Lethbridge Herald

Tories go for a Scheer bet

Sask. MP wins Conservati­ve leadership race

- Stephanie Levitz

Andrew Scheer, a longtime Saskatchew­an MP and former Speaker of the House of Commons, has been narrowly elected the new leader of the federal Conservati­ve party.

The nail-biting process of winnowing the field went down to the final 13th ballot before Scheer, 38, was declared the winner with 51 per cent of the available points, edging out longtime front-runner Maxime Bernier.

Bernier had led throughout the previous 12 ballots, but finished a close second with 49.05 per cent.

Candidates were scored not by votes, but by points: every riding in the country was allocated 100 points, and each candidate received a number of points depending on their share of votes in that riding.

Bernier is a longtime Quebec member of Parliament, but support in his home province wasn’t a sure thing, given his profuse opposition to the supply management system that regulates some of the province’s most lucrative agricultur­al industries.

After the first ballot, he had captured just 48 per cent of support from his own riding of Beauce, with rival Scheer nabbing a surprising­ly high 47 per cent.

Deepak Obhrai, Andrew Saxton, Rick Peterson, Kevin O’Leary, Chris Alexander, Steven Blaney and Lisa Raitt were some of the earliest casualties as early-ballot results were announced, while Kellie Leitch, Pierre Lemieux and Michael Chong fell off in subsequent rounds.

“I’m a free market guy so I like competitio­n,” Bernier said earlier, after he was seen exchanging a nervous laugh with Scheer after the results of one of the ballots. “It’s a tough competitio­n.”

Gone in the ninth ballot was controvers­ial MP Kellie Leitch, the former cabinet minister and orthopedic surgeon whose key campaign pledge to screen newcomers for Canadian values saw her dominate early media coverage of the race, only to fade from prominence as the vote grew nearer.

Pierre Lemieux, a former MP from Ontario who ran championin­g socially conservati­ve policies, dropped off in the eighth ballot, while Brad Trost hung in longer than many expected, dropping off on the 11th ballot.

Obhrai was the first of 13 candidates to drop off as the party begins disclosing the results of voting, which began weeks ago by mail and culminated Saturday with members voting in person at the Toronto Congress Centre and polling stations across the country.

O’Leary dropped out of the race abruptly last month but was too late to have his name removed from the ballot.

The lengthy ranked-ballot system and the size of the field meant several rounds of balloting were necessary to crown a winner. Officials say 132,000 ballots — the party has some 259,000 eligible members — had been received by the Friday deadline for mail-in ballots.

Mesh bags released Conservati­ve party balloons over the crowd at the Toronto Congress Centre as hundreds of people cheered the news of their unlikely winner.

Ahead of the announceme­nt, the party’s interim leader Rona

Ambrose took to the stage for one final farewell — and to send some words of advice to whomever replaces her.

Bedrock conservati­ve values are more important than any policy proposals shared during the campaign, Ambrose said.

“When we rally around those values and speak with one voice there is no limit to what we can

achieve together,” she said.

The winner should also take heed of the advice former leader Stephen Harper gave caucus when she replaced him, she added.

“The measure of a good leader is also how they treat their opponents in defeat,” she quoted Harper as saying.

“Never forget that.”

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Conservati­ve leadership candidate Andrew Scheer speaks to the crowd during the opening night of the federal Conservati­ve leadership convention in Toronto on Friday.
Canadian Press photo Conservati­ve leadership candidate Andrew Scheer speaks to the crowd during the opening night of the federal Conservati­ve leadership convention in Toronto on Friday.

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