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iN VIDEO: Federal election campaign underway with leaders in Ontario, Quebec and B.C.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addresses a crowd at a Liberal fundraiser in Brampton, Ont., on Thursday, September 5, 2019.
Image Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov

OTTAWA - Justin Trudeau began his bid for re-election Wednesday by framing the next 40 days as a time for Canadians to make a choice: whether they want more of his sunny ways or a return to the gloomier days he says are characteristic of life under a Conservative government.

But clouding over his optimism was the SNC-Lavalin scandal, given fresh life by a Globe and Mail report that the RCMP's investigation into potential obstruction of justice in the matter has been limited by the shroud of cabinet confidence.

Moments after emerging from Rideau Hall, where he asked Gov. Gen. Julie Payette to dissolve Parliament, Trudeau faced a barrage of fresh questions on the affair.

Asked what his government is hiding, Trudeau said his office gave the largest waiver of cabinet confidences in Canadian history but would not add anything more.

He also declined to address what personal mistakes he might have made in the saga, which saw the ethics commissioner declare Trudeau broke the law by trying to influence a decision on whether the Quebec engineering firm should go to trial on charges related to alleged corrupt dealings in Libya.

"My job as prime minister is to be there to stand up for and defend Canadians' jobs," he said.

"I will always defend the public interest."

Before jumping on his own campaign plane this morning, a fired-up Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer said the SNC-Lavalin story showcases his belief that Trudeau has lost the moral authority to govern.

READ MORE: The latest developments as federal party leaders kick off campaigning for the Oct. 21 election

Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer talks with reporters prior to boarding his campaign plane in Ottawa on Wednesday, September 11, 2019.
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer talks with reporters prior to boarding his campaign plane in Ottawa on Wednesday, September 11, 2019.
Image Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson

"Over the next five weeks I will be explaining the reasons why Justin Trudeau has lost that authority and our alternative plan," he said in French.

Scheer will spend Day 1 of the campaign in Quebec and Ontario, while Trudeau will head for Vancouver, the same place he launched his bid for election in 2015.

"We've done a lot together these past four years but the truth is we're just getting started," Trudeau said.

"So Canadians have an important choice to make — will we go back to the failed policies of the past or will we continue to move forward?"

Polls suggest the Liberals and Conservatives are running neck-and-neck, while the NDP and Greens are fighting for third.

The NDP launched its campaign Wednesday in London, Ont., one of the regions of the province where New Democrats think they'll be able to hold onto seats.

Leader Jagmeet Singh accused Trudeau and Scheer of failing to live up to promises to help Canadians, saying the costs for everything are getting out of control.

"I believe we can do better," Singh said.

"But we can do that only if we have the courage to take on the powerful interests at the very top."

The Greens began in their own comfort zone of British Columbia, where Elizabeth May launched her campaign in Victoria.

"This is the most important election in Canadian history," May told about 200 cheering supporters.

"We are going to stand firm. We will tell Canadians how serious the climate emergency is."

Later Wednesday, People's Party of Canada Leader Maxime Bernier is to appear for his own campaign debut in Toronto, alongside candidate Renata Ford, wife of the late populist Toronto mayor Rob Ford.

At the dissolution of Parliament, the Liberals hold 177 seats, the Conservatives 95, the NDP 39, the Bloc 10 and the Greens 2. There are eight independents — including former Liberal cabinet ministers Jane Philpott and Jody Wilson-Raybould. The People's Party of Canada has one seat and former New Democrat Erin Weir sits as a member of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation. Five seats are vacant.

The election is Oct. 21.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2019
The Canadian Press

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