The Ottawa Citizen picks up a piece I put together over the last week in which we wanted to spotlight some of the local races that have a little extra spice in them. We called it Grudge Matches, Trend Setters, or Star Turns. Here's the 20 races the Citizen ran and I've thrown in a few more.
Grudge Matches
1. Halton (ON) – Garth Turner ran as a Conservative in 2006 and won. He then annoyed the rest of his caucus so much they threw him out. Turner then signed up with the Liberals and will carry their banner this time around. Local Tories were annoyed that head office appointed a candidate – Lisa Raitt – to face off against Turner. But Conservatives will cheer loud and long if they can oust Turner on Oct. 14.
2. Whitby-Oshawa (ON) – Finance Minister Jim Flaherty should win here but his Liberal opponent is Brent Fullard, who was a key organizer of investors that were furious over Flaherty’s flip-flop on income trusts.
3. Edmonton-Strathcona – (AB) Conservative MP Rahim Jaffer had a tough fight in 2006 to beat NDP candidate Linda Duncan. Duncan is back for round two in a riding where the NDP holds th provincial seat. Mark everything else in Alberta Tory blue.
4. Churchill (MB) Liberal Tina Keeper won this in 2006 partly because the NDP vote was split between NDP candidate Nikki Ashton and Bev Desjarlais, the MP who had been kicked out of the NDP caucus and was running as an independent. Ashton’s back for a rematch and there’s no independnt on the left.
5. Avalon – Politics could hardly be more personal. Conservative incumbent Fabian Manning was, at the time of his election in 2006, famous for being one of the few island politicians to stand up to Premier Danny Williams and live to tell the tale. Manning, who was part of Williams’ caucus in the provincial legislature refused to tow the party line once and earned Williams wrath. Now Williams, of course, is heading up the Anybody But Conservative campaign in that province and Manning, the only Conservative incumbent in that province, will earn some special attention from Williams.
6. West Nova –Liberal Robert Thibault beat Tory Greg Kerr by a little more than 500 votes in 2006. Then, this summer, Thibault added insult to injury suggesting Kerr was too old to run against him again. Kerr and the Tory war room hope to make Thibault eat his words.
7. Vancouver Island North – A grudge match pitting NDP MP Catherine Bell and three-term former MP John Duncan. Bell and Duncan first squared off in 2004 with Duncan prevailing. Bell beat him in 2006 and the two are fighting it out once again.
8. Skeena-Bulkley Valley – NDP MP Nathan Cullen should probably hold this riding but as his party’s environment critic, he’s been a sharp critic of the Conservatives. The Tories would love to see him lose but it might be wishful thinking
9. Cumberland-Colchester-Musquodoboit Valley – Bill Casey got turfed from the Tory caucus over the Atlantic Accord. This is the first time his constituents will get to vote on his decision and they’re expected to send him back to Ottawa as an elected independent MP. A grudge match for the voters of this riding who want to give Tory HQ a piece of their mind.
10. Burlington – It took Conservative Mike Wallace three tries before he knocked off Liberal Paddy Torsney in 2006. Torsney wants a rematch but Wallace hopes that a reputation he earned for solid committee work on the Hill combined with suburban fear of a carbon tax will make Torsney a two-time loser. Keep an eye on Liberal MP Bonnie Brown next door in Oakville. If the Conservatives have an Ontario breakthrough, Brown is one of those who will be vulnerable.
11. Gatineau – A grudge match. In 2006, the BQ’s Richard Nadeau ousted Liberal incumbent Francoise Boivin. Nadeau is facing Boivin again but this time Boivin is running for Layton’s NDP and she says BQ volunteers are moving over to her side.
12. Trinity-Spadina – NDP MP Olivia Chow took three kicks at the can to win this riding, which she did in 2006. She narrowly beat former Liberal cabinet minister Tony Ianno. Ianno isn't running again against Chow — but his wife his. Christine Innes is carrying the Liberal torch hoping to steal this downtown Toronto riding back from Chow, the spouse of NDP leader Jack Layton.
Trendspotting
1. Richmond – The Tories are gunning for former Liberal MP Raymond Chan. This is one of three ridings the Liberals won in 2006 that the Tories think they can steal. They also hope for Vancouver Quadra and West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea-to-Sky
2. Nunavut – For the first time, voters in Nunavut get to choose from an all-Inuit slate. Liberal Nancy Karetek-Lindell is retiring and though the Conservatives haven’t won anything in the north since Erik Nielsen held the Yukon back in the 1980s, they think their candidate Leona Aglukkaq, a former health minister in the territorial government, might be their breakthrough. Harper campaigned in Iqaluit with Alukkaq last weekend.
