sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Jack Knox: Meet your candidate? Basically, it's speed-dating

Nick Loughton is a 23-year-old law student at UVic.
TC_327835_web_ele7.jpg
An elector casts his ballot in this undated file photo from Elections sa国际传媒. ELECTIONS CANADA

Nick Loughton is a 23-year-old law student at UVic. When the Victoria Green candidate gets all sciencey about the cancer research he did while an undergrad at the University of Calgary, he can make you feel like a parent faking understanding of your kid鈥檚 chemistry homework.

Harley Gordon? He鈥檚 29, working on a PhD in forest biology, lives in Colwood with his wife and two dogs. Grew up in Oliver, but became smitten with the Island when he moved here for university. He鈥檚 running for the Greens in Esquimalt-Saanich-Sooke.

Alana DeLong spent 14 years as an Alberta MLA, but the Vic High grad and Thetis Island resident doesn鈥檛 have that kind of profile in sa国际传媒, so Wednesday evening found the Conservatives鈥 nominee in Cowichan-Malahat-Langford pounding the pavement in the West Shore.

Welcome to Election 2021, where candidates with little name recognition have even less time than usual to raise their profiles and make you fall in love with them and their ideas. This 36-day campaign is the shortest the law allows. Think sprint, not marathon. Basically, this is the electoral equivalent of speed-dating. Not only that, but speed-dating with masks, Zoom and all the other pandemic buzzkills.

The challenge of becoming known is particularly tough for those running locally for the first time. Take the Liberals鈥 Sherri Moore-Arbour. She鈥檚 a relative newcomer to Galiano Island, the mother of two teens, Metis, the founder of a PR firm. She talks about her time with the Native Women鈥檚 Association of sa国际传媒 and the sa国际传媒 School Trustees Association, and her belief in education as a lever for equity. She talks about being chair of Equal Voice, urging women of colour, and women in general, to run for office.

She talks passionately about a range of topics 鈥 but that won鈥檛 matter if voters don鈥檛 know her name, let alone what she believes in. And how do you get known when there are no big all-candidate meetings, and when COVID-wary voters might not be thrilled about opening their doors to door-knocking strangers? It鈥檚 tough enough that Moore-Arbour is running against Elizabeth May in Saanich-Gulf Islands, which, for the past decade, has been like running against the Sedins in Vancouver.

鈥淭here is no doubt that the electoral conditions in this riding are squarely uphill,鈥 Moore-Arbour says. She vows to do her best to make herself known. 鈥淎s long as it is safe to be meeting people outdoors, we鈥檒l be meeting people.鈥

That matters. YouTube might be useful, but there鈥檚 nothing like an in-person exchange for people to get a read on one another. Door-knocking is effective (though Elections sa国际传媒 suggests modifications this year: masks, two-metre distancing, avoid shaking hands, keep records of who went where).

鈥淧eople tend to be really honest at their doors,鈥 says DeLong. 鈥淭hey say what they really think.鈥 If Twitter is where voters exchange fire from entrenched positions, the front porch is where they keep an open mind. A veteran campaigner, DeLong usually buys a new pair of running shoes before each election. She began going house-to-house well before the writ dropped.

DeLong is one of seven challengers in the Island鈥檚 seven ridings who are returnees from the 2019 campaign. The others are Blair Herbert, her Liberal opponent in Cowichan-Malahat-Langford, Liberal Michelle Corfield in Nanaimo, New Democrat Sabina Singh and Conservative David Busch in Saanich-Gulf Islands, Conservative Shelley Downey in North Island-Powell River and Liberal Nikki Macdonald in Victoria. Like DeLong, Macdonald began knocking on doors as soon as Dr. Bonnie said it was OK; she figured she was over 2,000 by the time the campaign began.

Others were ready to go, too. As soon as the election was called, the Pat Bay Highway sprouted seven big billboards bearing Singh鈥檚 image. She鈥檚 knocking on doors, too. Still, this is a different kind of election. Like several other candidates, the combination of COVID protocols and the brevity of the campaign means Singh won鈥檛 bother opening a traditional campaign office. Instead, she鈥檒l putt-putt around the riding in a Westfalia microbus, pulling out tables and chairs at stops.

As for those first-time candidates starting from square one? Gordon says he has a pretty healthy online presence. Ditto for Loughton. 鈥淚鈥檓 a young guy, I鈥檓 on social media,鈥 the latter says. Plus, he adds, he has the energy to get out in public a lot.

Better get moving. Election day is a month tomorrow.

[email protected]

> For more election coverage, go to