The Daily Courier

Tories unsettled over ouster of Derek Sloan

- By STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA — Conservati­ves were torn Tuesday over a decision by party leader Erin O’Toole to try to expel an MP from their ranks over a donation from a known white nationalis­t.

The party’s 121 MPs are set to vote via secret ballot this morning on whether Derek Sloan ought to be removed, with a simple majority required to oust him.

While Sloan has courted his fair share of controvers­y for months, the idea he should be booted from caucus specifical­ly because of a donation he said he had not realized he’d received wasn’t sitting well with some MPs and party supporters.

And the move prompted immediate backlash from some anti-abortion groups, who had been firmly in Sloan’s corner during the leadership race he lost to O’Toole almost six months ago.

The group Right Now urged backers to contact MPs to voice their displeasur­e.

“We feel that this an attempt to discourage pro-lifers from engaging within the Conservati­ve Party of Canada, specifical­ly at the upcoming policy convention,” Right Now’s email said.

“If those officials in the Conservati­ve Party of Canada who do not share our values were not threatened by us taking our rightful and democratic place within the party, then they would not attempt such a brazen and obviously desperate effort such as this.”

The controvers­y over the $131 donated by Paul Fromm, a longtime political activist with links to neo-Nazi causes, erupted late Monday.

O’Toole declared the donation — made under the name “Frederick P. Fromm” — meant Sloan could no longer be a Conservati­ve MP, citing an intoleranc­e for racism within the party. O’Toole promptly kick-started the process of getting him removed from the Conservati­ve caucus.

Some MPs publicly voiced their approval on social media, but privately concerns were immediatel­y raised about the bar O’Toole was setting.

The party prides itself on collecting donations from hundreds of thousands of grassroots supporters. Vetting them all against an unclear standard would be challengin­g, if not outright impossible.

Sloan was first elected as the MP for the Ontario riding of Hastings-Lennox and Addington in 2019 and stunned many of his fellow MPs by running to lead the party not long after.

He has sparked several controvers­ies during his relatively short political life. He’s been accused of racism for questionin­g the loyalty of the country’s chief public health officer, a charge he denied. He’s also suggested being LGBTQ is not a matter of science and compared a ban on therapy designed to force a person to change their gender or sexual identity to child abuse.

During the leadership race, O’Toole told MPs Sloan ought not be kicked out of caucus over the remarks he made about Dr. Theresa

Tam, even buying ads on social media trumpeting that position.

The fact a donation would be the thing that finally turned O’Toole against Sloan raised some eyebrows.

“That he plays silly-bugger word games that homosexual­ity is a choice should have disqualifi­ed him. But kicking him out over a donation from a racist who disguised his identity? So many good reasons to kick him out. Not sure this is one,” wrote longtime Conservati­ve operative and strategist Chisholm Pothier on Twitter.

“Glad he’s gone. But ends justifying the means is easy, principled politics is hard.”

The Liberals had been calling for months for O’Toole to eject Sloan, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday that he was pleased O’Toole was showing leadership.

“Political parties need to remain vigilant, particular­ly in the wake of what we see in the United States, from the infiltrati­on or the active presence of fringe or extremist or violent or unacceptab­le or intolerant elements,” Trudeau said at a news conference.

“And that’s something that we constantly need to work towards as all politician­s in Canada.”

Trudeau, however, did not address whether Fromm’s organizati­ons would also see money they received in COVID-19 supports clawed back as well.

Fromm has been connected to Holocaustd­eniers and other white nationalis­t groups for years. Sloan cited Fromm’s use of his first name in making the donation in saying he was unaware of the source of the funds.

Fromm also holds a membership in the Conservati­ve party, voted in the leadership race, and had registered for a virtual convention the party is holding in March, none of which had raised red flags before Monday’s revelation.

Late Tuesday, the party said Fromm’s membership would be revoked and he would not be allowed to participat­e in the convention.

In an interview, Fromm said he’s never met Sloan, and while Sloan’s policies did appeal to him, he argued that to suggest his money, membership or desire to participat­e in the convention taints Sloan or the party is ridiculous.

“I think basically, somebody is out to get Sloan and are prepared to use just about anything,” he said.

O’Toole won the leadership last year thanks in part to Sloan’s supporters, whom he’d courted.

Ever since, he has faced questions about how he’ll broaden the appeal of the party, given the strength of its social-conservati­ve wing.

That faction was already gearing up to try to play an outsized role at the party’s policy convention in March, organizing to advance several socially conservati­ve positions through policy motions and ensuring they had enough delegates to make them pass.

Their efforts were spurred on by Sloan, who had been pushing people to sign up as delegates, a move viewed within caucus as challengin­g O’Toole.

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