“I’ve been following a little bit of what’s happening on Twitter and it doesn’t seem like any (of the four major parties) have really mentioned anything” about the industry, Dean Moore, a cattle producer from Paradise Hill, Sask., told Farms.com. “It looks like politics and farming don’t mix right now.”
Some members of the ag community aren’t surprised by farming’s absence during campaign announcements.
“It’s usual that, during federal elections, agriculture isn’t high on the radar because of the distance between the industry and most of the population,” Mike Southwood, general manager of Alberta Milk, told Farms.com. “We always think we contribute significantly to the GDP of this country and feed the world, so we think we have an important part to play.”
One reason for the industry’s lack of a presence during the campaign trail discussions could be because of candidates’ strategies.
The parties are more focused on winning in Eastern Canada, Moore said.
“It’s Quebec and Ontario that everyone is looking after. Whatever we do out here is going to be the opposition party,” he said.
But the industry hasn’t been completely shut out of the federal election campaign cycle.
The Canadian Federation of Agriculture (CFA) hosted an ag leaders’ debate on Sept. 24.
Marie-Claude Bibeau (Liberal), Luc Berthold (a Conservative MP), Alistair MacGregor (an NDP MP) and Kate Story (a Green Party representative) answered questions based on the CFA’s Producing Prosperity in Canada campaign.