An NDP leader, Jagmeet Singh, used the opportunity to advance expectations for a better future for Canadians amid the barrage of criticism that Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been receiving for blaming India for the death of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
Burnaby South MP Singh claimed that neither the opposition nor the current Trudeau administration are "interested in change." He claimed that he is fighting for the people and is not "backed by billionaires".
"We have the ability to change the status quo together. Change is not what Justin Trudeau and Pierre Poilievre want since their business backers won't support it. I'm fighting for you, not for millionaires, the MP stated in the title of a post on X (previously Twitter).
He was heard speaking to a group of kids in the video that was posted with this.
"Young people matter because they are going to inherit the world and the nation. We must be mindful of the fact that your voices matter now as well as in the future. He was heard saying in the video, "I am genuinely interested in connecting seriously with young people and also offering them hope.
Jagmeet exhorts them to cast their ballots, pledging change if his party wins. "What's the point of voting, right? I think it's one of the greatest things that drives indifference, that leads people to not get out and vote. The blue team or the red team, he declared, would win.
"But if we think about the major changes, where we really did things to lift people up, like old age security, pension, and medicare, these changes came in when the New Democrats were in power," Jagmeet observes, claiming that the parties in power are not interested in these things.
"The establishment parties are not interested in implementing significant changes that are required to address the issues we are facing. That simply isn't who they are, and it's not what they do. New Democrats, however, are unique. That transformation is what we want to enable," he is heard stating in the video.
He criticised Trudeau on Tuesday, saying that he should be held accountable for the nation's housing crisis rather than foreign students."Students are having a difficult time finding housing due to Justin Trudeau's housing problem. We need to put quick answers in place rather than blaming students, Singh, the leader of Canada's New Democratic Party, stated on X (formerly Twitter).
Singh's remarks come as Justin Trudeau, the prime minister, is under fire from people all over the world for honouring a 98-year-old man who fought for the Nazis in World War II at the House of Commons last week.

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