Jagmeet Singh ignores surging Bloc as he courts union votes in Quebec
MONTREAL — NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh painted his Liberal, Conservative, and Green rivals as unfriendly to to the labour movement on Wednesday, as he sought to shore up his party’s traditional union support.
But his rousing, 45-minute speech to a Canadian Union of Public Employees convention in Montreal made no mention of the Bloc Quebecois — a party rising in the polls and competing for Quebec votes, both inside and outside the labour movement.
Singh got a rock-star welcome in the packed room at Montreal’s Palais des Congres, where he was cheered onstage by some 2,000 delegates of the 700,000-member public-sector union as he pitched the NDP’s promises to bring in pharmacare, to address on-the-job violence faced by some public workers such as nurses and teachers, and to crack down on tax havens to fund better public services.
CUPE is a founding partner of the NDP, and endorses the party on its website. In Montreal, members rose to their feet and danced to Singh’s campaign song, at his urging, at the end of his speech, and mobbed him for handshakes and selfies as he left the stage.