Times Colonist

O’Leary quits Conservati­ve leadership race, backs Bernier

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA — Celebrity investor and reality-TV star Kevin O’Leary, who rattled Conservati­ve cages three months ago when he joined the party’s leadership race, did it again Wednesday by quitting a contest observers believe he had every chance of winning.

O’Leary’s stunning news — he’s throwing his support behind Quebec rival Maxime Bernier — appeared to catch members of his campaign team off-guard as they gathered to prepare for Wednesday’s final leadership debate.

Behind the scenes, however, O’Leary been mulling the idea for about a week, sources said, ever more convinced that as leader, he might never be able to rally enough support in Quebec to deliver a majority Conservati­ve mandate in 2019 because of his inability to speak French.

“It’s selfish to just take the leadership and say, ‘Great, I’m the leader, now in 24 months I will lose for the party,’ ” O’Leary told a news conference in Toronto. “That’s not right. That’s just wrong.”

The tipping point, he said, came when he saw Conservati­ve membership numbers overall that were even higher than he expected, which meant he didn’t have as large a share of the support as he thought he did.

When he learned that ballots had already been printed and mailed, he decided to act, picking up a phone at 1:30 a.m. to call Bernier, a longtime Quebec MP, to pledge his support.

The two share similar policies, while Bernier can deliver the number of seats the Tories need to form a majority government, O’Leary said.

On the campaign trail, the two weren’t exactly the best of friends. Bernier at one point called O’Leary a “loser,” and each campaign more or less accused the other of voter fraud, though the allegation­s were never proven.

But it was all smiles Wednesday as Bernier said the endorsemen­t marks a turning point.

“As Kevin says, in Quebec the numbers for me are very good and the competitio­n I had outside Quebec was really Kevin,” Bernier said in French.

O’Leary said he’ll do whatever it takes to help Bernier, but defended the fact his campaign sent out a fundraisin­g letter just hours before he dropped out. He said he still needs the funds and will continue to raise money, though he didn’t explain why.

A moderator’s reference to O’Leary’s withdrawal drew sustained applause from the debate audience Wednesday night in Toronto.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Conservati­ve Party leadership candidate Maxime Bernier, left, appears with Kevin O’Leary at a news conference in Toronto on Wednesday.
NATHAN DENETTE, THE CANADIAN PRESS Conservati­ve Party leadership candidate Maxime Bernier, left, appears with Kevin O’Leary at a news conference in Toronto on Wednesday.

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