The Daily Courier

Conservati­ve leadership candidates spar over COVID-19, trucker convoy

- By STEPHANIE TAYLOR

OTTAWA — Longtime Conservati­ve MP Pierre Poilievre and Jean Charest, Quebec’s former premier, took turns attacking one another’s political records Thursday in the first unofficial debate in the Tory leadership race.

Poilievre, who’s campaignin­g on a promise to give more freedoms to Canadians and has been attracting crowds of thousands at rallies across the country, took aim at Charest throughout the event, where five out of the six candidates appeared on stage before a room of conservati­ve faithful.

The Ottawa-area MP repeatedly called Charest a “Liberal” for having once led the Quebec Liberal party, as he has done since before the former premier officially entered the race.

“We reduced income taxes and the credit rating agency actually said that that’s what allowed Quebecers to come through the great recession much better than anyone else,” Charest said in defence of his record.

Poilievre responded that Charest raised several other taxes, including the gas tax and the sales tax, and left Quebec the most indebted province in all of Canada during his time as premier.

At one point, Poilievre repeatedly pressed Charest about past work with the telecom giant Huawei.

“He has never told us how much he got paid,” he said. “This is a company whose software and hardware has been banned from the 5G networks of four of the Five Eyes countries because of allegation­s, in many cases proven, that they have used it for espionage.”

Speaking to reporters afterward, Charest dismissed any suggestion that his past work with the company was a liability for him in the race. He said it’s not an issue that he hears about while campaignin­g, saying any mention of it is history. Charest said he considered the attacks on him to be compliment.

The debate, organized by the Canada Strong and Free Network political advocacy group, also featured heated exchanges between candidates about their levels of support for the truckers’ convoy protest in Ottawa and for those fighting COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandates.

Charest, who is pitching himself as an experience­d national leader who believes in a united Canada, earned boos from the crowd of hundreds by criticizin­g Poilievre for endorsing what he called illegal blockades.

Poilievre responded by saying “Mr. Charest learned about the trucker convoy on CBC like other liberals, and he misreprese­nted them.” He added that Charest perpetuate­d cancel culture for saying in previous interviews that Poilievre’s support of the protest means he should be disqualifi­ed.

Leslyn Lewis, the MP who placed third in the 2020 leadership race, also challenged Poilievre over his record on standing up for Canadians’ freedoms throughout the pandemic. Many Conservati­ves opposed health measures such as vaccine and mask mandates over concerns that they infringe on personal choice.

As Poilievre tried arguing that he was one of the loudest voices, Lewis charged he was not.

“You did not speak up until it was convenient for you to speak up. You did not even go to the trucker protest,” she said.

“You actually went and you took a picture in your neighbourh­ood at a local stop.” Lewis, who is promising to ban so-called sex-selective abortions, also challenged Poilievre over his stance on social conservati­ve issues. She accused him of avoiding media questions about abortion in recent days after the draft of a U.S. Supreme Court decision that would overturn Roe v. Wade was leaked.

“He cannot just be a minister of finance if he wants to be a prime minister,” she said.

Poilievre said earlier in the week that a government led by him wouldn’t introduce or pass laws that restrict abortion.

As Charest, Poilievre and Lewis all took turns focusing on one another, Ontario MP Scott Aitchison said on stage that as Conservati­ves, “all we do is yell and scream at each other,” and said that’s an issue if the party wants to be competitiv­e in the next election. However, there were heated exchanges throughout the entire debate.

“Here we are calling each other names. What Canadian is going to trust this lot? We’ve got to do better,” said Aitchison.

He also added that: “Every time I hear a Conservati­ve talking about some conspiracy theory — there’s another group of swing voters in the GTA that just are not going to come our way.”

That comment prompted pushback from Lewis as well as Roman Baber, the independen­t MPP from Ontario who was booted from Doug Ford’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ve caucus in 2021 over opposing a COVID-19 lockdown that was in place at the time.

Baber says many Canadians still cannot board a plane in the country because of a federal COVID-19 vaccine mandate.

“Canadians are witnessing the continuous erosion of our democracy and we should be mindful of this conversati­on instead of mocking them like the Prime Minister does,” said Baber.

While the leadership contenders sparred on stage, most appeared collegial once the questions ended. Poilievre and Charest, however, studiously avoided shaking hands with each other on stage.

Candidates were also questioned on the party’s past few election losses, former leader Erin O’Toole’s attempts to move the party to the centre to grow support, and issues of national unity.

Patrick Brown, the mayor of Brampton, Ont., did not take part in Thursday’s event. His campaign said he was focused on selling membership­s to supporters before the June 3 deadline needed to vote in the Conservati­ve leadership race.

Moderator Jamil Jivani, incoming president of the Canada Strong and Free Network, took aim at Brown’s campaign tactics in his absence.

“Some Canadians are concerned that Mayor Brown is sowing division in our country. He has been criticized for manipulati­ng diaspora politics to bolster his campaign,” Jivani said.

Brown will be on stage next week when all six candidates take part in the first official debate in Edmonton.

The party is set to pick a new leader on Sept. 10.

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