3. Ottawa West-Nepean – A bellwether riding whose MP always seems to be on the government side of the House. In 2006, voters here picked John Baird who became environment minister. The Liberals are running David Pratty, a former defence minister, against Baird. Pratt got ousted in 2004 next door in Nepean-Carleton by Pierre Poilievre. Keep an eye, as well, on Ottawa-South, the riding held by David McGuinty, the brother of the Ontario premier. He should win but some Conservatives think he is vulnerable.
4. Oshawa – This is a grudge match pitting the country’s autoworkers against the Conservatives. In the last year, more than 70,000 manufacturing jobs have been lost in Canada, many in the auto sector that powers Ontario’s economy. Conservative incumbent Colin Carrie faces a stiff challenge from the NDP’s Mike Shields, a popular CAW leader. Autoworkers are also looking unseating Conservatives in the southwestern Ontario ridings of Essex, Chatham-Kent-Essex, Elgin-Middlesex-London, and Sarnia-Lambton
5. Parkdale-High Park – A downtown Toronto riding that NDP MP Peggy Nash stole from a Liberal incumbent in 2006. Now the Liberals want it back and failed leadership candidate and convention kingmaker Gerard Kennedy is the candidate. Nash is putting up a tough defence, though, making this race too close to call.
6. Trois-Riviéres – If Parkdale-High Park highlights the NDP-Liberal battle, Trois-Rivieres is a good proxy for the Conservative-Bloc Quebecois contest. BQ incumbent Paule Brunelle faces Conservative Claude Duran, who has a high-profile locally. If the Tories can win steal the Trois-Rivieres of the world, the BQ MPs in ridings like Chicoutimi-Le Fjord, Richmond-Arthabaska, Drummond, and elsewhere ought to be worri
ed.
7. Outremont – Can Thomas Mulcair hold the NDP foothold in Quebec? Mulcair won what had been viewed as Liberal stronghold in Montreal in a byelection. General elections, though, are a different kettle of fish. Mulcair benefited from the collapse of the separatist vote in this riding and there is no sign that support has revived.
8. Saint John – The ghost of former premier Bernard Lord lurks over this riding and one other the Tories hope to steal from the Libs. Here, incumbent Paul Zed faces off against Lord’s former chief of staff. In Moncton-Riverview-Dieppe, Liberal incumbent Brian Murphy is facing one of Lord’s top aides. The Tories wanted Lord himself to run in Moncton but he declined and is one of the co-chairs of the Conservative campaign. The Tories were keen on Moncton-Riverview but they have a new respect for Zed’s ability to survive after he survived an all-out Conservative assault in 2006.
9. Quebec – The Conservatives enjoy their strongest support in the province around the provincial capital. Christiane Gagnon, though, was the lone BQ member to win in 2006 in the city of Quebec. She faces a tough fight to keep that riding out of Tory hands.
High profile races
1. Wascana – Ralph Goodale holds down the only Liberal outpost between Winnipeg and Vancouver’s eastern suburbs. The Conservatives would dearly like to make it Tory Blue right across the Prairies but Goodale is no pushover. Meanwhile, the NDP are gunning for some Conservative-held ridings including Palliser, Regina-Qu-Appelle, and Saskatoon-Rosetown-Biggar
2. Desnethé-Missinippi-Churchill River – The Liberals will take any riding they can get but winning this one might give Stephane Dion a few headaches down the road. His candidate is David Orchard, who once tried to beat Peter MacKay to lead the Progressive Conservatives. The most northern of Saskatchewan’s ridings is now held by Conservative Rob Clarke who won a squeaker in a byelection. The Liberals won it in the 2006 general election by a hair over the Tories. And in 2004, the Tories won by a nose.
3. Vaudreuil-Soulanges – Michael Fortier quit the Senate to carry the Tory banner in this west end Montreal against BQ incumbent Melli Faille. This is widely seen as the best chance the Conservatives have in Montreal
4. Westmount-Ville Marie – The NDP is running a popular radio show host – Anne Lagace Dawson – against Liberal Marc Garneau, the astronaut. A riding that should be about as safe as it gets for Liberals in Quebec but the NDP thinks Jack Layton is connecting with Quebecers.
5. Papineau – Justin Trudeau fought for and won the right to carry the Liberal banner in a riding that is by no means a safe seat. Bloc Quebecois MP Vivien Barbot beat then Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew for this Montreal seat in 2006. Trudeau will try to win it back for the Libs.
6. Central Nova – Defence Minister Peter MacKay is the favourite but his challenger is Green Party leader Elizabeth May. The Liberals agreed not to run a candidate here to give May her best shot. May either wins the upset of the evening on Oct. 14 or is 0-for-2 when her name is on the ballot.
7. Surrey North – No incumbent here with the retirement of NDP MP Penny Priddy. Dona Cadman, widow of former MP Chuck Cadman, is carrying the Tory torch. The Tories hope she gets elected but they won’t let her talk to the national press, hustling her out a back door at a Harper rally this week.