Regina Leader-Post

Tories tour Quebec, hope to fill Bloc void

- Giuseppe Valiante

• The Conservati­ves are on the road again in Quebec before a federal election, this time with a relatively new leader but with largely the same message: Tory values are Québécois values.

Party leader Andrew Scheer — like his predecesso­rs — says Conservati­ve policies such as low taxes, strong borders and respect for provincial jurisdicti­on make his party the natural choice for Quebecers.

But while the message might be similar to the one trotted out by the Tories before the 2015 election, the context is not. Scheer sees an opening for the Tories now that the Bloc Québécois appears to be tearing itself apart. And the refugee crisis at the Quebec-New York border is providing him with talking points in the province that positions his party in stark contrast with Justin Trudeau’s Liberals.

On Friday, the second day of the Conservati­ves’ crossQuebe­c tour, Scheer sat down with Cogeco Nouvelles for a radio interview in Trois-Rivieres, about halfway between Montreal and Quebec City. The Tory leader hammered home his message on what he called “illegal immigrants.”

“It’s been more than one year and the Trudeau government has done nothing,” Scheer said in the interview. “And we have to remember it was his tweet that started the problem.”

Quebec’s opposition parties have also used Trudeau’s social media messages welcoming refugees as a major reason for the high volume of asylum seekers at the border.

The tens of thousands of people who have crossed illegally into Quebec from the United States over the past two years seeking asylum have strained social services and made immigratio­n a major election issue ahead of the October provincial vote.

About a month ago, Scheer penned an open letter to Quebecers in La Presse, in which he said his party was “listening” to their preoccupat­ions, adding, “together, let’s build the Canada of tomorrow.”

Scheer says he hopes to collect support on the tour from disenfranc­hised Bloc supporters who have seen their party’s seat total fall to three after seven members recently quit the caucus.

“There is an opportunit­y for people who might have voted for the Bloc in 2015,” Scheer said. “(They) aren’t necessaril­y separatist­s, but believe in a strong Quebec and are a little nationalis­t and are looking for a party that will protect Quebec’s interests.”

The Tories won 12 of the 78 federal ridings in the 2015 election but lost a byelection last year to drop to 11.

 ??  ?? Andrew Scheer
Andrew Scheer

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