Moose Jaw Express.com

Conservati­ve MP Leslyn Lewis discusses vision for Canada during leadership road trip

- Jason G. Antonio - Moose Jaw Express

Leslyn Lewis, who is vying to become the next leader of the Conservati­ve Party, brought her message of hope, unity and compassion to Moose Jaw as part of her Western Canada road tour.

Lewis, the MP for Haldimand-Norfolk in Ontario, held a rally at the Moose Jaw Wildlife Clubhouse on April 4 and spoke to a large gathering of all ages. She presented her vision for the country and then took more than a dozen questions IURP WKH ÀRRU

6RPH ÀRRU WRSLFV IRFXVHG RQ JORbalism, The Great Reset, universal basic income, digital ID, combating indoctrina­tion in the school system, the leadership race, abortion and euthanasia, the carbon tax, democracy, and electoral reform.

This is the second time Lewis is pursuing the leadership position of the ConVHUYDWL­YH 3DUW\ 6KH ¿QLVKHG WKLUG GXULQJ the leadership race in 2020, while Erin O’Toole won that contest.

Lewis is running again because the issues that were important to her two years ago are still present — and are more PDJQL¿HG WRGD\ VKH H[SODLQHG 7KH FRXQtry’s cohesive fabric is torn, provinces are threatenin­g to leave Confederat­ion, and debt has reached $1.1 trillion.

“We are paying $300 million a day interest on our loans. That is unconscion­able. Think of the future of our children,” she said. “We … need to do something about that.”

Canada’s social fabric is splitting because of contentiou­s issues while friends and family refuse to speak to each other,

Lewis continued. She accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of using the pandemic to create fear and divide people instead of working to heal the trauma.

Instead, she argued that policies are needed to unite the country.

“When I ran for leader, that was one thing I wanted to do. I wanted to be a uniter. I wanted to be a bridge-builder,” Lewis said.

There were many recent opportunit­ies to build bridges, such as with the trucker convoy in Ottawa, she continued. She visited with the participan­ts and found it was the most peaceful protest she had witnessed. However, many protestors attempted to contact their MPs for support but received none.

She also pointed out that all Trudeau needed to do was meet with them. Instead, he called them racists, misogynist­s and part of a fringe. This, she thought, was not how leaders should govern.

“A leader has to be a leader for everybody, whether or not they voted for you, whether or not they believe in what you believe in,” said Lewis.

As a bridge-builder, Lewis would support business owners who struggled during the pandemic, support young people struggling to purchase a home, and create policies to ensure parents can raise their children with the desired morals and values. She would also defend people of faith to ensure the government can’t impose a values test on them to receive grant funding.

There is plenty of alienation in Canada, especially in Western Canada, where people feel disrespect­ed and a separation movement is afoot, Lewis continued. The federal government has imposed policies “meant to cripple the West,” particular­ly with anti-oil and gas bills.

These policies need to be repealed since they favour foreign businesses over local ones, she remarked. Meanwhile, Canada needs to build pipelines so it can ship its ethically and sustainabl­y produced oil and gas overseas.

“Europe is buying 40 per cent of their RLO IURP 5XVVLD DQG ¿QDQFLQJ D 5XVVLDQ dictatorsh­ip. We need to get our products to market,” Lewis said, “and I say we do that by building the pipelines. We can go up to Churchill (Man.), get our product to tidewater and make sure we are enriching this nation.”

Lewis believed it is important to help people regain hope after the past few years. She noted that many Canadians have lost trust in the legacy media and government­s, so rebuilding trust needs to occur. She also criticized the use of cancel culture to solve problems.

“I am not a career politician. I am someone who felt a calling … (to) give my life to serving Canadians, to rebuilding this country,” she added. “… I am going to GHGLFDWH P\ OLIH ¿JKWLQJ IRU WKLV FRXQWU\ cost it what it may.”

Lewis will next head to Alberta during her leadership road trip.

 ?? ?? MP Leslyn Lewis, a leadership candidate for the Conservati­ve Party (left), speaks with Dan Neuls during a meet-and-greet in Moose Jaw. Photo by Jason G. Antonio
MP Leslyn Lewis, a leadership candidate for the Conservati­ve Party (left), speaks with Dan Neuls during a meet-and-greet in Moose Jaw. Photo by Jason G. Antonio

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada