By Jennifer Ditchburn, THE CANADIAN PRESS
OTTAWA: Canada’s federal leaders were waving the flag and priming their political messages Wednesday on a Canada Day that landed smack in the build-up to this year’s election campaign.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper delivered the traditional midday remarks from Parliament Hill’s main stage, but also borrowed a line from his 2011 stump speech.
“In times of never-ending economic and political turmoil in the world, our Canada is an island of stability,” Harper told the crowd that police estimated at about 34,000, thinner than usual because of rainy weather.
Harper also referred to the Oct. 22 attack on Parliament Hill, which claimed the life of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, and to the deployment of Canadian troops in Iraq and Kuwait.
The Conservatives recently criticized Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau’s failure to support the mission against the Islamic State in a political ad.
“As we saw right here in our Parliament, this threat is everywhere today,” said Harper, who took in the festivities with his wife Laureen and two children.
“But we have faced great threats many times before, and we have overcome them. And we shall overcome them once more. So, let’s hear it for the brave men and women of the Canadian Armed Forces.”
Security around Parliament Hill was much heavier than usual. Some police officers were seen walking around with semi-automatic weapons. Many visitors were unable to make their way up on to the Parliament Hill lawns once the prime minister and governor general had arrived, and the perimeter was made bigger than in past years.
The wet weather meant there was no air show this year featuring the Snowbirds. The onstage entertainment included pop artists including Kiesza and Magic, as well as a tribute to Sir John A. Macdonald, 2015 marking the 200th anniversary of his birth.
If Harper didn’t have to be in Ottawa on Canada Day, he might have done exactly what Justin Trudeau and Tom Mulcair did, hopscotch around the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) and southwestern Ontario.
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair issued a Canada Day statement that explicitly pointed to the election on the horizon. His schedule included five different stops, featuring NDP candidates, in Toronto.
“We have many reasons to be proud to be Canadian, but much work remains to be done,” Mulcair said.
“The NDP has a clear vision to build a more sustainable society. Canadians can count on the NDP to bring concrete proposals to Ottawa to make life more affordable for families and make Canada a fairer country.”
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau issued a holiday statement that lauded Canada as “a place of fairness and of opportunity; a place where people from every imaginable country and culture, who speak every language, live and work, and build and thrive together.”
Trudeau also had five scheduled events, including two in Mississauga, Ont.
Trudeau added: “We are stronger not in spite of our differences, but precisely because of them. For much of the world, Canada represents the most hopeful vision of what the future can look like.”
 
© 2015 The Canadian Press