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Former Conservati­ve leader alleges Chinese interferen­ce may have played a part in his ouster

- Kate McKenna

Former Conservati­ve leader Erin O'Toole believes foreign interferen­ce may have led to his removal as party leader, according to documents tabled before the foreign interferen­ce in‐ quiry.

In a document containing notes from an interview be‐ tween O'Toole and lawyers acting for the Foreign Inter‐ ference Commission earlier this year, O'Toole is quoted as saying he was suspicious about the motives of the per‐ son behind the petition that called for a leadership review following the 2021 election.

"Mr. O'Toole also believes foreign interferen­ce played a role in his ouster as party leader," says the document. "In the immediate aftermath of the election loss, a petition and public relations cam‐ paign against Mr. O'Toole was initiated within 48 hours by a high-profile CPC party member who had served on the national council of the party."

That Conservati­ve Party member was Bert Chen, who was suspended from the par‐ ty's national council after launching the petition to re‐ call O'Toole as leader.

"A trusted source in a di‐ aspora group and a journalist have advised Mr. O'Toole in confidence that this specific party member had unusual ties to the [People's Republic of China] government. Mr. O'Toole has no informatio­n to corroborat­e these claims, but he trusts the sources," the document says.

"This informatio­n was brought to his attention after he had already lost the party leadership."

O'Toole's Conservati­ve Party lost the 2021 election, winning 119 of 338 seats, de‐ spite winning the popular vote.

Chen's petition did not lead to O'Toole stepping down as party leader. He was forced to leave the job in February 2022 following an internal caucus revolt.

"Certain things in my re‐ port were told to me by peo‐ ple," O'Toole told Power & Politics host David Cochrane on Wednesday. "I have no verifiable evidence with re‐ spect to Mr. Chen or anyone else. But I do think sunlight is the great disinfecta­nt, and we need to have more trans‐ parency."

Chen denies ties to Chi‐ nese government

In an email sent to CBC News, Chen said he launched the petition to elect a new Conservati­ve leader "on the basis that Mr. O'Toole was not fit to lead our country or our party."

"As a Canadian born in Taiwan whose family fought in the Chinese Civil War against the Chinese Commu‐ nist Party, I can unreserved­ly assure all Canadians that I have no ties to the PRC regime," he said.

"My motivation for the pe‐ tition to recall Mr. O'Toole's leadership was due to his flip-flop from his leadership campaign promise to never institute a carbon tax. The fact that he does not men‐ tion this is a testimony to the credibilit­y of him and his sources."

Conservati­ve Party spokespers­on Sarah Fischer called O'Toole's reported alle‐ gations "ridiculous."

"It was the Conservati­ve Party of Canada caucus that voted to remove the thenleader, not a National Council member," she said in an email to CBC News.

In O'Toole's testimony be‐ fore the inquiry on Wednes‐ day, he said Chinese foreign interferen­ce may have led to the defeat of up to nine CPC candidates - a claim he has made in the past.

He said his party was a victim of misinforma­tion claims on the social media platform WeChat, used by many Chinese-Canadians.

O'Toole said he believed his party was targeted by the Chinese government in part because of its push to probe Chinese interferen­ce in Canada's National Microbi‐ ology Laboratory, in addition to a private members bill supporting a foreign agent registry.

WATCH | O'Toole says Conservati­ves lost seats in last election due to foreign interferen­ce:

He also said he does not believe Chinese meddling changed the actual outcome of the election.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau dismissed claims of foreign interferen­ce affecting riding results.

"I can understand where someone who lost an elec‐ tion is trying to look for rea‐ sons other than themselves for why they lost the elec‐ tion," he said speaking in Toronto.

"The reality is, we put in place a panel formed by top independen­t public servants, a task force staffed by secu‐ rity officials throughout our intelligen­ce and security ser‐ vices to ensure the integrity of the 2019 and 2021 elec‐ tions. And the conclusion of all those mechanisms is un‐ equivocall­y that the election's integrity held."

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