
CONSERVATIVE candidate for Etobicoke Lakeshore Indira Bains (blue mask) on the campaign trail in Alderwood.
Conservative candidate Indira Bains and her team were making a final stomp to reach voters in Tory-rich Alderwood on Sunday.
She has been knocking on doors for hours with the party’s message of more affordable housing, help for businesses and more COVID-19 aid to attract voters in the Etobicoke Lakeshore federal riding.
The other campaigns were similarly out until the last minute trying to capture votes.
You are being urged to get out and vote on Monday, September 20. Each vote counts as leaders of the Liberals and Conservative Party are neck to neck, according to national polls.
Both the Liberals and Conservatives are tied in the polls at around 30% give and take.
Though the Liberals and Conservatives are effectively tied in national support with a small edge given to the Liberals, Justin Trudeau’s party is favoured to win the most seats and has roughly a three-in-five chance of being re-elected with a minority government, according to the CBC.
The Conservatives are holding their support but are trailing in some key battlegrounds. NDP support is also holding and the party could see a big increase in its seat count, said the broadcaster.
The candidates for Etobicoke Lakeshore are: Conservative Indira Bains, Liberal incumbent James Maloney, NDP Sasha Kane, People’s Party of Canada’s Bill McLachlan, Sean Carson of the Rhinoceros Party and Anna Di Carlo of the Marxist-Leninist Party of Canada.
The candidates for Etobicoke Centre are: Conservative Geoffrey Turner, Liberal incumbent Yvan Baker, NDP Ashley Da Silva and People’s Party of Canada’s Maurice Cormier.
The candidates for Etobicoke North are: Conservative Priti Lamba, Liberal incumbent Kirsty Duncan, NDP Cecil Peter, People’s Party of Canada’s Jim Boutsikakis and Independent Carol Royer.
Your poll number is written on your voter information card that came in the mail. Make sure to bring identification that includes your name and, if possible, the address matching the voter card.
Polls open at 9:30 a.m. and close at 9:30 p.m. To obtain more information on your candidates or polls visit elections.ca


