The Telegram (St. John's)

In choosing Scheer, Conservati­ves buck global political trend

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Conservati­ves around the world have sought to shake up the political status quo in the last year, voting for Britain to leave the European Union, electing a complete political neophyte as president of the United States.

For a time, it looked like Canadian conservati­ves were headed down a similar path.

For the first 12 rounds of counting Saturday night, the leader they were poised to elect was Maxime Bernier, a Quebec MP with a libertaria­n bent whose policy proposals included slaying sacred cows like supply management in agricultur­e and federal health care funding.

But in the end, the Tories couldn’t bring themselves to do it, instead handing Andrew Scheer the keys to the Opposition leader’s residence, giving him 50.95 per cent of the available points over Bernier’s 49.05.

Scheer’s campaign slogan was “Scheer excitement,’’ and there was no doubt in the aftermath of his win supporters were vibrating with just that.

“He just hit the right balance of values and experience and he was a very genuine person,’’ said supporter Leslie Whicher.

“He’s the kind of person the whole team can rally around. He’s not too far on one direction or another.’’

In his platform with boutique tax cuts, tough talk on extremism, even his release of his “five key priorities,’’ Scheer was also the candidate many saw as any echo of Stephen Harper, the party’s first and only leader.

So what came to mind for some observers was a button available on the leadership event floor reading “Scheer Bored.’’

Scheer is the “Goldilocks’’ candidate, not too hot, not too cold, said Gerry Nicholls, the former vice-president of the National Citizens Coalition, a conservati­ve lobby group.

“I guess they call them conservati­ves for a reason,’’ he said.

“They didn’t want to take that radical, sort of populist step, or even maybe that libertaria­n step. They’d rather just sort of be safe.’’

The thing is, said pollster Frank Graves, it seemed like the Conservati­ves were in fact ready to not just take the step, but jump.

The majority of Canadian Conservati­ve supporters he’s polled have backed not just Trump, but the right-wing candidate Marine Lepen who mounted a strong campaign in the recent elections in France.

While yes, social conservati­ves did help Trump win and are understood to have helped Scheer too, those views are out of lockstep with the majority of Canadians and there’s little political traction to be gained from seizing on them nationally, Graves said.

And while Scheer promises to put an optimistic, positive tone on Conservati­ve politics and promises, Canadian conservati­ves have a dark view of the economy, and like conservati­ves in the U.S. and U.K., have deep concerns about free trade and immigratio­n, Graves said.

“I have no idea how Mr. Scheer will be able to capitalize on that kind of populist wind,’’ Graves said.

Kellie Leitch had hoped she could, running a campaign seizing on populist themes of antielitis­m and a Canadian values test for newcomers.

She captured seven per cent of the vote on the first ballot and never gained more than eight, dropping off at the 10th round of counting.

This despite having what everyone said was one of the best organized campaigns among the 13 candidates in the race, and the fact that she raised over $1.3 million.

Another contender with a populist appeal — celebrity businessma­n Kevin O’leary — had dropped out of the race just three months after launching his own campaign this year, though his name remained on the ballot until the fifth round.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Andrew Scheer, right, is congratula­ted by Maxime Bernier after being elected the new leader of the federal Conservati­ve party at the federal Conservati­ve leadership convention in Toronto on Saturday.
CP PHOTO Andrew Scheer, right, is congratula­ted by Maxime Bernier after being elected the new leader of the federal Conservati­ve party at the federal Conservati­ve leadership convention in Toronto on Saturday.

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