2011年4月14日星期四

Campaigns of leaders will resume following debates

The Canada federal party leaders occur again campaign trail Thursday, after the days of low laying in preparation for the discussions of the heads back.

Conservative leader Stephen Harper introduces his first day back with a campaign in Beaupré, Quebec, event followed a rally in Etobicoke, Ont., Thursday night.

Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff is set to visit a local company and to make an announcement in Gatineau, Quebec, followed by a barbecue with liberal candidates to St. Isadore, have.

Jack Layton, leader of the new Democratic Party, will spend the day in Montreal, including a gathering of op and photo campaign. Layton will wrap the day watched the match from the Montreal Canadiens playoffs.

Bloc Québécois leader Gilles Duceppe will speak at a luncheon of campaign in Gatineau, followed by a press briefing at the headquarters of the candidate Richard Nadeau.

During this time, Green party leader Elizabeth may will be once again spend the day in British Columbia Colombia, courting votes in and around his home on Vancouver Island port. It is scheduled to attend a rotary meeting, rock the Vote event and a meet and greet.

May is also scheduled to hold a press conference calling for a national plan for affordable housing and to attend the meeting of the candidate for all on Pender Island.

All four party leaders have done their best to seduce the Canadian electorate during the French and English television debates of heads.

May was excluded debates by the consortium of broadcasting on the basis that in the last federal election, the party did not get a seat in Parliament.

During the debate in English on Wednesday, the question of a coalition Government began the event.

Ignatieff promised to work with other parties in a minority situation, but not as a coalition.

Duceppe then demanded to know where Harper would have cut to eliminate the deficit, but Harper said, the Government would seek efficiency gains, not cuts and said the economy needs a strong hand.

Jack Layton has used an analogy of hockey to go after Duceppe, saying that the block is as a team with only defenders and the NDP was the only party "goals."

The leader of the Bloc fired back that his party has more players on the ice than the NDP. Harper has done its best to attract Quebec voters who choose the block because they do not like the Liberals, saying that a vote for the Bloc is a vote for Ignatieff as Prime Minister.

Things were just as heated in the course of the English debate of two hours in downtown Ottawa on Tuesday where issues such as the G8/G20 Summit expenses controversy, corporate tax cuts and measures concerning the institution of Parliament dominate the conversation.

Ignatieff blasted Harper on the latest corporate tax cuts, but the Chief conservative, from the rear, saying that the increase in corporate tax rates would send a negative message to investors and affect job creation.

Layton also intervened in the fray, slamming Igantieff for supporting the tax cuts in previous Conservative budgets.

Leaders sparred also in the mission in Afghanistan, immigration, crime and health care.

All four party leaders declared they victorious debates.

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