The criticisms of the conservative leader Pierre Poilievre to Mark Carney became personal on Tuesday, while the liberal leader responded in Poilievre’s political career.
Poilievre’s past landslides in his main political opponent include criticism that Carney is not different from his predecessor Justin Trudeau and that the liberal leader co -charted two investment funds that were recorded in Bermuda during his time in Brookfield Asset Management.
During a press conference on Tuesday, Pailievre raised those criticism again, but also added some personal excavations.
He said voters should not think that Carney is different from Trudeau “because he has a banker haircut and uses a couple of blue socks.”
Pailievre also reduced in the experience of the private sector of Carney, which the liberal leader has promoted during the campaign.
“Mr. Carney is not a businessman. It’s a political decisive noise,” Pailievre said Tuesday in response to a question about the past business of Carney.
Speaking at a press conference later in the day, Carney took some excavations in Poilievre. The liberal leader greatly pointed to Pailievre’s career as a deputy, and contrasts with his experience working as head of the Bank of Canada with the Stephen Harper government during the financial crisis of 2008.
“Pierre Poilievre was not in any of those tables, he was not given any of that responsibility and … in the following years he has not gained any responsibility in crisis management,” he said.
Former Prime Minister Stephen Harper has backed the conservative leader Pierre Poilievre for the Prime Minister, saying that he has the critical “political experience” necessary at a time of crisis.
Pailievre was a deputy in the Harper government during the financial crisis. He was named for the Harper Cabinet in 2013.
Carney’s comments occurred in response to a question about Harper supporting Poilievre during a demonstration in Edmonton on Monday night.
“I am the only person who can say that the two men who run to be prime minister once worked for me,” he told a large multitude of followers.
Harper bowed to Pailievre’s experience and implied that Carney had parachute at work.
“The political experience, political experience chosen and responsible, and the capacity for growth with that political experience, is what Pierre has demonstrated for two decades and that is the most important characteristic that a prime minister needs,” said Harper.
Carney says that Smith’s comments are intended to be “cheerful”
The 36 -day campaign is approaching halfway.
During a demonstration in Victoria on Sunday, Carney took a blow to the Prime Minister of Alberta, Danielle Smith, while talking about how Canada can respond to the tariffs of the United States
“We are sending Doug Ford to Fox News, to show them that we are not playing here. And we are going to send Danielle next, we are, well, maybe we will not send to Danielle,” he said, with a grimace. “That was a bad idea.”
When asked on Tuesday if the comments could contribute to a feeling of western alienation, Carney minimized him as a “cheerful comment.”
“I have a lot of respect for the prime minister, we have worked together,” he said, referring to a First Meeting of Ministers in March To develop a national commercial strategy.
Liberal leader Mark Carney was asked if he was concerned about his previous comments about Alberta Prime Minister Danielle Smith, he will feed Western alienation on Tuesday. Carney said the comments were cheerful and that he “respects the prime minister a lot.”
Liberals have led conservatives in most surveys since the electoral campaign began. The CBC survey tracker has the average support for liberals with 44 percent compared to conservatives they averaged in approximately 37 percent.
Some surveys also show that Carney is leading Pailievre in sympathy. A recent Angus Reid survey found that 55 percent of respondents had a favorable vision of Carney, compared to 36 percent for Poilievre. When asked, 50 percent of respondents said Carney would be their preference for Prime Minister, compared to 28 percent who said Pailievre would be their choice. The survey had an error margin of two percent.
Two other leaders of the party are also scadled in Carney in Carney in recent days.
The leader of Bloc Québécois, Yves-François Blanchet, who follows the liberals in the surveys in Quebec, said on Monday that Carney “does not care” about the province.
“He will never say we don’t like it, but I don’t feel love … I don’t feel interest in culture, I don’t feel interest in anything Quebec,” he said.
The leader of the NDP, Jagmeet Singh, told journalists on Tuesday that people are worried about Pailievre, but avoided most of his criticism for Carney.
“If you are worried about him and you are saying: ‘I am worried that Mark Carney will cut the things that matter to me. I’m worried that he [was] The president of a company that was dedicated to fiscal avoidance, a tax dodger, which worries me what that means ‘,’, [then] Choose your new Democrat again … send more new Democrats to Ottawa, “said Singh.