National Post

‘Time for a new leader’: Manitoba’s Pallister won’t seek re-election

Recent pressure for comments on Canadian history

- Kelly geraldine Malone

BRANDON, MAN. • Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister says he won’t seek re-election and a new Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader will be chosen before the next provincial election.

“After almost 10 years as leader of our party and more than five years as our province’s premier, I believe that now is the time for a new leader and a premier to take our province forward,” Pallister said Tuesday during a caucus retreat in Brandon, Man.

Pallister, 67, said the decision was not easy but it was right for the party, his family and the province.

“I don’t think there’s a better time than now for me to step aside.”

Pallister hinted for nearly a year that he might leave office before the next election, which is slated for October 2023, and said he was staying on to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Pressure for his exit recently began to mount after he came under fire for comments he made about Canadian history. He apologized last week for saying in July that people who came to Canada before and after it became a country did not come to destroy but to build.

Since then, his Indigenous relations minister resigned from cabinet, two Indigenous men quit provincial economic developmen­t boards and Indigenous leaders roundly condemned the premier.

Some Progressiv­e Conservati­ve caucus members have also distanced themselves from Pallister’s remarks.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt now sets off movement within the party to find a new leader.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Party President Tom Wiebe said the executive council will meet in the coming days to determine leadership contest rules. The party’s constituti­on states the next leader is to be chosen by all party members on a one member, one vote basis.

“I would like to thank Premier Pallister for all he has done for Manitobans,” Wiebe said in a statement. “Since becoming leader, he worked tirelessly to build our party and unite us in our efforts.”

Pallister ran unopposed for leader in 2012, after spending years in provincial and federal politics, and drove his team hard to boost membership­s and volunteers.

His hard-driving approach won him few friends but filled the party’s coffers and helped guide the Tories to the largest majority government in a century, in 2016.

Pallister was re-elected with a smaller but still substantia­l majority in 2019, and he recorded a balanced budget in the 2019-20 fiscal year.

But his popularity dropped sharply as Manitoba dealt with surging COVID-19 infections and hospitaliz­ations. At the same time, the premier faced public anger over a plan to reform the education system.

Recent opinion polls have suggested Tory support has dropped far back that of the New Democrats, especially in seat-rich Winnipeg.

Pallister said he is confident in the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve team and whomever is chosen as the next leader will be poised to help the province recover from the pandemic.

“I believe that now is the time for a new leader and a premier to take our province forward,” he said.

“The honour of my life has been serving as your premier. Manitobans have gifted me with a great privilege.”

 ?? DAVID LIPNOWSKI / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The hard-driving approach of Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister — above on Tuesday as he announces he won’t seek re-election — won him few
friends but filled the party’s coffers and helped guide the Tories to the largest majority government in a century in 2016.
DAVID LIPNOWSKI / THE CANADIAN PRESS The hard-driving approach of Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister — above on Tuesday as he announces he won’t seek re-election — won him few friends but filled the party’s coffers and helped guide the Tories to the largest majority government in a century in 2016.

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