With just days left in the federal campaign, NDP leader Jagmeet Singh is urging voters not to lose faith, as his party battles to hold on to official party status. Facing a sharp dip in the polls, Singh is making a final push to inspire progressives, promising that the NDP “won’t be silenced, sidelined, or shut down.”
Speaking in Edmonton alongside former Alberta Premier Rachel Notley, Singh dismissed suggestions that he should step aside, insisting the fight is far from over. “I don’t hear any bell,” he told supporters. “This round is not over.”
The NDP is trying to shift its message in the campaign’s final stretch, moving from anti-Trump warnings to a call for bold progressive action. Singh cautioned against simply settling for the Liberals as the “less bad” option and urged voters not to “give this one to Mark Carney.”
With polling projections showing the NDP winning as few as one seat, Singh emphasized that his party stands for real change, not compromise. Singh continues to campaign hard in key ridings like Edmonton Centre, where the party is hoping to make gains.
He ended a recent rally by reminding supporters: “New Democrats show up when we’re counted out. We fight when we’re told to fall in line.”
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