The Telegram (St. John's)

Scheer’s summer tour rebuilding for 2019

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Rest and relaxation might top the agenda for most Canadians right now but newly-minted Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer is going full-tilt on the barbecue circuit in a bid to introduce himself and boost his party’s prospects before 2019.

As part of his summer travels, Scheer spent a chunk of July in New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador before moving on to Alberta, Saskatchew­an and Quebec.

“A big part of my tour was to introduce myself and make connection­s with people who maybe weren’t following the leadership race but are inclined to support the Conservati­ve party,’’ he said in an interview.

Scheer, who is expected to tour western Canada this month, acknowledg­ed his party will have to cultivate new support if it hopes to head back to 24 Sussex Dr., in addition to holding on to the 98 seats it has today.

Pollster David Coletto said it takes a long time to build up a party’s ground game ahead of an election and summer is a critical time for outreach, especially with a new leader.

“One of the interestin­g things about new Opposition leaders is nobody knows who you are,’’ said Coletto, CEO of Abacus Data.

“If you looked at the candidates who ran for the Conservati­ve leadership, at least in the polling we did, he was probably one of the least well-known candidates in terms of just general name recognitio­n and awareness.’’

If Scheer wants to win a majority in the next election, Coletto said he’ll have to make inroads in Atlantic Canada, where the Liberals made a clean sweep in 2015. And on that score, he said Scheer has a long way to go.

“You look at the polling that’s been put out in the last few weeks, ours included, the Liberals are still doing very well in Atlantic Canada,’’ he said.

“The majority of the region would vote Liberal which is pretty much where they were at the last election so Atlantic Canada remains, I think, a fortress for the Liberals.’’

Scheer, a Saskatchew­an MP who took the helm in May after a marathon leadership race sparked by the departure of former prime minister Stephen Harper, said his party is in the midst of beginning a new chapter and rebuilding trust, including with voters who were wooed to the Liberals in the last election.

Conservati­ve MPS are also preparing to hold their annual summer caucus retreat in Winnipeg on Sept. 7 and 8 _ a key target area for growth.

“There are several seats in the area that we held for many years and that we lost in the last election,’’ Scheer said. “We want to get some colleagues back and show Manitobans and Winnipegge­rs that we want to be there, we want to be there to listen to what we need to do better.’’

He also pointed to the electoral success of the province’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ve premier Brian Pallister, a former Conservati­ve MP.

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