I’m a senior reporter covering the Conservative campaign this week.
We’ve seen unprecedented efforts at message control from the Poilievre campaign that have broken with tradition in a number of ways.
The CPC is the only party to bar media from its campaign plane and buses. The Stephen Harper, Andrew Scheer and Erin O’Toole campaigns all allowed media to travel with the leader, and charged sometimes exorbitant amounts of money for the privilege. The other parties do the same, and also charge.
Poilievre takes fewer questions than other leaders, a maximum of four per event, and insists on choosing which reporters are allowed to ask. After a week following the campaign, neither I nor my CBC colleague Tom Parry have been permitted to ask any questions.
Sometimes, CPC staffers try to get reporters to say what they plan to ask — a question a reporter is not supposed to answer. However, we have seen local media pressured into answering. Obviously, if a reporter declines, that could factor into the decision of who gets to ask questions at all.
The decision on who asks questions is always last-minute. A CPC staffer holds the microphone, ready to pull it away. No follow-up questions are permitted.
On occasion, CPC staffers have gotten physical with journalists, such as on the public wharf at Petty Harbour, N.L., where there was pushing and shoving.
Today, in Trois-Rivières, we asked to be allotted a question. Party staffers said yes, so long as it was asked by my colleague Tom Parry. We responded that I would prefer to ask it. At that point the party took away our question and gave it to another outlet.
The difficulty of trying to keep up with a campaign that has its own chartered aircraft is a logistical problem that can be mitigated to some extent. But the extreme message control makes it all but impossible to bring the same level of accountability to the Poilievre campaign that other campaigns are subject to. It also protects the campaign from having to answer tough questions and is a marked departure from previous Conservative campaigns I have covered.
Well, CBC, just report that they are acting just like the Trump campaign doing these sketchy things. That will get Poilievre few seats.
PP has more disdain for the Canadian public than Trump does. He’s unfit for public service and looks like he’s got no new ideas on the campaign trail unless it’s copying other parties’ homework; he is not a leader.
Maybe Harper’s International Democracy Union is hiring consultants or something; he’d probably be better at that and it would give him a break from all these evil journalists who want to do horrible things like ask him questions.
You’ve got to be pretty deeply indoctrinated not to think that’s an order of magnitude past shady.
All pp does is repeat the exact same words in every speech.
I wonder if anyone has done a word count.
Bets on it totalling 1,488.