The Daily Courier

Controvers­ial MP Sloan ejected from Tory caucus

- By STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA — Controvers­ial MP Derek Sloan was kicked out of the Conservati­ve caucus on Wednesday.

The majority vote to oust him came after hours of heated debate over how party leader Erin O’Toole has handled the process, multiple sources who were not authorized to publicly discuss caucus deliberati­ons told The Canadian Press.

O’Toole triggered the effort to boot Sloan after learning that Sloan accepted a donation from a known white nationalis­t last year, news that broke one day after O’Toole declared there’s no room in his party for far-right extremism or racism.

Sloan has acknowledg­ed he did accept the donation but has claimed there was no way he — or any MP — could have vetted every single contributi­on to his campaign.

While Sloan’s extreme socially conservati­ve views have been a thorn in the party’s side for nearly a year, ahead of the vote Wednesday MPs expressed frustratio­n the stated reason given to eject him was a donation that in theory, any one of them might have received and overlooked.

Sloan said in email to supporters that he will sit as an independen­t.

“I will still vote, debate, and represent true conservati­ve values and policies,” he wrote minutes after the votes were counted.

He also urged his supporters not to rip up their membership cards in the party so they could still wield influence at the coming policy convention.

“No matter how ugly — how undemocrat­ic — the events of the last two days have been, always remember that the Conservati­ve Party of Canada is not the personal property of Erin O’Toole, nor is it the personal property of the cabal that surrounds him,” he wrote.

During his 15 months as an MP, Sloan has faced accusation­s he’s racist, drawn condemnati­on for his views on LGBTQ rights and

for his anti-abortion stance, all leading to periodic calls he be tossed from the party’s benches.

“I’ve worked well with many social conservati­ves in our party over the years. They are welcome in our party, but Derek Sloan’s behaviour is not,” wrote former Conservati­ve cabinet minister John Baird on social media on Tuesday.

MPs also blasted Sloan for his views on Wednesday, and his failure to be a team player.

Those concerns were linked to tensions that have emerged in recent weeks over Sloan’s efforts to mobilize his supporters to participat­e in a Conservati­ve policy convention in March.

The party is investigat­ing whether his use of robocalls to get people to register for the convention runs afoul of telecommun­ications regulation­s.

His use of the party’s membership list to encourage socially conservati­ve delegates to register has also ruffled feathers.

Socially conservati­ve groups are traditiona­lly quite active at Conservati­ve convention­s but it’s believed their ranks swelled during the leadership race, given both Sloan’s and Leslyn Lewis’s campaigns explicitly targeted those constituen­cies.

With strong enough numbers, resolution­s backed by social conservati­ves would have a better chance of passing, including one

that would delete a policy pledging that a Conservati­ve government will not regulate abortion.

That in turn would jeopardize O’Toole’s efforts in recent weeks to present the party as more centrist.

In his email Wednesday, Sloan urged his backers not to give up, a spirit echoed by the Campaign Life Coalition, which accused O’Toole of trying to deflate the enthusiasm of Sloan’s supporters.

“Don’t give O’Toole exactly what he wants,” the coalition’s Jack Fonseca wrote in the email.

“We are so close to winning at the convention that even if Derek gets expelled, we need to stay engaged in the convention to make the party more socially conservati­ve in its policy declaratio­n.”

Sloan’s reckoning is the latest step in the ongoing debate within the Conservati­ve movement over the role and place of social conservati­ves, and could thrust Lewis into the spotlight again.

The leadership contest that put O’Toole in charge of the party was launched after the 2019 election.

Andrew Scheer’s failure to win a majority many believed was possible was attributed by many — including eventual leadership contender Peter MacKay — to Scheer’s personal failure to manage fears about his own social conservati­ve views.

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Derek Sloan speaks to a mostly-maskless crowd at a stop in Kelowna in April 2020.
Facebook Derek Sloan speaks to a mostly-maskless crowd at a stop in Kelowna in April 2020.

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