CAQ looks to flip script on Quebec Liberals, boot them out of Laval - Action News
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Montreal

CAQ looks to flip script on Quebec Liberals, boot them out of Laval

In the last election, the Quebec Liberals won five out of six seats in the city of Laval. With many Liberal incumbents quitting politics, the Coalition Avenir Qubec is looking to swoop in, grab ahold of those ridings and tighten its grip on the province en route to a second mandate in power.

CAQ finished 2nd in each Laval riding won by Liberals in 2018, with narrow margins in most of them

A man and a woman are walking in front of a bus.
Franois Legault campaigned in Laval's Mille-les riding on Monday alongside candidate Julie Side. The Coalition Avenir Qubec is looking to grab more of the city's six seats. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

As Franois Legault made his way around the room at a pizza restaurant in Laval, smiling and shaking hands, he stopped and delivered a message to four men eating lunch at a table.

"It's about time for a change in Laval," said the leader of the Coalition Avenir Qubec during thecampaign event in the city's Mille-les riding on Monday. "We have to change the colours."

On its way to what it hopes will be a resounding majority victory for a second mandate, the CAQ is looking to flip the province's third largest city from Liberal red to CAQ blue.

In 2018, the Quebec Liberal Party (PLQ) won five out of six seats in Laval, with only one seat going to the CAQ.

This year, however, nearly all of the candidates who wonunder the Liberal banner four years ago are gone. That includes Francine Charbonneau, who has represented the Mille-les riding since 2008.

The CAQ hopes Julie Side, a longtime party member, can break through in that riding.

"This year, I am convinced that it's the right one. It's the right year for Julie, and she's coming to Quebec City," Legault told the small crowd at the restaurant while standing next to Side, who finished a distant second to a Liberal in the Bourassa-Sauvriding in the northern part of Montreal in 2018.

A woman reaches out to shake a person's hand.
Quebec Liberal Party Leader Dominique Anglade, right, greets a supporter during an election campaign stop last Sunday in Laval, Que. Saul Polo, left, is hoping to win the seat in the Laval-des-Rapides riding for the third straight time. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

In addition toCharbonneau, outgoing Liberal MNAsJean Rousselle andMonique Sauvhave alsoquit politics. Thesame goes for Guy Ouellette, who representedthe Chomedey ridingand was booted out of caucus shortly after the 2018 election.

In mostof the five Laval ridings the Liberals won in the last election, the CAQ finished second and not by much.

"Those ridings in 2018 were won by very close margins," said Philippe J. Fournier, a pundit and poll analyst behind the 338Canada poll aggregator.

"If you apply the current polling, especially among francophones, unless there's a micro-local target thing that we missed in the polling, the Liberals will be swept out of Laval except Chomedey."

A man is sitting behind his desk.
Stphane Boyer, the mayor of Laval, says provincial party leaders have been paying a lot of attention to the ridings in his city during the election campaign. (Benot Chapdelaine/Radio-Canada)

'We feel comfortable in this situation': Liberal candidate

Saul Polo, who was twice elected in the Laval-des-Rapides riding, isn't fazed by what the punditssay.

"In the past two general elections, all the odds were always against myself and this time it's no different," Polo said during a campaign event in Laval last Sunday.

"We feel comfortable in this situation."

Earlier in the campaign, Quebec Liberal Leader Dominique Anglade said the party was playing offence, not defence, when it came to the ridings in Laval.

"It's about more than preserving seats in Laval, it's about getting Sainte-Rose," Anglade said referring to the lone riding the CAQmanaged to win last time.

The mayor of Laval, Stphane Boyer, has noticed the increased focus on his city from party leaders, and he's all for it, believing it could lead to more commitments from future governments.

"I'm happy there's a tough battle in Laval," he said. "Historically, in Laval, there's been a lot of under-investment in different fields, whether it's culture, transit or others."

A man stands in front of three signs.
Jonathan Marleau, the Liberal candidate for the Maurice-Richard riding, says he's confident his party will retain seats in the Montreal area. He says Legault's controversial comments on immigration are turning off voters. (Simon Nakonechny/CBC)

CAQalso eyeing seats in Montreal

Despite the CAQ's dominant election victory in 2018, it has yet to make a major dent in Montreal.

Going into this election campaign, the party only held two ridingsin the city: Camille-Laurin (formerly known as Bourget) and Pointe-aux-Trembles both on the east end of the island.

That could change come Oct. 3, according to Fournier. He says the east end ridingof AnjouLouis-Riel and the Maurice-Richard riding, whichincludes part of the city's Ahuntsic neighbourhood are in play.

In 2018, as in Laval, both those ridings elected Liberal MNAs who are not running this time around.

"Basically, you look at the data of francophones per riding and everywhereyou have over 60 per cent francophones, the Liberals are in trouble," said Fournier.

Jonathan Marleau, the Liberal candidate for Maurice-Richard, saidhe believes the party's door-to-door efforts are paying off and he brushedoff talk of a CAQ takeover.

He also saidLegault's controversial comments on immigration aren'tgoing over well withvoters in and around Montreal.

"In Ahuntsic, people of course come from all, very diverse backgrounds," Marleau said. "When they talk to me they say that's something they're not very comfortable with. Because they want a leader to say that all Quebecers matter."

CAQ progress in and around Montreal, however, including in Laval, would deal a crushing blow to the Liberals who suffered historic lossesduring the last provincial election, dropping from 68 seats to just 31.

With files from Simon Nakonechny, Kate McKenna and Radio-Canada