Times Colonist

Liberals cautious about possible electoral impact of Conservati­ve rift

- JOAN BRYDEN

NANAIMO — Conservati­ves, from leader Andrew Scheer on down, are predicting that Maxime Bernier’s decision to quit their party and start his own will end up helping Justin Trudeau’s Liberals win re-election next year.

But one notable person isn’t taking that bet: Trudeau himself.

The prime minister was careful Thursday, as he wrapped up a three-day cabinet retreat on Vancouver Island, to avoid wading into the Conservati­ves’ civil war.

“Over these past three days, I’ve remained focused with my team on how we’re going to continue to serve Canadians,” Trudeau said at a news conference.

“I’m going to let Conservati­ves focus on themselves, as they are right now. We’re going to stay focused on Canadians.”

Federal cabinet ministers repeated much the same message, as did Liberal MPs trotted out at the Conservati­ves’ national convention in Halifax to respond to the Bernier bombshell.

Their reluctance to gloat over the Tory turmoil likely reflects an old political maxim: Never get in the way of an opponent who’s self-destructin­g.

But it also reflects a genuine caution. Liberal insiders privately admit they don’t know how Bernier’s departure will affect the Tories — or, by extension, their own party — in the long term.

If other Conservati­ve notables — including MPs but, most importantl­y, donors — follow Bernier in his bid to create a new, more libertaria­n party, that could well split the Tory family and deplete their well-stocked war chest. In that case, the Liberals could indeed stand to benefit — particular­ly in the renegade MP’s home province of Quebec, where the Conservati­ves have been hoping to make gains.

If, however, Bernier finds himself isolated and unable to attract much support, he could quickly become irrelevant. In that case, the Liberals would have lost one of their best cudgels with which to beat Scheer, who would no longer have to placate or account for the controvers­ial views of his prickly former leadership rival.

Liberal strategist­s privately point out that politics, in an era when few voters feel any long-term attachment to any particular party, has become unpredicta­ble — which is why Trudeau stuck to his party’s own game plan during his wrap-up news conference Thursday.

Trudeau did, however, take one shot at the Conservati­ves, over the revelation that a Tory robocall in a Toronto riding used the cancer diagnosis facing the riding’s Liberal MP, Salma Zahid, to try to recruit new members.

“We all have friends and family members who’ve struggled with cancer. And for any political party to bring that element into partisan politics … I hope all Canadians, regardless of political parties, are better than that,” he said.

The Conservati­ves have blamed the robocall on one now-former member of the party’s riding associatio­n.

Zahid announced last February that she had been diagnosed with stage four nonHodgkin’s lymphoma. Trudeau said Zahid’s cancer is now in remission.

 ??  ?? With the federal cabinet assembled behind him, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau answers questions from reporters Thursday in Nanaimo.
With the federal cabinet assembled behind him, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau answers questions from reporters Thursday in Nanaimo.

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