Toronto Star

Sloan and Conservati­ve party: a right good fit

- Susan Delacourt Twitter: @susandelac­ourt

At least one party leader in Canada is taking some delight in Derek Sloan’s exploding political career in the Conservati­ve party — and no, we’re not talking about Justin Trudeau.

Maxime Bernier, head of the People’s Party of Canada, is positively upbeat about yet another former Conservati­ve leadership candidate on the outs with the party he also once aspired to lead.

“Is anyone still wondering why I left?” Bernier tweeted in response to news that Sloan was going to be ousted for accepting a donation from a white supremacis­t.

“This is getting fun,” Bernier exulted when Sloan argued that the Conservati­ve party had taken a 10 per cent cut of the donation.

Bernier did not leave the Conservati­ves under a shadow of racism and intoleranc­e, but in his new life as head of the People’s Party, he’s been making up for lost time, regularly railing against immigratio­n, “radical multicultu­ralism” and the “cult of diversity.”

If Sloan is looking for a new political base of operations when the Conservati­ves are done with him, one gets the sense he’d be quite at home in the People’s Party.

In their first huddle, Bernier and Sloan could commiserat­e over the rude shock of finding that the Conservati­ve party was not as open to their views as they presumed.

They are right to be surprised. For too long, but especially since they were knocked into opposition in 2015, the federal Conservati­ves have given too many indication­s that they were willing to dance with the darker forces of intoleranc­e in this country.

Actually, you could trace it back slightly farther, to the anti-niqab campaign they ran in 2015, and the now notorious proposal for a snitch line to report “barbaric cultural practices.”

The two main proponents of that ugly scheme were MPs Kellie Leitch and Chris Alexander, who turned around and ran for the leadership of the Conservati­ve party after Stephen Harper left in defeat.

Far from disavowing their role in that debacle, the two doubled down during the leadership race, appearing with two other leadership candidates at a big Toronto rally in February 2017 to denounce an anti-Islamophob­ia motion making its way through the Commons at the time.

Hosted by Rebel Media, it was a hateful free-for-all against “political correctnes­s,” held at Canada Christian College (which is enjoying new legitimacy under Premier Doug Ford, incidental­ly.)

News reports of that 2017 event are still chilling to read, especially in the wake of this month’s Capitol Hill rampage. People were wearing red “Make Canada Great Again” caps without a trace of irony, railing against accommodat­ion of minorities.

Still, Leitch told the crowd that it was good to get together with “severely normal” people and Alexander declared: “the number one threat in the world today… is Islamic jihadist terrorism.” This was right after Trump’s ban on Muslim travel — which new president Joe Biden is poised to repeal as soon as he takes power this week.

Bernier, though also a candidate, didn’t attend this disgracefu­l event, but he can be forgiven for hearing reports of it and feeling that folks such as this had a home in the Conservati­ve party — at least in 2017.

Casting forward to more recent developmen­ts, it’s not like Sloan’s support from white supremacis­ts should have come as a surprise to new Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole.

As Press Progress exhaustive­ly detailed in the report that broke the news of the donation, Paul Fromm — the wellknown neo-Nazi — has been hiding in plain sight, repeatedly posting approval of Sloan’s views on social media. He seemed particular­ly chuffed with Sloan’s views on limiting immigratio­n.

Meanwhile, Sloan pointed out in a Facebook Live video on Monday night that Fromm was a registered party member, which is, well, awkward.

We do know that all Conservati­ves are not racist and many of them have a lot of trouble with intoleranc­e in their midst. Sloan did not have any caucus support — not one MP — in his bid for the leadership.

But it is more than a coincidenc­e, and a disturbing one, that flirtation with racism hasn’t become a career-killing problem until very recently.

In the immediate aftermath of Trump’s victory four years ago, it was even deemed politicall­y prudent for leadership candidates to show up at Rebel’s ridiculous mimicry of Trump-style rallies. In January 2021, with Trump on the way out and that kind of rallying exposed for what it is — a mob — not so much.

So is all this outrage over Sloan just fashionabl­e, or a principled retreat?

Maxime Bernier and Derek Sloan may well now belong to a select club — former Conservati­ve leadership candidates who didn’t fit with a party shedding itself of Trump-style intoleranc­e.

But how is it that they thought they belonged there in the first place?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada