Last on my list of interviews was
Thomas Mulcair, the leader of the New Democrats. It took a while to get hold of
him, because when I called his campaign office a recording said the line had
been disconnected. Eventually I tracked down his campaign manager, who turned
out to be crashing on a buddy’s couch for just a week or two until he got some
things straightened out.
I was supposed to meet Mulcair
in the parking lot of a Wal-Mart on the south side. I stood there wondering why
he would choose this place, until I was distracted by the sound of an engine
sputtering. An ancient Winnebago came down the road, painted bright orange,
with Air Mulcair emblazoned on the
side. The motor stalled every time the camper turned left, but it managed to
coast almost all the way to me.
Thomas Mulcair got out, his face
plastered with a smile that looked like a cross between a game-show host and
rigor mortis. He sauntered over and shook my hand energetically, rather like
the Cat in the Hat might.
“Mr. Mulcair,” I said. “It seems
that your proposed budget, which makes only small changes to the tax structure
and social spending, has failed to impress leftists. Was this a strategic
calculation to win over centrist voters in Ontario, or are you taking a principled
stance against sacrificing fiscal responsibility for redistribution?”
With his teeth bared and his
cheeks scrunched up in a massive grin, his reply went like this, “pollscannotbetrustedanywaybreakthroughin905upcomingtookmoralhighroadasalwayscanadasnextgovernment.”
“Are you okay?” I asked. “It
kind of looks like you smiled so much your face got stuck that way.”
“photoopneedbaby,” said Mulcair.
“zhuli!getmebaby!” He waved his fist at the Winnebago. “BAAAABY!”
A staffer ran out of the camper,
carrying a nonplussed-looking baby. She handed it to Mulcair, who cooed at it
and kissed it as well as he could without breaking his rictus grin.
“Sorry,” the staffer whispered. “If
it’s time for a photo op and he doesn’t have a baby to kiss, he sometimes loses
his temper.” She surreptitiously wiped some spittle from Mulcair’s beard. “It’s
been a long campaign.”
“Tell me about it,” I said.
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