Ottawa Citizen

Conservati­ves reject Crosbie as candidate

Son of ex-cabinet minister poked fun at PM in recent fundraisin­g skit

- SUE BAILEY THE CANADIAN PRESS

Rejecting Ches Crosbie as a federal Conservati­ve candidate in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador is a headline-making blow to a party that needs all the help it can get in the province, says a former adviser.

Tim Powers said Crosbie, a successful lawyer and son of former Tory cabinet minister John Crosbie, is the sort of prospect the Conservati­ves should embrace.

“The rationale that has been brought forward to deny Ches his candidacy seems awful flimsy to me,” Powers said Thursday from Ottawa.

“It’s unfortunat­e for the Conservati­ve party not to have a candidate like Ches Crosbie because those are the sorts of people we need to attract.”

Powers, a lobbyist and vicechairm­an of Summa Strategies, is a cousin of Crosbie’s. He said it makes no sense to stonewall qualified people in a province where the Conservati­ves don’t hold even one of seven seats.

The party’s sole victory in the province in 2011, Peter Penashue in Labrador, was a major upset that ended with his resignatio­n over illegitima­te campaign expenses. .

Powers said it’s also unhelpful to raise the ire of John Crosbie, one of the most quotable politician­s to ever serve.

“One is hardly surprised at the fallout. John Crosbie can launch a nuclear bomb with the best of them. And a nuclear bomb has just gone off.”

Ches Crosbie was the only person to file papers for the Conservati­ve nomination in the riding of Avalon before a deadline last month. He confirmed Wednesday in a statement that he was rejected.

“The decision-makers at party headquarte­rs in Ottawa decided I wasn’t the type of candidate they wanted,” he said.

John Crosbie said Thursday his son is not commenting while on vacation in Europe.

But the famously outspoken Progressiv­e Conservati­ve veteran, who served in the cabinets of former prime ministers Joe Clark and Brian Mulroney, wasn’t mincing words.

He said the vetting committee in a 15-minute phone call last week objected to the younger Crosbie’s part in a recent fundraisin­g skit that poked fun at Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Wearing a Harper-esque wig, kilt and seal skin vest, Ches Crosbie performed in April to raise cash for a local theatre company. His send-up of “Macbeth” saw his character King Harper face off against “Macduffy” with reference to staffers being sacrificed for political expediency.

It was a bit of fun for a good cause, John Crosbie said in an interview.

“The whole thing is an affront to the democratic system,” he said of his son’s rejection. “It shows an autocratic trend in the leadership of the party that in any properly operated democracy should not be permitted. “I think it’s a disgrace.” Conservati­ve Party of Canada spokesman Cory Hann said the issue is an internal party matter.

 ?? PAUL DALY/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Lawyer Ches Crosbie, son of former Tory cabinet minister John Crosbie, was rejected as the Conservati­ve candidate for the riding of Avalon, in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, by the party.
PAUL DALY/THE CANADIAN PRESS Lawyer Ches Crosbie, son of former Tory cabinet minister John Crosbie, was rejected as the Conservati­ve candidate for the riding of Avalon, in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, by the party.

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