Ottawa Citizen

HE’S OUT, HE’S IN, HE’S OUT.

FIGHTING CLAIMS

- TOM BLACKWELL

Patrick Brown announced Monday he is pulling out of the Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ve race, citing the attacks that his friends and family have endured during his brief candidacy, and a need to fight what he calls “slanderous” allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

Sources on his campaign earlier claimed he and his family have faced death threats, and that his mother was hospitaliz­ed for stress.

Brown’s decision caps a bizarre, roller-coaster few weeks for the party, beginning with his resignatio­n as leader last month, then a dramatic decision to enter the contest to fill his old job.

The campaign’s internal polling, released to the Post, suggested that Brown was doing surprising­ly well, showing him tied for the first-ballot lead with former MPP Christine Elliott.

But in a statement issued Monday afternoon, Brown said he could not continue as a candidate, given his efforts to refute the “horror” of false misconduct charges, and the toll that vying for the leadership has taken on those close to him. As well, he said his situation posed too much of a distractio­n from the party’s push to replace the Liberal government with a “pragmatic, moderate, fiscally responsibl­e alternativ­e.”

“I can no longer stand as a candidate in our party’s leadership race,” he said in the message posted on his Twitter account. “I simply cannot run a provincial party leadership campaign and, if successful, square off against (Premier) Kathleen Wynne in the most important election in a generation, while at the same time continuing my fight to prove that the allegation­s are lies.”

Vic Fedeli, who took over as interim leader after Brown’s resignatio­n Jan. 24 and has been critical of Brown’s tenure in the job, welcomed the announceme­nt Monday.

“I want to thank Patrick Brown for making the right decision for himself and the Ontario PC Party,” Fedeli said. “He is right to focus on clearing his name.”

One source in his campaign said the final straw was the barrage of threats he and his loved ones faced from those angry that he had rejoined the race.

His mother was admitted to hospital with chest pains Sunday, apparently tied to the anxiety of her son’s highprofil­e ordeal.

People have stood outside family homes in Barrie, Ont., and screamed obscenitie­s, accusing him of underminin­g the Conservati­ve party, the campaign official said.

“I can take a punch, but it stings when it is unfairly directed at the people I love instead of me,” Brown said in his statement. “They didn’t sign up for this. It pains me to cause them this difficulty.”

Brown quit under pressure early on the morning of Jan. 25, after CTV News aired a story in which two women accused him of sexual misconduct 10 years ago when he was a federal MP.

He has vigorously denied those allegation­s, is suing CTV for libel and claimed that his name had been cleared when some holes were knocked in the women’s stories.

The party then called a leadership contest to replace him, with voting scheduled to start Friday and end March 8, the result to be announced March. 10.

 ??  ?? Patrick Brown
Patrick Brown

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