“This is a fresh wound for the Liberals who are bleeding on several fronts,” says UBC political scientist Stewart Prest
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had a bad day Monday.
In the morning his deputy and finance minister Chrystia Freeland unexpectedly quit her ministry. In the afternoon his government filed a fall economic statement showing a deficit of more than $60 billion. And on Monday night the Liberal Party of Canada lost the riding of Cloverdale-Langley City in a byelection.
The riding became vacant after Liberal incumbent John Aldag resigned in May so he could run for the B.C. NDP in Langley-Abbotsford in October. Aldag lost that race to B.C. Conservative Harman Bhangu.
On Monday, federal Conservative candidate Tamara Jansen won the riding comfortably, returning for the second time. Jansen represented the riding from 2019 to 2021, after which she was narrowly defeated by Aldag.
Aldag was also the Liberal MP in Cloverdale-Langley City from 2015 to 2019.
This time around Jansen was competing against Liberal candidate Madison Fleischer.
“This is a fresh wound for the Liberals who are bleeding on several fronts,” said UBC political scientist Stewart Prest. “It was not unexpected.”
Prest said the Liberals won the seat in 2021 by only a handful of votes when overall Liberal popularity was around 32 per cent. This time the Liberals had the support of just 22 per cent of Canadians according to recent polls.
The loss also came after the Liberals lost two long-held seats in byelections in the last several months — in Toronto and Montreal.
Cloverdale-Langley City covers an area of Surrey as well as the entire City of Langley. The 2021 census showed there were around 130,665 residents. As of Nov. 10, there were 92,061 voters on the electors list.
On Monday night, with votes reported from 105 of 122 polling stations, Jansen had 7,581 votes compared to 1,985 for Fleischer and 1,580 for federal NDP candidate Vanessa Sharma.