Lethbridge Herald

Is Tory elite vulnerable to populism?

CANADIAN CONSERVATI­VE ESTABLISHM­ENT HASN’T BEEN IMMUNE TO CHANGE

- Stephanie Levitz THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

There were “Make America Great Again” hats, there were signs with Donald Trump’s name. There was a panel devoted exclusivel­y to the topic of whether Trumpism could be exported to Canada, and more than one other session made mention of the Trump effect.

It’s clear that conservati­ves at the Manning Centre conference were thinking about the political ramificati­ons of the seismic political shift in the U.S. in recent months.

But does it matter what those particular conservati­ves think?

In the Populism Project, The Canadian Press is exploring the factors that led to Trump’s victory, how it is changing politics in Canada and testing them against the current economic, social and political climate of Canada to see whether the potential exists for the same kind of political upheaval here.

Held in Ottawa every year, the Manning Conference attracts a particular swath of the conservati­ve movement — the self-described policy and politics junkies eager to chew on the issues of the day. Put another way, suggested Toronto politician Doug Ford, not exactly the average voter.

“Common folk don’t come to events like this,” he told a panel at the conference called “Down with The Elites?”

It’s the so-called common folk understood to have propelled Trump to victory, not just in the general presidenti­al election.

What put him in the running for that at all was his complete overthrow of the American Republican establishm­ent to win the U.S. state primaries and get the nomination in the first place.

The Canadian conservati­ve establishm­ent also hasn’t been immune to upset.

The Reform movement of the 1980s and 1990s rose up in response to a belief the federal Progressiv­e Conservati­ves had lost their way.

Then there was Rob Ford’s mayoral victory in Toronto, argued his brother.

In that campaign, the conservati­ve establishm­ent supported the provincial liberal running against Rob, Doug told the panel, but Ford triumphed anyway thanks to his connection directly with voters.

No one should be naive enough to think the establishm­ent won’t turn again, he said.

“Don’t kid yourself, they are all good buddies at the end of the day,” he said.

Frustratio­n with the conservati­ve establishm­ent in Alberta is also what led to the splinterin­g of the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party there, argued Derek Fildebrand­t, the finance critic for the Wildrose party that was the result of that splinter.

“The old, left liberal clique drove the PC party into the ditch,” he told a panel on Alberta conservati­sm.

The extent to which the current federal conservati­ve establishm­ent is vulnerable might not be known until after their leadership race is over, said Michele Austin, a Conservati­ve strategist.

Thirteen of the 14 candidates in the race have long-standing ties to the party, she pointed out.

“The question maybe isn’t, are we vulnerable? The question is maybe, are the grassroots open to it?” she said.

The 14th candidate could be the man who answers the question — businessma­n and celebrity Kevin O’Leary.

The fact that attacks against O’Leary drew some of the biggest cheers during the Manning conference’s leadership debate speaks to the extent to which he is an outsider in that crowd, said David Valentin, a pollster with Mainstreet Research, running regular surveys of Conservati­ve members on their leadership preference­s.

O’Leary is currently running ahead of the pack in those polls, while a straw poll of conference attendees put his support at about 10 per cent.

Maxime Bernier, a former cabinet minister and longtime Quebec MP, won the straw poll with 32 per cent.

Kellie Leitch, whose focus on immigratio­n screening for so-called Canadian values has generated controvers­y, garnered 5.6 per cent.

Leitch says that many Canadians she speaks with share her views, while the elite just dismisses them, a point she reiterated Saturday in releasing more elements of her immigrant platform.

But critics have accused her of deliberati­ng seeking to stoke the kind of fear-based, antiimmigr­ant sentiment that won Trump and other populist movements in Europe so much success.

Any politician can tell you they receive hundreds of angry and often xenophobic messages, and it is a mistake to ignore them, said former immigratio­n minister Jason Kenney, who is currently running to unite the right in Alberta.

“But we also make a mistake if we exaggerate their influence,” he said. “Most of those angry keyboard warriors leave it at that. Many of them don’t come out and vote, they don’t get involved in the process. Anybody who takes their lead from over-caffeinate­d angry voices is making a huge mistake.”

Many argue Trump’s victory in the primaries couldn’t be replicated in federal leadership race because of how it works. Primaries are a free-for-all vote that take place over months, allowing candidates to surf momentum. The Tory race requires card-carrying members to be signed up well ahead of voting day and all cast their ballots at once in a ranked system.

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