except an election is the last thing singh wants with his party underwater, according to the polls.
singh violated the spirit of his deal with trudeau, written into the accord itself, in which the ndp pledged it would “commit to a guiding principle of ‘no surprises’” in administering the supply and confidence agreement which was scheduled to remain in place until june 2025.
it was certainly a surprise to blindsided liberal house leader karina gould, who proclaimed last week she was “fairly confident” the ndp would honour the deal, an indication the liberals are as out of touch with the ndp as they are with canadian voters.
to be sure, singh was entitled to end the agreement because it was a political deal, not a legally binding one.
but he has no interest in an election now which is why his announcement on wednesday was mainly political theatre.
all it means in the real world is that trudeau’s minority government going forward will operate as traditional minority governments always have.
that is, it will seek support from enough members of the opposition parties to pass legislation on an issue-by-issue basis, while attempting to avoid defeat on confidence motions, such as approving the federal budget, where a defeat would bring down the government.