The Peterborough Examiner

Convention chance for Scheer to refocus

Conservati­ve leader aims to help his party win next election

- ALEX BOUTILIER Alex Boutilier is an Ottawa-based reporter covering national politics. Follow him on Twitter: @alexboutil­ier

OTTAWA — Andrew Scheer will head to a gathering of Conservati­ve faithful this week looking to refocus his party on 2019’s electoral battle after a week of unwanted headlines about a former leadership rival.

Scheer will deliver a keynote address to the Conservati­ve policy convention in Halifax on Friday. It will be the largest crowd of Conservati­ves he’s addressed since becoming party leader in 2017, and likely the largest crowd he’ll address before next year’s general election.

For the rookie political leader, it’s a chance to set the tone for his campaign to unseat Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government — and pivot away from a week of former rival Maxime Bernier’s musings on the dangers of multicultu­ralism and “political correctnes­s.”

Last week, Scheer was forced to respond to a Bernier Twitter rant about how “ever more diversity” will “destroy what has made (Canada) such a great country.”

Bernier was criticizin­g Trudeau’s oft-repeated line that diversity is Canada’s strength, but soon faced direct and public criticism from his own caucus colleagues over the comments.

“Mr. Bernier does not hold a position in our caucus. He’s not a shadow minister, he’s not the spokespers­on on any issue,” Scheer told reporters in Regina last Thursday.

“It’s clear that when he expresses those types of comments that he speaks for himself … I’m not going to get into internal caucus dynamics, those are things we decide as a team, as a caucus, as a group of parliament­arians. But as I said, there is that expectatio­n that we all work toward the same goal.”

For a party with a history of rigid message discipline, this summer has been an outlier. Senior Conservati­ve MPs have publicly disagreed on social media, freelanced policy, and at times stolen the spotlight from their own leader — things that would have been hard to imagine under Stephen Harper.

Conservati­ves who spoke to the Star this week suggested the Twitter blowups are distractio­ns that resonate largely among pundits and political observers, and are unlikely to move the electoral needle.

But heading into what the party hopes to be a momentumbu­ilding family reunion, questions about Scheer’s ability to manage his caucus — and their philosophy on hot-button issues like immigratio­n, diversity and inclusion — are undoubtedl­y unwelcome.

The convention schedule puts a heavy emphasis on learning the ropes of modern campaignin­g, including training on the party’s mobile canvassing app, managing a campaign team and “working with the media.”

The 76 policy resolution­s put forward by grassroots members will be debated in public workshops, which will determine which policies make it to a general vote.

The proposals include old conservati­ve saws like breaking down interprovi­ncial trade barriers, simplifyin­g the tax code, and opposition to the Liberals’ proposed national carbon pricing scheme.

Some more socially conservati­ve proposals will also be debated — including several anti-abortion proposals, opposition to assisted suicide and labelling pornograph­y a “public health risk.”

Multiple Conservati­ve riding associatio­ns are advocating cracking down on irregular crossings at the Canada-U.S. border, an issue that the party has put front and centre in the House of Commons. One suggests turning away border crossers “without process,” which would violate both Canadian law and internatio­nal treaties.

Several other motions relate to freedom of speech, including one that would make Scheer’s proposal to withhold federal funding to universiti­es that “do not protect free speech” official party policy.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Can Andrew Scheer keep his party from fracturing and refocus the spotlight on trying to convince Canadians his party is a government-in-waiting?Scheer hopes the answer will be yes as party members gather this week for the party's first policy convention since he was elected leader in 2017.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS Can Andrew Scheer keep his party from fracturing and refocus the spotlight on trying to convince Canadians his party is a government-in-waiting?Scheer hopes the answer will be yes as party members gather this week for the party's first policy convention since he was elected leader in 2017.

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