Truro News

Member for Battleford­s-Lloydminst­er first elected in 1997

- By terry Pedwell

Gerry Ritz won’t enter the race to lead the Saskatchew­an Party, the long-serving Conservati­ve MP said Thursday, after announcing he’s leaving federal politics.

“It is out of the question,” Ritz said in a telephone interview, suggesting he’s finished with political office. “After 25 years involved at the federal level, I’m not sure there’s enough fire in the belly left to take on a challenge at that level.”

That doesn’t mean he won’t be active in supporting someone in the race to replace outgoing Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall, Ritz said.

“I just don’t see myself in that capacity.”

Ritz added that he has been paying close attention to the leadership race, although he hasn’t yet picked a favourite to support before the party chooses a new leader in January.

In a statement posted earlier on social media, Ritz confirmed he won’t be back in the Commons when House business resumes next month.

“Today, I am announcing my intent to resign as the member of Parliament for Battleford­s-Lloydminst­er,” Ritz posted on Twitter. “I will not be returning to my seat in the House of Commons this fall.”

Ritz was first elected in 1997 and held his Saskatchew­an riding for two decades, first as a Reform party member, then under the Canadian Alliance banner before it merged with the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves to become the Conservati­ve party. Gerry Ritz, one of the longest serving Conservati­ve members of Parliament, is leaving federal political life.

Between 2007 and 2015, he served as agricultur­e minister under former prime minister Stephen Harper, overseeing, among other things, the marquee Conservati­ve promise to overhaul the Canadian Wheat Board.

It was during that time, in the midst of a 2008 outbreak of listeriosi­s that killed about 20 people that the outspoken Ritz drew widespread condemnati­on for cracking a joke that the political damage from the issue was “like a death by a thousand cuts. Or should I say cold cuts.”

He later apologized for the remark, which Harper’s office had called tasteless and completely inappropri­ate.

Ritz said he informed Andrew

Scheer of his planned retirement two weeks ago as the Conservati­ve leader was in the midst of putting together his shadow cabinet.

Ritz, 66, spent two decades as a farmer before entering politics. He won office in the same election that saw Deepak Obhrai secure a seat for the Reform party in Calgary — Obhrai was sworn in before Ritz, because of the alphabetic­al list, and is technicall­y considered the longest-serving Tory MP.

But the duo represent the last of the old Reform guard in the Commons.

After the Liberals came to power and Harper stepped down as Conservati­ve leader, Ritz served as internatio­nal trade

critic under interim party leader Rona Ambrose.

In his Thursday tweet, Ritz extended thanks to his colleagues as well as his constituen­ts.

“It has been an honour and privilege to serve the people of Battleford­s-Lloydminst­er; I thank them for the confidence they placed in me for the past 20 years,” he wrote.

Ritz also had high praise Thursday for Premier Wall’s tenure in office, saying his replacemen­t will have “some pretty big shoes to fill.”

There are five declared candidates for the provincial party’s leadership so far. Party members are to select their new leader on Jan. 27 in Saskatoon.

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CP PHOTO

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