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Jack Knox: 10 takeaways from the 2021 federal election

Ten takeaways from election night: 1) Hey, did you ever get in the car with this fantastic destination in mind, but kind of get lost and drive around aimlessly for 36 days, only to find yourself half a block from where you started? Justin Trudeau鈥檚 $
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Doug Kobayashi, the Liberal candidate for Esquimalt-Saanich-Sooke, and his wife, Mindy, watch the federal election results at Six Mile Pub in View Royal on Monday, Sept. 20, 2021. ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST

Ten takeaways from election night:

1) Hey, did you ever get in the car with this fantastic destination in mind, but kind of get lost and drive around aimlessly for 36 days, only to find yourself half a block from where you started?

Justin Trudeau鈥檚 $600-million Excellent Adventure didn鈥檛 go as planned. We only endured this early election so he could win a majority, which he didn鈥檛 get. As bad decisions go, Trudeau鈥檚 call ranks with the Seattle Seahawks鈥 failure to give the ball to Marshawn Lynch on the one-yard line in the 2015 Super Bowl (not that I鈥檓 still bitter).

Trudeau will remain prime minister, but the man who earned praise for leading sa国际传媒 through the early days of the pandemic now looks not only opportunistic but politically inept.

2) With polls identifying climate change as a top worry for voters, this should have been the Greens鈥 chance to build on the momentum of 2019, when they went from one MP 鈥 Elizabeth May 鈥 to three. Instead, the Greens shot themselves in the Birkenstocks before the race even began by descending into internal squabbling triggered by, of all things, a dispute over Palestine and Israel.

When a party gets in a family punch-up over a half-a-world-away issue over which it has no influence, red flags go up. It took May years to drag the Greens out of fringe territory, but now 鈥 even if they win three seats again 鈥 they鈥檙e sliding back, flirting with numbers so low that they put election-expense reimbursements in jeopardy. Leader Annamie Paul didn鈥檛 win her Toronto seat, so where does that leave former leader May?

3) There was some real ugliness to this campaign, with an emboldened, angry fringe showing up at campaign stops to hound Trudeau (who probably thought their antics would earn him sympathy), chanting 鈥渓ock him up,鈥 threatening him, even throwing gravel.

It showed the power of social media to attract the kind of people who mistrust traditional media (and science) but are happy to place their faith in echo chambers that spew (suspect) information from a single perspective.

It would be easy to dismiss them all as crackpots, but the reality is sa国际传媒 has a significant number of largely young people with not much money and not much education who are seriously disaffected, not recognizing themselves in any of the mainstream parties.

4) There was as much chance of the Conservatives winning the Victoria riding as there was of Trudeau leading the Calgary Stampede parade. The Conservatives earned less than 13 per cent of the vote in Victoria in 2019, so they knew they didn鈥檛 have a prayer this time, either.

But the party did make a statement by running transgender candidate Hannah Hodson. It was a message that these were not, as she said, 鈥測our grandfather鈥檚 Conservatives.鈥

5) Erin O鈥橳oole did a far better job than did his predecessor, Andrew (Smiling Harper) Scheer, who in 2019 had some Conservative campaign workers on Vancouver Island complaining about a strategy based on little but A) grinning and B) complaining about Trudeau. O鈥橳oole articulated a relatively centrist-friendly campaign while dodging the cow-pies 鈥 gun bans, vaccine-mandate vacillation 鈥 in his path.

Yet he still didn鈥檛 move the needle much, losing support on the right as he gained it on the left. Expect the other Erin O鈥橳oole, a woman who hosts a Colorado radio show and who often receives Twitter messages meant for the Canadian politician, to field more resignation demands.

6) O鈥橳oole might not have won many votes when he vowed to ditch $10-a-day childcare, but he sure lost those of would-be parents.

7) This would be a really good time for NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh to finally say if he would kill the Trans Mountain Pipeline.

8) This will be the third consecutive election in which Vancouver Island hasn鈥檛 elected a single member of the governing party.

9) Pause to pity the people of Nanaimo, enduring their ninth federal, provincial or municipal election or byelection in seven years, including four in the past 16 months.

10) Mail-in ballots are nice. Knowing the winner on election night is nicer. Sorry, Nanaimo-Ladysmith.