Full caveat: Iā€™ve only been on the Trudeau beat since the writ dropped Sunday, so I have no comparisons to other parties.

But one of the things thatā€™s struck me over the past few days covering the Liberal Leader is the energy -- and a more assertive tone. Heā€™s been showing more fight since he officially launched his campaign. 

True, heā€™s trailing in the polls. And true, many are speculating the NDP threatens to squeeze out the Liberals. But Trudeau is showing heā€™s ready for battle. 

Tuesday I was at his event in Mississauga. Hereā€™s some of the energy I was talking about. Yes -- thatā€™s Prince playing in the background.

 

When DJs are asked to play music at political events, what songs do they spin? Omar Sachedina asked the DJ at a Justin Trudeau campaign stop today.

Posted by on Tuesday, August 4, 2015

While I was waiting around for Trudeau to show up, asked a few questions about the music. I wanted to know if the DJ was instructed to play certain types of songs, or in a certain order. Music is very important in campaign events. Here's how a prominent magazine during his re-election campaign. 

The goal is to get people revved and give them something to connect to. So I chatted with the DJ. Turns out, he pretty much has free reign. Hereā€™s Vincent Bertucci from Symmetry Studios:

 

 

When DJs are asked to play music at political events, what songs do they spin? Omar Sachedina asked the DJ at a Justin Trudeau campaign stop today.

Posted by on Tuesday, August 4, 2015

When Trudeau showed up, he pulled up in a bus.

As for the substance of what Trudeau talked about, he said Stephen Harperā€™s plan for the economy isnā€™t working, and voting for the status quo (i.e. Harper) is therefore a risk. He again called Tom Mulcairā€™s economic plan a ā€œmirage.ā€

He said Mulcair talks about a National Minimum Wage, but that it only affects workers in Federally Regulated industries like banks and airlines - not the ā€œ99 per centā€ (his math) of Canadians who actually need it.

A more colourful moment came during the question and answer period. Stephen Harper has started referring to Trudeau only by his first name, Justin.

this is a concerted effort to chip away at Trudeauā€™s credibility and his fatherā€™s political heft, and make him look like a boy next to two more senior politicians. Take this Conservative for example: ā€œJustin thinks budgets balance themselves,ā€ a voice in the ad says. But the ad refers to the NDP leader by his full name: Thomas Mulcair.

When I asked him for his reaction to the name issue, Trudeau didnā€™t bite. He ignored the question -- and started talking about the economy. When another reporter asked him to react again, he said it was a distraction. The non-reply and the sort-of-reply show that this is a guy who wants to be the one setting the agenda -- not Stephen Harper.

He also wants to stick to what's emerging as the key theme of this campaign: the economy (and Liberals as a champion for the middle class).

As for what the Conservatives are saying about calling Trudeau by his first name -- they're playing it down. From Conservative campaign spokesman Kory Teneycke:

"The Liberal party invested a lot of money branding him as Justin," he said. "And not surprisingly thatā€™s how most Canadians know him.ā€