Chinese-Canadian voters
courted as
key demographic in elections
Canada is just days away from holding elections in a close race that analysts say could see Prime Minister Stephen Harper kicked out of office. Chinese-Canadians may play a part in that.
CCTV America’s Roee Ruttenberg reports:
Highlights:
- There are 1.5 million Canadians with Chinese origins, in country of 35 million people. About a third of Chinese-Canadians live in the Greater Toronto Area where they make-up one of the largest minority groups. Their vote could potentially make – or break – a candidate.
- Geng Tan moved to Canada from China’s Hunan province nearly 20 years ago. He’s a Liberal Party candidate running for parliament in a Toronto district also known as a “riding”that has one of the highest populations of Chinese-Canadians.
- Olivia Chow is among the country’s most well-known Chinese-Canadian faces and she’s running with the New Democratic Party in a tight race to represent Toronto’s Spadina-Fort York riding in one of the closest watched campaigns in this election.
- Prime Minister Stephen Harper is seeking a fourth term. Earlier this month, he told Chinese-Canadian voters in Vancouver that his Conservative Party is their natural home. A Chinese-language version of his party’s website aims at delivering the same message.
- However some Chinese-Canadian activists note that the Harper government recently introduced tougher language requirements for would-be citizens. For some, the move echoed now-outdated laws that once blocked, or limited, immigration from China.
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