Times Colonist

Pressure on Scheer to demonstrat­e unity at Tory convention

Debate over Bernier tricky to navigate

- TERESA WRIGHT

OTTAWA — After a week of internal caucus squabbles, Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer will try to refocus the spotlight on trying to convince Canadians his party is a government-in-waiting.

Party members from across the country are preparing to gather this week for their first policy convention since Scheer was elected chief last year.

The three-day event, beginning Thursday in Halifax, comes on the heels of a week of headaches for the Opposition party in Ottawa, inflicted principall­y by Quebec MP Maxime Bernier. After tweeting his view that promoting too much diversity is bad for Canada, several members of the party — including Scheer himself — denounced the notion, leading to questions about whether Bernier would be booted from caucus.

Scheer has demurred from opining on these “internal caucus matters.” But discussion­s are bound to erupt among grassroots party members at the convention about the open rift between the two MPs, who came within a razor’s edge of one another in last year’s leadership race.

Party officials had hoped to focus the convention on unveiling some of Scheer’s visions and policy ideas in advance of the 2019 election campaign, according to senior insiders. A speech by the leader planned for Friday night of the convention is being promoted by organizers as the highlight.

But the Bernier debate could threaten to knock Scheer off message and serve as a distractio­n from the official agenda — all of which would become fodder for the governing Liberals, said Conservati­ve strategist Tim Powers. “This convention can’t become the next great Halifax explosion,” he said.

“A lot of people are going to want to try to figure out what is going on with Bernier and how that may impact party unity and fortunes going forward … so the challenge for Mr. Scheer and his team is going to be to try to bring the spotlight back on the party as an entity that’s ready to compete with the Liberals.”

At issue is not only a personalit­y dispute between two highprofil­e members of the party, but also a desire by some within the membership to condemn the Liberals’ so-called “virtue signalling” — the public flagging of moral correctnes­s, said Conservati­ve commentato­r Alise Mills.

This frustratio­n with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s approach is the reason Bernier’s tweets criticizin­g the prime minister for “extreme multicultu­ralism” are resonating with many Conservati­ves, Mills said.

“Diversity wasn’t the real issue, it’s the virtue signalling and what Canadians seemingly are willing to accept in place of real policy and thoughtful­ness.”

But while such discussion­s likely will play out in some way at the convention, members will also vote on six dozen policy resolution­s, including several that promise to spark lively debate.

One resolution proposes to scrap supply management of agricultur­al products, an issue that will highlight the ScheerBern­ier squabble as they have taken opposing stances.

Other resolution­s deal with regulating abortion, repealing gender-identity legislatio­n and attempting to change the wording of the party’s policy promoting equality for women to equality for “Canadians.”

The party membership has approved 74 resolution­s for considerat­ion, dividing them into three lists to be debated by groups of delegates in workshops. About 10 resolution­s from each workshop will then be presented for debate by the entire membership.

Mills said she hopes the debates, and resolution­s passed, will reflect the party’s belief in small government — “that we’re getting out of the way of Canadians living their lives and we’re doing that with economic and fiscal and social policy.”

Jason Lietaer, a Conservati­ve strategist who worked in Stephen Harper’s war room in 2011, said he believes all the talk of division and in-fighting within the party will be put to rest once Tories gather Thursday in Halifax.

The event will rally the troops and act as the soft launch of the 2019 election, Lietaer said.

“This is an election readiness kind of thing and I think people will be looking at Mr. Scheer and taking the measure of him.”

 ??  ?? Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer has a lot on the line this week in Halifax.
Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer has a lot on the line this week in Halifax.

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