Meet Martin Singh, The Next NDP Leader?

First Posted: 10/21/11 02:36 PM ET Updated: 10/24/11 10:33 AM ET

Martin Singh
If New Democrats want a leader who will focus on Canada’s business community, the environment and health care, Martin Singh says he’s their man.


If New Democrats want a leader who will focus on Canada’s business community, the environment and health care, Martin Singh says he’s their man.


The pharmacist from Musquodoboit Harbour, N.S., is pitching himself as the business-friendly candidate in the race to succeed Jack Layton. It’s a curious strategy considering his party’s deep roots and close ties with unions and labour groups.


“People might think it’s not exactly an exact fit for a business person to go with the NDP, but for me, I saw no contradiction there,” Singh said in a recent interview.


His pro-business slant does put him at odds with some of his rival candidates, however. Singh says he wants to make it easier to do business in Canada and is proposing more foreign investment, reducing bureaucracy and other measures, while his rival Brian Topp talked this week about raising taxes on high-income earners and corporations, measures that critics say will make it harder to do business here.


Singh said he was drawn to the NDP about 15 years ago, and he's been involved with the party at provincial and federal levels, working on campaigns and attending conventions whenever they occur. He supported Layton in the 2003 leadership convention and said his death in August was a tragic event.


“No candidate is going to be able to fill his shoes. I’m interested in building upon his legacy,” Singh said.


He is currently president of the Sackville-Eastern Shore riding association and the NDP’s faith and social justice commission. The first campaign he worked on was Alexa McDonough’s, the party’s former leader and MP for Halifax, where Singh attended Dalhousie University and completed degrees in chemistry and chemical engineering. He gave up his plans to do a PhD in environmental engineering when his father asked him to take over his pharmacy business when he was diagnosed with cancer. Singh then obtained his pharmacy degree at Dalhousie.


He and his brother carried on the family business and expanded it to include more stores in Nova Scotia and one in London, Ont., and they operate six residential care facilities in both provinces. Singh also started an investment company called Amritdhari Investments, geared toward members of the Sikh community.


He was born Martin Hill, raised in a Protestant family and later converted to the Sikh faith. His religion is a significant part of his personal background, but Singh says his focus for his campaign is his business background, and that’s why the first set of policy proposals he’s made are related to doing business in Canada.


National entrepreneurship strategy


Singh outlines his call for a new national strategy to encourage more innovation and entrepreneurship on his website, and he says he wants to engage Canadians in a conversation about “the positive value of business, innovation, profit, wealth creation and entrepreneurship.”


He says he wants to create an environment where it’s easier for people to invest and become entrepreneurs. His proposals include:


- Tax incentives for people who invest in a family member’s business.


- Lowering the cost of consulting programs.


- Developing youth mentorship programs.


- Increasing financial literacy.


- Encouraging more foreign investment.


Singh, who has an MBA degree from St. Mary’s University, says the Conservative government doesn’t have a coherent policy that appeals to Canada’s business community.


“As a result of that, that is what I want to bring forward,” he said. “That is what I’m interested in sharing with Canadians and members of the New Democratic Party and it is for that reason that I am running,” he said.


Singh so far is up against five other candidates: Topp, the party’s president who stepped down to run, and MPs Nathan Cullen, Paul Dewar, Romeo Saganash and Thomas Mulcair.


Topp and Mulcair have both amassed a number of endorsements from the NDP caucus and notable party members and all of the candidates have a higher profile than Singh, but he says he has been getting support from “coast to coast to coast” from people of all backgrounds.


“The diversity of the campaign reflects the diversity of the nation I guess is the best way I can put it,” said Singh.


He is taking time off work to campaign full-time for the NDP’s top job and is opening campaign offices on the West Coast, the East Coast and in Central Canada.


In addition to business, talking about health care and the environment will be priorities in the six-month campaign, Singh says.


The married father of three children says he is committed to running for a seat in the House of Commons regardless of whether he wins at the leadership convention in Toronto in March. He doesn’t see his lack of elected experience as a disadvantage.


“Each of the candidates have their own strength that they bring to the race, mine is my business experience,” he said. “There’s an opportunity here to have a person who is a businessman run in politics. That’s not just rare for the New Democratic Party, that’s rare across the political spectrum.”


'Delighted' to be a member of Canadian Forces reserves


In addition to a businessman with expertise in health care, Singh portrays himself as a patriotic Canadian. He’s a member of the Canadian Forces reserves and says that’s an example of his “very deep commitment to this country.”


“I’m absolutely delighted to be in uniform,” he said.


He wasn’t faced with any deployments to Afghanistan but said if asked, he “absolutely” would have served his tour of duty.


The NDP, however, wanted Canadian troops out of Afghanistan years before the combat mission came to an end this summer. When Parliament voted in 2006 to extend Canada’s involvement, the NDP voted against it.


Singh was asked whether he thought his commitment to serving in Afghanistan contradicted his party’s policy of wanting troops out of there.


“My focus for this campaign is on business, health care and the environment,” he responded. Singh was pressed for an answer but repeated that his focus is on the topics he mentioned, and not on Canada’s military and Afghanistan.


“When these particular issues come up as part of the campaign and the candidates are talking about it as part of the debates and what not then I will engage the topic at that time,” he said.


Singh was asked if there are any NDP policies he disagrees with or varies on, and he said his beliefs “are in line with party policy.”


NDP LEADERSHIP RACE: WHO'S IN, WHO'S OUT
Brian Topp: In
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Age: 51

Executive Director of ACTRA Toronto
Former NDP party president

So far the front runner, Topp has already received endorsements from former NDP leader Ed Broadbent, former Saskatchewan NDP Premier Roy Romanow and Quebec Liberal turned NDP MP Françoise Boivin.

