Pressure grows to delay Tory leader race
O’Toole, Sloan say wait
OTTAWA • There is growing pressure on the Conservative Party to delay its leadership race as two of the four candidates on the final ballot have now said it’s not right to be campaigning while Canada is seized by the COVID-19 pandemic.
However, as of Sunday afternoon the party says its position hasn’t changed that the race can proceed as scheduled. The party says it is closely monitoring the situation and will keep assessing whether the race can continue.
Erin O’Toole, considered to be one of two front-runners in the race, released a video on Sunday calling for the race to be delayed.
“I’m asking the leadership committee of the Conservative Party of Canada to delay the Conservative leadership contest to ensure that all time and resources of our Conservative caucus and our grassroots members can be focused on helping our constituents and the needs of our communities in the fight against COVID-19,” O’Toole said in the video.
O’Toole also said he wanted his own campaign team and supporters to devote their time to helping their communities, and said parliament should create an allparty committee to show a united front in dealing with the pandemic.
Derek Sloan, who qualified for the final ballot last week, also called over the weekend for the party to delay the race.
Sloan said he spoke with the co-chairs of the leadership committee, Dan Nowlan and Lisa Raitt, and told them that continuing the race is damaging the party’s brand, that campaigning is practically impossible right now, and that it’s wrong to be soliciting donations during the pandemic.
Peter MacKay, the race’s other front-runner, has not yet stated his own position. However, his campaign’s director of communications Julie Vaux told the National Post she left the campaign last week because she believes it’s inappropriate to be campaigning during COVID-19. She said it was a personal decision and she still supports MacKay’s leadership bid.
Leslyn Lewis, the fourth candidate on the final ballot, told the Post on Sunday she does not support delaying the race.
“The next leader of our party is going to be required to show leadership in a time where Canada is still in the valley created by this pandemic,” she said in a statement. “How you lead and manage a campaign in a time of crisis is very indicative of how you can lead the party, and more importantly, our country in a time of crisis.”
Until now, the only candidates calling for the race to be delayed were also those furthest back in the qualifying process: Marilyn Gladu, Rick Peterson and Rudy Husny.
Conservatives are to choose a successor to Andrew Scheer at a convention in Toronto on June 27.