Medicine Hat News

Scheer says Tories will recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital if elected

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OTTAWA Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer says if his party forms government in 2019, it will follow Donald Trump’s lead and recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

Scheer’s declaratio­n comes in the form of a pledge posted to the Conservati­ve party website designed to gather signatures from members of the public.

“Canada’s Conservati­ves led by Andrew Scheer will recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital when we form government in 2019,” the pledge says, describing the party as “a strong voice for Israel and the Canadian Jewish community.”

It marks Scheer’s first definitive statement on the issue since it became a renewed matter of public debate late last year.

That debate was prompted by the U.S. president’s decision in December to not just recognize Jerusalem as the capital, but to promise to move the American embassy there as well.

It’s a contentiou­s move. While Israel claims Jerusalem as its capital, so do the Palestinia­ns; the status of the city is part of ongoing peace negotiatio­ns. The U.S. decision was seen as taking sides in the debate and upending years of American diplomacy.

In the aftermath of Trump’s announceme­nt, the federal Liberal government said the issue must be resolved through negotiatio­n.

The pledge from Scheer sides squarely with Israel. “Canada’s Conservati­ves recognize the obvious fact that Israel, like every other sovereign nation, has a right to determine where its capital is located,” it says.

It makes no mention, however, of whether or not a government led by the Conservati­ves would move the Canadian embassy from Tel Aviv. Jake Enwright, a spokesman for Scheer, said that would be discussed when the party forms government. “We’re focused on this policy and this recognitio­n and we’ll consider that at a later date,” Enwright said.

In the aftermath of Trump’s announceme­nt, the Tories had found themselves scrambling to define their policy on Jerusalem, as neither Scheer nor the party had taken a public position on the issue. At the time, the party said it would discuss the issue as a caucus and make a decision.

That debate was settled weeks ago — earlier this month, foreign affairs critic Erin O’Toole referred to the party’s support for Jerusalem as the capital during a conservati­ve conference in Ottawa.

On Monday, O’Toole said recognizin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital doesn’t mean the Palestinia­ns must be entirely shut out.

“East Jerusalem could also one day be the centre or capital of some eventual Palestinia­n state within a two-state solution, but to suggest at present that Jerusalem is not the capital of Israel kind of conflicts with common sense,” he said.

Canada should have some kind of consular presence in Jerusalem, but a decision on an embassy is a separate discussion, he added.

 ??  ?? Andrew Scheer
Andrew Scheer

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