Brown insists he deserves to lead
FORMER ONTARIO PC LEADER SAYS HE GREW THE PARTY , SO HE SHOULD GET TO LEAD IT
The former leader of Ontario’s Progressive Conservatives said since he helped grow the party to unprecedented levels, he should be the one to lead it into the upcoming election.
Patrick Brown stepped down from his position late last month amid sexual misconduct allegations, which he has repeatedly and categorically denied. On Friday, Brown officially entered the race for his old job.
But beyond the allegations that forced Brown from the party helm, the number of card-carrying Tories the politician offered up is also in contention.
Interim leader Vic Fedeli said in an email to caucus earlier this month that the party has roughly 67,000 fewer members than the 200,000 Brown claimed in early January.
Speaking to a room full of enthusiastic supporters at his official campaign launch in Mississauga, Ont., on Sunday, Brown said the specific numbers aren’t what matters.
“Our membership has gone from 12,000, and whether it’s 145,000 or 180,000 or 200,000, it’s still the largest we have ever been. Members expire every month, so the number does change,” he said.
He also said he’s proud of the PC party’s diverse candidates, calling the party “more representative of the province than it’s ever been before.”
Joined onstage by his sisters and about a dozen MPP candidates for the Progressive Conservatives, Brown told supporters his leadership would improve conditions for Ontario’s families, and vowed to defeat Kathleen Wynne’s Liberal party in the June election.
Dozens of supporters responded frequently and energetically, cheerfully interjecting with catchphrases like “People’s Guarantee” and erupting into cheers of “Patrick! Patrick! Patrick!”
Brown addressed the allegations against him, telling his campaign launch that he believes he’s cleared his name.
“What has happened to me, I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy. To be vilified without due process is absolutely gutting,” he said.
“To be shunned as an outcast from the party that I love over fabricated news reports — it hit me like a ton of bricks.”
Brown was expelled from the Tory caucus on Friday, just prior to his announcement that he would once again be running for party leader. He will sit as an independent when the legislature resumes on Tuesday.
Brown has alleged that the two women who accused him of sexual misconduct were lying and may have been manipulated by his political enemies. He said his lawyers are in the process of launching a lawsuit against CTV News, which broadcast the allegations. CTV has said it stands by its reporting.
Two of Brown’s competitors for PC leadership, Caroline Mulroney and Doug Ford, have said that Brown joining the race is pulling attention away from what should be the party’s real objective: defeating the Liberals.
Brown, meanwhile, characterized the criticism he has faced as “petty internal nonsense.”