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Canada election 2015: What we learned this week

Three (long) weeks into the 42nd general election, we've covered everything from which Avenger is the best to whether journalists cheat on their taxes.

Boy Scouts, Avengers and journalist tax-cheats: Week three of the federal election

Best campaign zingers of the week

9 years ago
Duration 1:05
A collection of some lighthearted moments from the federal leaders out on the campaign trail this week.

Three (long) weeks into the 42nd general election, we've covered everything from which Avenger is the bestto whether journalists cheat on their taxes.

This leaves eight weeks to go which is still longer than the 37-day campaign that's been the custom in modern times. If you're tired of this, just think of the campaign volunteers taking unpaid leave from their jobs and living off pizzaand subs while canvassing in 35 C heat.

Marathons are hard

Runners like Nigel Wright, Conservative Leader Stephen Harper's former chief of staff,know there's usually a point in an endurance race where they start to question why they signed up for it. Running long distances is hard and turns into a mental game.

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper has spent all of his time with reporters this week defending his chief of staff Ray Novak, right. Novak is the senior director of Harper's campaign tour, but the previously mostly unknown staffer has seen his name come up repeatedly in the trial of Conservative-appointed Senator Mike Duffy. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

The Conservatives seem to be discovering that this week as they weather repeated questions about Harper's currentchief of staff, Ray Novak, and what Novak and Harper knew of Wright'splanto cover the $90,172.24 inquestionable expenses racked up bySenator Mike Duffy.

Harper called the election early on Aug. 2 when he could have waited until early September because that timing fit into the Conservatives' strategy. They're now discovering how that is working. Will Canadians forget about the testimony in the Duffy trial once they're back from the cottage and the kids are in school? We'll know more on Oct. 19.

The premiers aren't going away

The campaign's first week saw Ontario Premier KathleenWynnetrade barbs with the Conservative leader, while he in turn draggedAlberta Premier Rachel Notleyinto the federal election.

By the end of the second week,Harper even had some sharp words for BradWall, who is normally an ally, when he told the Saskatchewan premier to worry less about the country's equalization formula and more about whether the NDP will take government (presumably on the federal side).

Now into the third week, we're hearing from more premiers. On Monday, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard released a list of requests for whichever party leader becomes prime minister following this fall's vote.

On Thursday, NDP Leader TomMulcair met privately with Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger. The NDP premier didn't attend Mulcair'sWinnipeg rally, leading CBC News to ask whether Mulcair was concerned about how unpopularSelinger is. Selinger's approval ratings are in the low-to-mid-20sand his leadership was challenged by his own MLAs earlier this year.

Trudeau the comic book geek

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau showed this week that he'sjust not ready to pick his favouriteAvenger. Asked to choose a comic bookhero at a news conference, the man widely acknowledged to have the best hair in this year's election race said he's such a geek that heshouldn't be answering the question.

"You know, that's a difficult one," Trudeau said in Sudbury, Ont. on Tuesday. "I like the core integrity of Captain America. I like the ingenuity of Tony Stark," Trudeau said, before finally making a reluctant choice.

"But ultimately, yeah, ultimately I think I might have to go with Hulk. Just to mix it up a bit, because he wears his passions on the outside and he is someone who is I don't know he's green. We need a little more green."

The Hulk might be a more obvious choice forNDP Leader Tom Mulcair, who has tried to shake theAngry Tom moniker in part by embracing it and dressing for Halloween as an Angry Bird.

Of course, anger also had its moment when a man later identified by the Toronto Star as Earl Cowantook out some frustration on three journalists at a Harper event over coverage of the Duffy trial.

RAW: Harper supporter yells at reporters (Warning: offensive language)

9 years ago
Duration 1:29
After a Tory campaign stop in Toronto Tuesday, a supporter fed up with questions about the Duffy trial hurls profanity at reporters

Cowan told the CBC's Hannah Thibedeau, CTV's Laurie Graham and Kristy Kirkup of The Canadian Press that they were "lying pieces of shit" who cheaton their taxes.

Mulcair's Thatcher moment

Asurprise this week from the leader of Canada's left-leaning party: In 2001, Mulcairpraised the policies of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, whom the labour movement detested for her hard line against unions.

As a member of the National Assembly in Quebec in 2001, Mulcair credited the success of England's economy under Thatcher's Conservative Party to the "winds of liberty and liberalism" that "swept across the markets in England." Mulcair was a Liberal member at the time.

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair during a campaign stop in Winnipeg on Thursday: Left-leaning leader once applauded late British prime minister Margaret Thatcher's anti-union tactics. (John Woods/Canadian Press)

The NDP recently celebrated the news that one of Quebec's largest and sovereigntist-leaning labour federations dropped its long-standing endorsement of the federal Bloc Qubcois, with some of its members shifting their support to the NDP.

Former Conservative foreign affairs minister John Baird loved Thatcher so much that he named his cat after her. One wonders whether Mulcair would go that far.

Elizabeth May recycles MPs too

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May scored another sitting MP for her caucus, the second time she's persuaded a member to join her just before an election.

Jose Nunez-Melo will run for the Green Party in the new Montreal-area riding of Vimy, making him the second New Democrat to join the Greens after being rejected by the NDP. Nunez-Melo lost his nomination race under the NDP banner. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

On Sunday, New Democrat Jos Nunez-Melo switched to the Green Party, joining another former New Democrat, Bruce Hyer, in May's parliamentary caucus. Of course, Parliament isn't sitting now, so Nunez-Melo will have to win his Vimy seat in the election before sitting with the caucus in the House.

Nunez-Melo lost his nomination race under the NDP banner. Hyer left the caucus over his support for eliminating the long-gun registry.

May's first recruit, even before she had her own seat, was former Liberal MP Blair Wilson in 2008. Wilson quit the Liberals over campaign spending irregularities, but Elections Canada later found no evidence of wrongdoing. However, he never sat in the House as a Green MP: Parliament was dissolved the week after he joined the Greens, and he lost the subsequent election.

And... Boy Scouts are cool!

But aren't allowed to wear their uniforms to political events.

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper speaks near a trio of Boy Scouts in Campbell River, B.C. on Friday. This prompted Scouts Canada to tweet a reminder that it is a non-partisan organization and that members are not allowed to wear their uniforms to political events. (Hannah Thibedeau/CBC News)