National Post

Scheer picks ex-mayor to face Bernier in Beauce

- MORGAN LOWRIE VICKY AND FRAGASSO-MARQUIS

MONTREAL• Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer announced Saturday that he’s chosen a former local mayor and agricultur­al entreprene­ur to face Quebec MP Maxime Bernier in the 2019 election.

Speaking in Saint-Elzear, Que., Scheer named Richard Lehoux, the former president of an associatio­n of Quebec municipali­ties and the town’s longtime mayor, as the candidate in the Beauce riding.

Lehoux will take on the task of challengin­g Bernier, the outspoken former Conservati­ve leadership candidate who quit the party over the summer and has since become one of its loudest critics.

Scheer did not mention Bernier by name on Saturday, choosing instead to aim his criticism at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

But he claimed the Conservati­ve party was the only one capable of defeating Trudeau’s Liberals in next year’s federal election.

“If you want to change government­s in 2019, you have to vote Conservati­ve, by marking an ‘X’ next to Richard Lehoux,” he said to cheers.

Bernier announced in September that he’s starting his own party, the People’s Party of Canada, to represent those who reject political interferen­ce by special interest groups, cartels and lobbyists.

Lehoux served as Saint-Elzear’s mayor for 19 years before leaving the post to return to agricultur­e in 2017. He describes himself as a former dairy producer and said on Saturday that he obtained his first Conservati­ve Party membership card in the 1980s.

In a speech, Lehoux said the Conservati­ve party was the best one to lead the Beauce region’s farmers and entreprene­urs, who he described as fiercely independen­t and “strangled” by state bureaucrac­y.

“We (Conservati­ve party members) count on the personal responsibi­lity of individual­s and don’t throw obstacles in their path, so they can develop,” he said to the partisan crowd, which included several mayors from the region who had come to support him.

Bernier was quick to react to the candidatur­e, taking to Twitter to criticize Lehoux’s connection to what he called the “dairy cartel.”

In an interview with The Canadian Press, he said he wasn’t surprised Scheer had chosen a dairy producer to face him, given the leader’s support of supply management.

“I’m looking forward to have a debate in Beauce about his privilege, and why he wants people to pay twice the price for milk, poultry and eggs,” he said in a phone interview.

The Beauce MP quit the Conservati­ve party in August amid disagreeme­nts with Scheer on a number of issues, including Canada’s supply management system. He has said his new political formation will be ready to compete in the 2019 election.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, right, raises arms on Saturday with Richard Lehoux, left, the party’s choice to run in the riding of Beauce in the 2019 federal election. Lehoux was the mayor of Saint-Elzear, Que., and the former president of an associatio­n of Quebec municipali­ties.
JACQUES BOISSINOT / THE CANADIAN PRESS Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, right, raises arms on Saturday with Richard Lehoux, left, the party’s choice to run in the riding of Beauce in the 2019 federal election. Lehoux was the mayor of Saint-Elzear, Que., and the former president of an associatio­n of Quebec municipali­ties.

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