The Telegram (St. John's)

Progress in politics

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On paper, Lisa Raitt is as good a choice as any to help federal Conservati­ve Party of Canada Leader Andrew Scheer make inroads in Atlantic Canada. Though the newly minted deputy party leader represents a district in Milton, Ont., Raitt is a native of Sydney, N.S. And, of course, she’s a woman, leading to the predictabl­e statements about her ability to draw more women into politics.

No matter how you look at it, though, Raitt has a difficult road ahead in this region.

Winning back seats will be the main objective, of course. The Liberals wiped the Conservati­ves from the electoral map in all four Atlantic provinces in 2015.

Encouragin­g more women to run for office and expanding women’s roles in the Conservati­ve base may prove even more difficult.

In 2015, Canadians voters did elect a record 88 women to the House of Commons, a number that’s since grown to 91 through byelection­s and other shuffling.

Voters in Atlantic Canada managed to elect a handful of women. The most even split is in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, where three of seven MPS are women. New Brunswick elected three among its 10 districts.

In Raitt’s home province, however, only a single female was elected to one of Nova Scotia’s 11 seats. P.E.I. went four-for-four with men.

And again, every one of those seats is Liberal red.

About one-third of candidates across the country were women in 2015, a 1.5 per cent increase from the 2011 vote. Among all the major parties, the Conservati­ves ran the fewest women, with only 20 per cent.

Raitt says she’s a feminist and hopes women see her as an aspiration­al figure. She also told the Globe and Mail that while she may not personally agree with abortion, she believes in a woman’s right to choose.

While those ideas aren’t radical in this day and age, they may represent a significan­t shift for the Conservati­ve party, given its current demographi­cs.

Even so, gender parity in politics could still be a long way off.

Equal Voice, a group that advocates for greater participat­ion of women in the political sphere, has estimated it will take another 11 federal elections — in other words, 45 years — to reach something close to gender balance.

It could be argued that it’s time for parties to focus on more diverse candidate rosters in general, particular­ly in Atlantic Canada. Our population base has become more heterogene­ous through immigratio­n, while Indigenous people are still underrepre­sented across Canada.

It will take a bipartisan effort to push politics into modern times and ensure our MPS truly reflect the voting population.

Raitt’s words are a step in the right direction for the Conservati­ves. And if she puts them into action, it could be a starting point towards progress for the party.

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