Feisty federal forum packs SRSS

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This article was published 30/09/2015 (3123 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Sheltered in his rookie campaign from debates two years ago, Conservative incumbent Ted Falk looked seasoned through applause and jeers during an at-times heated forum Thursday in Steinbach.

Falk was praised, sometimes with shouts of ‘Amen,’ when he defended his commitment to family values and his pro-life stance, but was drowned out by laughter when he said every trade agreement Prime Minister Stephen Harper signed has benefitted the country.

Falk tangled with Liberal candidate Terry Hayward, NDP hopeful Les Lilley and Jeff Wheeldon of the Green Party at the Provencher all-candidates forum. More chairs were hauled out to accommodate a capacity crowd exceeding 320 spectators at the Steinbach Regional Secondary School theatre.

IAN FROESE | THE CARILLON
Conservative candidate Ted Falk and Liberal candidate Terry Hayward await the start of Thursday's candidates forum at the Steinbach Regional Secondary School.
IAN FROESE | THE CARILLON Conservative candidate Ted Falk and Liberal candidate Terry Hayward await the start of Thursday's candidates forum at the Steinbach Regional Secondary School.

The questions posed were submitted by the audience and high school students.

The southeastern Manitoba riding perceived as one of the country’s safest Tory seats proved why that is the case at various points. Before the forum began, Falk’s walk on stage was the only one greeted to applause.

Again, the claps came when Falk admitted though eradicating abortion is unlikely, more should be done to help the rights of unborn children.

His main rival, Liberal Terry Hayward, was laughed at when he said neither he or anyone else is in favour of abortion, but he respects a women’s right to choose.

“Listen to me,” said Hayward to calm the snickering, “I’ve been called an abortionist at the door in this town and guess what it hurts because I am not.’”

Though the Provencher race is seen as a sleeper, Hayward, a former agricultural official, has boosted the Grits’ fortunes from a meagre single-digit showing in 2011 to surge to nearly 30 percent in the 2013 by-election.

Hayward was on the attack all night. He jabbed at Falk noting that the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration, which supported sustainable development, has been shut down.

Hayward balked, too, when Falk suggested Canada already accepts 14,000 refugees a year.

NDP candidate Les Lilley, a former CN worker, admitted at times he didn’t know the specifics of his party’s platform but he ignited the debate early when he said more can be done to assist First Nations.

He decried the federal government’s resistance to funding Shoal Lake 40 Freedom Road project.

“I think we should address that first before anything else,” he said.

Green Party candidate Jeff Wheeldon, registrar at Providence University College, argued Provencher is not benefitting from the country’s focus on an oil-based economy and instead should focus on greener alternatives.

Wheeldon said only his party would not whip the vote.

“They would make really great MPs if their leaders would let them,” Wheeldon said of his three challengers.

Falk won his Provencher seat with 58 per cent support in the 2013 byelection.

A replay of the full debate, which was also seen live on The Carillon website, can be viewed below.

wfplivestream:4386445:wfplivestream
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