National Post (National Edition)

Six make final cut for Tory leader race

THREE REJECTED

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OTTAWA • The Conservati­ve party says six leadership candidates have cleared the final hurdles to getting their names on the ballot, while three others who did not make the cut are pushing back.

Pierre Poilievre, the Tory finance critic whose rallies have at times drawn thousands, and Jean Charest, the former Quebec premier who is appealing to more centrist Conservati­ves, are both candidates in the race to replace former leader Erin O'Toole.

So are Patrick Brown, the mayor of Brampton, Ont., who is promoting religious freedom and making targeted promises to ethnic communitie­s, and Leslyn Lewis, the socially conservati­ve rural Ontario MP.

Scott Aitchison, the Ontario MP pledging to end supply management, and Roman Baber, the Independen­t Ontario MPP turfed from the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve caucus for his opposition to COVID-19 lockdowns, also made the cut.

Candidates had to submit the full $300,000 required in registrati­on fees and a compliance deposit, along with signatures from 500 party members, by last Friday to be verified. The Conservati­ves will announce their new leader on Sept. 10.

Leona Alleslev, a former Ontario MP who joined the Conservati­ves in 2018 after crossing the floor from the Liberals, announced last week she was unable to raise the money needed in time.

British Columbia MP Marc Dalton, who like Alleslev had met an earlier registrati­on deadline, also said he did not manage to secure the remaining amount of funding needed to get on the ballot.

Three others who had met the earlier threshold are questionin­g how and why the Conservati­ve party did not verify their candidacie­s, while the party insists the decision had nothing to do with their political stances.

Joseph Bourgault, a businessma­n from rural Saskatchew­an who supported the truck convoy that took over downtown Ottawa earlier this year, said Monday on Twitter that his team had submitted more than $367,000. “We are seeking clarificat­ion,” he wrote.

Joel Etienne, a former Conservati­ve election candidate, said in a statement that his campaign is “preparing a formal protest” to the party after it had tried to submit the money and signatures required on Friday.

Grant Abraham, a consultant who ran as a candidate in Britain's 2019 election, said in a statement that he is asking the Conservati­ve party “for a detailed justificat­ion” of its choice to exclude him from the ballot, saying the money and signatures had been submitted.

However, the executive director of the Conservati­ve Party of Canada said any prospectiv­e candidate who did not meet the requiremen­ts was informed of this fact and the reason why they did not meet the threshold.

“Final verificati­on was based on the requiremen­ts set out under the rules, not any prospectiv­e candidate's political beliefs,” Wayne Benson said in a statement.

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