"I can stand out here and watch it all night long. You don't need a telly when you've got this," she said.
On domestic issues, Poilievre has pledged to deliver "the biggest crackdown on crime in Canadian history", promising to keep repeat offenders behind bars.He also came out in support of those who protested vaccine mandates during the 2021 "Freedom Convoy" demonstrations that gridlocked Ottawa for weeks.
On social matters, he has rarely weighed in - something Prof Besco said is typical of senior Conservatives, who see these topics as "a losing issue".While Poilievre voted against legalising gay marriage in the early 2000s, he has recently said it will remain legal "full stop" if he is elected.The Conservatives also do not support legislation to regulate abortion, though they allow MPs to vote freely on the issue.
"There will be no laws or other restrictions imposed on a woman's right to decide to do with her body as she wishes," Poilievre said in April. "And that is something that I am guaranteeing to you and to all Canadians."on immigration, the Conservative party has said it would tie levels of newcomers to the number of new homes built, and focus on bringing in skilled workers.
Poilievre's wife, Anaida, arrived in Canada as a child refugee from Caracas, Venezuela.
The Conservative leader has pushed for the integration of newcomers, saying Canada does not need to be a "hyphenated society".He added that the prime minister would "completely condemn" death threats received by the For Women Scotland who brought the Supreme Court legal case, adding they were "completely unacceptable".
Speaking to the BBC's Politics Live, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said her approach on the subject had "evolved"."My understanding of the law until this [Supreme Court] ruling was that it made provision for people who had been through the gender recognition process and transitioned to a different gender to be recognised in that gender in legal terms.
"I misunderstood the application of the law, like many people, and that's what we're working through now."Asked what the ruling meant for transpeople's participation in sport, Nandy said "biology matters" but added that there were international rules that prevented the government from interfering in the governance of sporting bodies.