Lethbridge Herald

Scheer removes Berni er as innovation critic

- Mia Rabson

Conservati­ve Party Leader Andrew Scheer has removed Quebec MP Maxime Bernier from his role as the party’s innovation critic.

A senior Conservati­ve source tells The Canadian Press Scheer made the decision after finding out Monday that Bernier had posted to his personal website a chapter on supply management that is part of his forthcomin­g book.

“He made a commitment to the leader and to caucus that he would no longer promote his book and he misled the leader and the caucus,” said the source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Bernier posted the chapter on June 5 but Scheer was not made aware of it until Monday.

Scheer said in a statement Tuesday night that science critic Matt Jeneroux would assume Bernier’s duties as innovation critic on an interim basis.

The move introduces a new fracture in an already tenuous relationsh­ip between the party leader and the man he beat out for the job a year ago.

Bernier first released the chapter in April, as a marketing tool for his book, “Doing Politics Differentl­y: My Vision For Canada” which was supposed to be published in the fall. The chapter on supply management blamed the dairy lobby in Quebec for electing Scheer and called them fake Conservati­ves who only joined the party to vote against Bernier because he was advocating to get rid of supply management.

On April 18, after a tense caucus meeting in which other Conservati­ve MPs accused Bernier of backstabbi­ng Scheer and causing division within the party, Bernier announced he would postpone the publicatio­n indefinite­ly.

But on June 5, amid U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest attacks on Canada’s supply management system, Bernier quietly added the chapter to his personal website where it can be downloaded.

In April 2017, during the party leadership, Bernier penned an open letter to Trump in The Globe and Mail, thanking him for raising the issue of supply management and agreeing with him that “this protection­ist system is unfair for the farmers in Wisconsin and other states, who cannot make a better living by selling their products to their Canadian neighbours.”

Bernier left the House of Commons before a vote Monday on an NDP motion condemning attacks by Trump and his officials on Canada, his tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum and expressing support for supply management and Canada’s agricultur­e industries.

The motion passed unanimousl­y as all parties rallied behind Trudeau.

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