Conservative Party of Canada will keep the federal sales tax at five per cent."
Earlier in the day, Harper spoke at a large Sikh festival in Liberal MP Ujjal Dosanjh’s riding, who won his seat by just 20 votes in the 2008 election.
Dosanjh was also on hand, addressing the festival in Punjabi, and ripping into the government’s record on family reunification. Afterwards, the former B.C. premier said he was in the political fight of his life.
"It’s a hotly contested riding, you know that. The Prime Minister is here. Why do you think he is here?"
Harper praised Sikhism, and called Sikhs courageous, hard-working and successful.
"These principles are also important to us here in Canada, because ours is a country defined by its belief in freedom democracy and justice, values that have attracted people from around the world to our shores, including the growing numbers of Canada’s Sikh community," he said.
After two Vancouver events today, the Conservative campaign heads to Whitehorse.
The New Democrat Leader Jack Layton continues his swing through Atlantic Canada with stops in Halifax and Dartmouth.
And Green Party Leader Elizabeth May gets on a train in Vancouver bound for Jasper in a whistle-stop campaign that will stop in half a dozen towns.
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