Medicine Hat News

Tory gathering not just about attack strategy

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WINNIPEG Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer pledged Thursday that when Parliament resumes later this month he’ll hammer the Liberals on three of the hot button issues of the summer: taxes, asylum seekers at the border and a payout to Omar Khadr.

“Our job from now until the 2019 election and beyond is to convince Canadians there is a better way,” he said during the party’s two-day strategy meeting.

What a Conservati­ve better way might look like is also beginning to take shape.

The summer coughed up a trifecta of events the Conservati­ves easily seized upon — a Liberal review of the tax code, a crush of asylum seekers crossing the border and a $10.5 million settlement with former Guantanamo inmate Khadr.

To oppose each was a simple riff on Conservati­ve values of seeking to keep taxes low, the border and immigratio­n system secure and having little sympathy for Khadr, who was captured in a fight against U.S. soldiers in Afghanista­n.

Scheer pledged Thursday the Tories will hold the government to account on all three when Parliament resumes.

But there are other issues where the Tories are only just starting to map out their positions.

Foreign affairs critic Erin O’Toole raised some eyebrows recently when he said the Conservati­ves have no time for the Liberals trying to push the environmen­t, gender and Indigenous issues into the NAFTA renegotiat­ion.

Indigenous affairs critic Cathy McLeod said that doesn’t mean the party has no time for First Nations issues writ large.

She and other MPs spent time Thursday afternoon at the National Truth and Reconcilia­tion Centre in Winnipeg, which is archiving and preserving stories told about the country’s residentia­l school system.

A Conservati­ve policy on Indigenous issues would likely focus on encouragin­g economic developmen­t, but that will be discussed at the party’s 2018 convention, she said.

“Right now, what we need to do is look at what the Liberals are doing and hold them to account for the work they’re doing,” she said.

O’Toole said the Conservati­ves’ position on missile defence for Canada is also up for discussion.

Canada needs to find a way to work with the U.S. now that North Korea is testing missiles capable of hitting this continent, O’Toole said. Canada is not currently part of the U.S. continenta­l missile defence system.

“At an absolute minimum, we should always be willing to be at the table with our closest ally on this and we’re going to be talking about how we might propose this to the government,” he said.

O’Toole is among the defeated leadership candidates to win a spot in Scheer’s shadow cabinet; his proposal to turn illegal border crossings currently being used by asylum seekers into a formal points of entry has already been adopted by Scheer as one new policy idea.

 ??  ?? Andrew Scheer
Andrew Scheer

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