Toronto Star

Brown’s troubled tenure

- R. MICHAEL WARREN

A leadership race based on who sells the most membership­s can lead to a disappoint­ing outcome. In May 2015, Patrick Brown won the Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leadership race against a more qualified and experience­d opponent, Christine Elliott. She was a three-term MPP, deputy leader of the party, and someone with vision.

Brown was a two-term, lacklustre, social conservati­ve MP. In Ottawa, he voted against same-sex marriage and was an anti-abortion advocate. He offered no clear vision for the PC Party during the race, but used his organizing skills to sell hundreds of party membership­s.

Two years of on-the-job training and Brown’s greatest talent may yet turn out to be selling membership­s. He’s lost a commanding lead over the Liberals and faces serious internal rebellion.

A strong democracy requires a strong opposition — one that challenges the governing party and presents a credible alternativ­e. Brown is struggling to deliver on both counts.

In his first year as opposition leader everything seemed possible. He was dealing with a seemingly spent 15-year-old, scandal-plagued government. He and the PCs vaulted ahead in the polls. Premier Wynne was falling out of fashion.

He swelled the party membership from 11,000 to 80,000 and won two by-elections, including his own seat in Simcoe North. He countered the Liberal attempts to brand him a social conservati­ve by claiming to be a “pragmatic conservati­ve.” That meant surprise support for the LGBT community and a “revenue neutral” carbon tax. Beyond that, Brown was bereft of any engaging policy ideas.

By the end of last year the hope was Brown’s young, slick image would give way to a more passionate politician with a plan for the future.

So far this year he’s failed to deliver on that hope. Instead of scoring easy points against the vulnerable Liberals, Brown attacks without having a plan. He rails against soaring hydro rates but hasn’t offered a solution. He complains about “reckless spending” but hesitates to say where he’d make major program cuts.

A year out from the next election, Brown leaves the impression he’s having difficulty fashioning a conservati­ve platform, one that will energize his base and the electorate. He’s faced with a fragmented party made up of Bay Street suits, social conservati­ves and libertaria­ns — all jockeying for policy supremacy.

Meanwhile, the Liberals are stacking up policy initiative­s like cord wood. A balanced budget. Improved labour standards, including a $15 minimum wage. A 25 per cent reduction in hydro rates. Massive rapid transit investment­s. Financial inducement­s for electric cars. Guaranteed annual income pilot projects. Free pharmacare care for young people. Tenant’s rights legislatio­n. Measures to cool housing prices. Increased daycare subsidies. A strengthen­ing economy. And the list goes on.

Brown’s biggest problems are internal. Angry, disgruntle­d nomination candidates blame Brown for interferin­g with the results. Whole PC riding associatio­n executives have resigned in protested. Brown has had to apologize publicly for the ham-handed actions of his appointed party brass.

There’s been widespread charges of Brown’s candidates winning through thuggery and dirty tricks in ridings such as Hamilton West, Scarboroug­h Centre and Ottawa West-Nepean. In May, Brown expelled Kanata MPP Jack MacLaren from the PC caucus. MacLaren has since joined the recently formed Trillium Party — a conservati­ve splinter group.

Through all of this, party leaders are speaking out publicly. Marilyn Mushinski, a former Mike Harris PC cabinet min- ister, summed up the growing sentiment, “I think it would be an absolute disaster if Patrick Brown became the next premier.”

Respected former senator, Marjory LeBreton, wrote in a recent op-ed, “I am sad to say that over all the years, I have never seen anything so blatantly undemocrat­ic as what occurred in Ottawa West Nepean (nomination meeting) on May 6, 2017.”

Last week, disillusio­ned former Brown supporter, Thomas Mooney, abandoned his bid for the nomination in Guelph saying, “Lately there has been a whole lot of warning flags flying across the PC party landscape.” He may run for another conservati­ve party.

And waiting in the wings is the Conservati­ve website” I’m Out” that’s organizing against Brown.

“Our position is simple: if Patrick Brown is corrupt now — just imagine how bad it will be after a few years in power.” Ouch.

Brown may yet pull his party together and give Ontarians a serious alternativ­e to the Wynne Liberals.

But time is against him and the knives are out.

Brown attacks the Liberals without a plan. He rails against hydro rates but hasn’t offered a solution. He complains about “reckless spending” but hesitates to say where he’d make major cuts

R. Michael Warren is a former corporate director, Ontario deputy minister, TTC chief general manager and Canada Post CEO. r.michael.warren@gmail.com

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