The conservative chief of Canada, Pierre Poilievre, plans to win the headquarters of Parliament

The conservative chief of Canada, Pierre Poilievre, is expected to win a crucial by -way election in the province of Alberta to guarantee a new seat of Parliament after losing his constituency during the last general elections.
The final bulletins being still counted, Hairy is leading with 80.1% of the votes in the rural district of the Battle River river, according to the public broadcaster of Canada CBC, which he plans that he will win.
“Getting to know the people of this region was the privilege of my life,” he told a delighted crowd on Monday.
His projected victory occurs four months after his party was defeated by the Liberals of Mark Carney and he lost the siege of the Ottawa region which he had had for two decades against Bruce Fanjoy Liberal.
During this by -election, Hairyvre had to face a record of 214 candidates, many of whom are associated with a protest group in search of electoral reform.
This is the second time that the target group hairy in a campaign. Voters were invited to fill in a writing bulletin due to the unusually high number of candidates.
The expected victory of Hairyvre will allow the 46 -year -old woman to return to the House of Commons for the fall after her defeat in April.
The special election was called in June after the former conservative deputy Damian Kurek moved away to let hairy run.
Hairyre thanked Kurek for his “graceful sacrifice” in his victory speech.
Alberta is a conservative bastion – Kurek, the former driving deputy, had won with 83% of the votes. In the past, driving has been won by preservatives with at least 70% of the vote.
The conservative chief has faced a decline in certain residents, including the independent candidate Bonnie Crichley, who had accused her of seeking to win driving as “nothing more than a means of reaching an end”.
Hairyre defended his campaign, telling the newspaper Calgary Herald that he had developed as if he were “a vote behind”.
“I believe in humility and to gain people’s confidence,” he said.
Hairyvre is now faced with a compulsory leadership review in January, where members of the Conservative Party will vote to find out if he should stay as a leader at their next national convention.
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