A bilingual Quebecer, Topp was the first to announce his bid. Despite having no electoral experience, Topp cites his work on in party's back rooms helping coordinate four national election campaigns, his senior advisor role as a deputy chief-of-staff to Romanow and his experience as a leader in the union movement. He stepped down from his role as NDP party president upon officially registering as a candidate.

Topp has begun a cross-Canada trip, speaking out against the Keystone Pipeline, the Conservatives decision to kill the Wheat Board and the need to strengthen public health care and the national public pension plan.
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If New Democrats want a leader who will focus on Canada’s business community, the environment and health care, Martin Singh says he’s their man. The pharmacist from Musquo...
If New Democrats want a leader who will focus on Canada’s business community, the environment and health care, Martin Singh says he’s their man. The pharmacist from Musquo...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jamster88
12:01 AM on 12/05/2011
Whatever you want to believe about anything political or cultural - Canadians won't vote for an odd looking man with a huge beard + turban - at least not for a long time.

Despite the fact that he's kind of reasonable and likeable - it will be the death of the party.
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grizzly bear55
King of the forest
07:48 PM on 11/13/2011
I am sure he'll be very popular in Quebec.
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grizzly bear55
King of the forest
11:41 AM on 11/13/2011
LOL.
09:23 AM on 11/13/2011
LULZ! this is actually an amazing strategy that could be replicated elsewhere... Run as a representative for a party who you actually don't agree with at all! Would be amazing to see Republicans running on a pro-gay, pro-choice, tax and spend agenda! Amazing no one has thought of this before. But maybe ONLY IN CANADA is everyone so accepting that even the bloody political parties don't care if their candidates actually carry the party's platform! LMAO
09:00 PM on 11/12/2011
Shave your face. You are supposed to be a business man? Pharmacist? I'd be worried about hair in my pill bottles.
02:38 AM on 11/13/2011
Packing pill bottles is the job of the technician, not the guy who owns the store.
07:23 PM on 11/06/2011
While I admire his commitment, the NDP will never win if he is the leader. It's an unfortunate fact, but a significant portion of Canadians, especially on the Right, will not feel comfortable with a Leader that has a big beard, and a turban. That type of subtle racism is obviously wrong and bad, but it is a fact. I'm a Conservative, and I recognize it.
02:39 AM on 11/13/2011
Maybe you're the problem then.
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jamster88
12:02 AM on 12/05/2011
decypher - you can't deal with facts?
06:44 PM on 11/02/2011
Just in case nobody got that, he's actually white. He was raised in a Protestant family and probably changed his name. Not of course that it matters. http://thoughtspotssafire.blogspot.com/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jamster88
12:05 AM on 12/05/2011
It matters.

Some people will see it not as a 'religious choice' but as an act of extreme rejection of the status quo - i.e. the ultimate rebellion.

I lived in San Francisco for years. What I now now for sure is that 'the left' does not really have an agenda other than to 'break the system'. The right's only agenda is to stop the left from changing the system.

Yes - the system must be changed sometimes - but 99% of the real motivation behind the left is 'rage' not 'fairness' or 'equality'. 100% of the ideas of the left need to be considered as they will be the only source of them, but 99% of them need to be rejected.

The next time a PETA protester screams in my face because I mentioned that it might be to walk dogs on a leash - I'm basically going to stop defending the left forever.
09:34 AM on 10/28/2011
At least he's not a Jew. Aw! come on just kidding. If they elect Cat Stevens so be it. Canadians will give him their I'm not a racist vote and get their entire culture changed in return.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sabra Bruning
Lovin' life....
05:37 PM on 10/23/2011
Shoot me now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SayBlade
This micro bio intentionally left blank.
11:06 PM on 11/12/2011
Where's my camera?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
12:02 PM on 10/23/2011
Are we ready for this?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Targa3141
02:49 AM on 10/24/2011
Go to your local gurdwara and vote now!

ਮੇਰਾ ਹਵਰਕ੍ਰਾਫ਼ਤ ਨਾਂਗਾਂ ਨਾਲ਼ ਭਰਿਆ ਪਿਆ।!
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
01:25 AM on 10/23/2011
Interesting guy. However, he may find he is running for the wrong party. Also, encouraging foreign investment over and above its current level would require heavy tinkering with either immigration, grants or business taxation, all of which are minefields in an election.
10:54 AM on 10/22/2011
He's seems as qualified as any other NDP candidate. At least he's not some life long politician or union activist or public servant who's sucked on the public teat all his working life and has no idea how the rest of the private world pays the bills. Furthermore, his academic background isn't in some useless field like political science or some other Starbucks degree like the majority of NDP academics.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tnanimation
01:58 PM on 10/22/2011
Furthermor­e, his academic background isn't in some useless field like political science or some other Starbucks degree like the majority of NDP academics.
Wow! The depth of ignorance goes deep here.
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BCPATRIOT
British Columbia
09:49 AM on 10/22/2011
Brian Topp or Thomas Mulcair will be the next NDP leader.
08:29 PM on 10/21/2011
His chance is ZERO!
09:16 AM on 10/22/2011
Foreign investment ? Does that mean opening Canada's immigration flood gates ?? His chance is ZERO !!!
02:45 AM on 11/13/2011
I'm sure it means foreign business investment. Jeez, not even a white guy with a beard can cut a break from you xenophobes.
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05:18 PM on 10/21/2011
Martin Singh has lots to offer the NDP. However, small business depends first and foremost on money in the hands of consumers. Public spending on infrastructure and social programs will get the money back where it will do the most good. Back in the hands of the consumer. We pay for it by taxing the rich and the corporations. No matter how much they whine, being a bit less rich is not the same as being poor.