The Province

Bernier quits Conservati­ves

Slams Scheer and calls party ‘intellectu­ally, morally corrupt’

- MIA RABSON and JANICE DICKSON

OTTAWA — Maxime Bernier declared open war on his own party Thursday as the outspoken and controvers­ial Conservati­ve MP abruptly quit the Tory caucus, announced plans for a new political movement and derided his former leader and colleagues as “intellectu­ally and morally corrupt.”

With Conservati­ve caucus members gathering in Halifax for a policy convention that was expected to bring the Bernier boil to a head, the Beauce MP instead stayed behind, summoning journalist­s to a snap news conference that proved breathtaki­ng in its defiance.

“I am no longer a Conservati­ve,” he declared after reading a scathing diatribe against his party and its leader, Andrew Scheer — the Saskatchew­an MP who narrowly edged Bernier out of the leadership job last year in a loss some have suggested he never got over.

“I am now convinced that what we will get if Andrew Scheer becomes prime minister is just a more moderate version of the disastrous Trudeau government,” he said.

“I have come to realize over the past year that this party is too intellectu­ally and morally corrupt to be reformed.”

With the aftershock­s still reverberat­ing, Scheer emerged in Halifax to fire back.

Bernier “is more interested in advancing his personal profile than advancing Conservati­ve principles,” Scheer said.

“He has decided that he is more important than his Conservati­ve colleagues and indeed the Conservati­ve party. He has traded an opportunit­y to influence policy in government for his own personal ambition.”

Bernier said he plans to contact Elections Canada immediatel­y about the path toward creating a new party and will spend the next several weeks travelling the country to meet with people interested in joining his cause.

“I hope that the majority of Conservati­ves will join our new party if they want to beat Justin Trudeau,” he said.

Bernier said it’s the party and its current leader that has lost its way, not him. Scheer, he said, is too focused on polls and focus groups, and too afraid of being attacked by people on the left and in the media to make good Conservati­ve policies.

He specifical­ly pointed to Scheer’s support for retaliator­y tariffs against the United States, saying he was told internal party polling showed Canadians supported the Liberal plan and the Conservati­ves would therefore support it unless the polls changed.

Bernier’s decision comes with the Conservati­ves gathered in Nova Scotia and marks the culminatio­n of months of turmoil — much of it fomented on Twitter — between himself, Scheer and many Conservati­ve MPs who felt he was jeopardizi­ng their chances in the next election.

Bernier’s insistence on supporting an end to supply management, in defiance of Conservati­ve policy, and his recent reflection­s about the perils of “extreme multicultu­ralism” had Scheer distancing himself from Bernier and his comments.

Earlier this week, Alberta MP and immigratio­n critic Michelle Rempel all but challenged Bernier to pick a side — and yesterday, he did.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Maxime Bernier announces on Thursday that he’ll leave the Conservati­ve party.
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Maxime Bernier announces on Thursday that he’ll leave the Conservati­ve party.

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