NDP leader Jagmeet Singh has 'Secret Weapon' says new chief of staff Willy Blomme

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Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh remembers being deeply impressed the first time he got to know Willy Blomme, the woman who would later become his new chief of staff. He also remembers thinking something else: the feeling wasn't mutual.

"She wasn't won over right away," Singh said of the 2015 encounter, which took place in Toronto at a tribute to former leader Jack Layton. "I was won over by her right away, but she wasn't necessarily won over by me."

“I was really struck at that point by how he connects with people,” she said, describing how he asked questions, pressed her for information and showed a genuine interest in her perspective. “Listening was really the primary thing he was doing.” 

“To me, leadership isn’t just about dictating,” Blomme said. “Leadership is about building consensus, it is about building a team where everyone feels empowered and this is something that Jagmeet is really interested in as well." Singh also has a secret weapon, Blomme added: his rivals frequently don’t see him as a threat, a fact that helped him get elected to the Ontario legislature in 2011. 

“I think Jagmeet often gets underestimated,” she said. “People told him he couldn’t win. He just put his nose to the grindstone, worked hard, got a great team around him and he surprised everyone.” “It is tough in often male-dominated spheres for people to get acknowledged for their skills,” Singh said.

“I want to just celebrate that she is so good. Age is not a barrier, gender is not a barrier and I really want to … highlight how for me it is important to have positions of influence and power in the party and in my team that are occupied by talented people and particularly by women.”

Singh, a turbaned Sikh who faced questions about secularism during his leadership campaign, said Blomme is someone to whom he has already turned for advice about how to navigate a complex political landscape that can often be vexing for an outsider — especially one whose faith is so unmistakably prominent.

“She’s also someone that I consider a friend; during the campaign, she helped out a lot in strategy and particularly Quebec-based strategy,” he said. “She’ll just do more of that now.”

“We share the same vision in terms of being really bold on progressive issues, so we are similar that way. I just think I’m not prone to not at all worry about the risks of something.”