Singh tries to rally his troops as the NDP struggles for traction
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says many Canadians have told him they are struggling with uncertain employment, a lack of housing and expensive medication — problems he told the party's most faithful Tuesday he believes the NDP can fix, despite depressed support in recent polls.
Singh spoke to NDP staffers who gathered in Ottawa from across the country for the federal party's annual staff forum.
The NDP leader delivered a campaign-style speech, aimed at rallying the troops in the midst of the party's ongoing struggle to gain traction.
A recent Nanos survey suggested the NDP is at 14 per cent support and that Singh as a federal leader is preferred by only 5.7 per cent of voters surveyed. An Abacus survey released last month was not much rosier, placing the party at 16 per cent and saying Singh is the preferred prime minister of just 11 per cent of respondents.
But Singh was upbeat in Ottawa Tuesday, saying he believes Canadians are in "a tough spot" and need New Democrats to step up for them.
"Many Canadians feel like they voted for something and they didn't get what they voted for," he said. "I'm serving notice that good enough is not good enough. We deserve better, we need better and we're going to achieve that together."