Politics·PODCAST

The Pollcast: Jagmeet Singh and the NDP's pressure test

On the latest episode of the Pollcast, the CBC's Hannah Thibedeau and Louis Blouin of Radio-Canada break down what's at stake for the NDP and Jagmeet Singh's leadership in the upcoming federal byelections.

This week: Hannah Thibedeau and Louis Blouin on what's at stake for the NDP in upcoming federal byelections

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, right, door knocking for his byelection campaign in Burnaby South. The vote will be held on Feb. 25. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh will face a serious pressure test in a series of federal byelections scheduled for Feb. 25. They'll put his party's future in Quebec under the spotlight — and they also could decide whether Singh leads the party into the 2019 federal election.

Three seats are up for grabs in the February byelections. Two of them, Outremont and Burnaby South, are seats the NDP won in the last federal election. Burnaby South is where Singh is making his bid for a seat in the House of Commons, while Outremont is the iconic former riding of Tom Mulcair, whose 2007 byelection breakthrough paved the way for the "orange wave" that swept Quebec in 2011.

The third contest is in the Ontario riding of York–Simcoe, a Conservative stronghold that is not expected to change hands.

But the NDP is pulling out all the stops to get Singh elected in Burnaby South. And according to the CBC's Hannah Thibedeau and Radio-Canada's Louis Blouin, that's because members of Singh's caucus made it clear last year that his future as leader of the party depends on victory.

On this week's episode of the Pollcast podcast, Hannah and Louis join CBC polls analyst and host Éric Grenier to discuss what's at stake for Singh and the New Democrats in the upcoming byelections.

Then, Éric gives his take on the results of Wednesday's provincial byelection in the B.C. riding of Nanaimo.

Listen to the full discussion above — or subscribe to the CBC Pollcast and listen to past episodes of the show.