Tougher on crime, more nimble with health care? How the PCs are trying to win back suburban Winnipeg voters - Action News
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ManitobaAnalysis

Tougher on crime, more nimble with health care? How the PCs are trying to win back suburban Winnipeg voters

The PCs mustconvince some of the middle-income, moderateWinnipeggers who polls suggest have abandoned the Tories since the pandemic started that the party deserves to remain in power until 2027.

Premier Heather Stefanson makes her 2023 election strategy clear with 2nd throne speech

A close-up profile view of a woman wearing glasses and a bright blue blazer.
Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson used her throne speech on Tuesday to further differentiate her Progressive Conservative government from the Opposition NDP on health-care delivery and crime. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

Some time between this winter and next fall, Premier Heather Stefansonmust convince tens of thousands ofmoderate Winnipeg votersthat her Progressive Conservative Party deserves another term in office.

If she does not, it's likely theNDP will form Manitoba's next government and Wab Kinew will be the next premier.

Why do only tens of thousands of voters in a single city matter in a province with 1.4 million people and a land mass the size of Afghanistan? Historically, theseare the voters who determine whether Manitoba turns orange or blue on election day.

When the PCs do well in Winnipeg, they tend to win power. When they do poorly, the NDP tends to win.

While this is a gross oversimplification of the political dynamics at playacrossManitoba, Stefanson and Kinew are effectively fighting for the hearts and minds of a relatively small number of adultswhose voting habits are more promiscuous than partisan in as few as nine or 10 seats on the suburban fringes of Winnipeg.

In short, the PCs mustconvince some of the middle-income, moderateWinnipeggers who appear to have abandoned the Tories since the pandemic started according to a series of polls that the party in power since 2016 deserves to stick around until 2027.

Manitoba NDP Leader Wab Kinew claimed Tuesday that Stefanson and her Progressive Conservative government are trying to institute a two-tier health-care system. (Travis Golby/CBC)

The NDP must convince those very same skittishpeople in those very same swing constituenciesto continue their mistrust of the Progressive Conservatives if not to the point where theyactually vote New Democrat then at leastto extent they sit out the next election cycle altogether.

The PCs made it clear this month how they intend to win those suburban Winnipeggers back, based on Stefanson'sTuesday throne speech and a few spending announcements made before the Kirkfield Park byelection blackout started.

For starters, the PCs are going big on homelessness and crime, betting that suburban Winnipeggers are so concernedabout the state of the inner city, they will embrace a party known more for law and order than the socially minded NDP.

In early November, Stefanson appeared with Winnipeg's new mayor, Scott Gillingham, to announce the return of city police-RCMP co-operation on outstanding warrants and a renewed focus on violent offenders.

Downtown surveillance

Stefanson's throne speech also gave prominence to crime, raising the prospect of more electronicsurveillance downtown.

"We are looking at what that will look like,"Stefanson told reporters during a question-and-answer session on Tuesday, prior to thepublic release of her second throne speech as premier.

'Obviously [we're]not wanting to invade people's privacy and so on, but we need to ensure that we're catching the criminals who areout there preying on vulnerable people in our downtown communities."

While this rhetoric will alienate progressive voters, they'renot the premier's target audience. She is making the same bet Vancouver's new mayor, Ken Sim, made in October when he came to power on the strength of a tough-on-crime platform tempered with references to alleviating homelessness and addictions.

Stefanson appears to be making a slightlyriskierbet when it comes toimproving health care. The throne speech made it clear she intends to partner up with more private companies to deliver health-care services.

Manitoba, she said, needs to learn more from other provinces when it comes to private health-care delivery.

"We have lagged behind because there was an ideological approach that was taken for decades here in our province. We're getting beyond that and we are going to look to the private sector to help be part of the solution," Stefanson said.

The premier was clear to note she's still talking about a single-payer system, where the government not the citizen picks up the health-care tab.

NDP warns of 2-tier health care

But any talk of private delivery is like catnip to the NDP, which has been keen to portray the PCs as out to privatize anything and everything.

On Tuesday, Kinew claimed Stefanson is trying to institute a two-tier health-care system.

"It will create a situation in Manitoba where the care that you receive is determined not by your needs, but by your bank account," he said.

This may very well have been music to Stefanson's ears.While diehard NDP voters are likely to be skeptical of any form of private health-care delivery, swing voters in suburban Winnipeg ridings tend to be less ideological and more pragmatic.

It is fair to assume they care moreabout positive health-care outcomes chiefly, shorter waits for surgeries or other procedures than they do about whether the province is paying a unionized public servant or the employee of a private company to do the work in question.

For Stefanson, the risk inherent in this push for private delivery is not so much voter opposition, but the time it will take to make significant changes to the health-care system.

Even under the most optimistic scenarios, surgery wait times won't improve much before the next provincial election. Raising public expectations now has the potential to backfire by election day next spring or fall.

Disaffected swing voters are unlikely to return to the PCs on the basis of a health-care promise. Stefanson will have to deliver tangible results by next year in order to have a fighting chance in suburban Winnipeg constituencies, which not too long ago helped the NDPhold power for17 consecutiveyears.