The Daily Courier

Defensive Poilievre promises to fire Macklem

- By STEPHANIE TAYLOR

EDMONTON — Candidates vying for the Conservati­ve leadership framed the country — and the party — as deeply divided at the first official debate on Wednesday, and took turns pointing fingers at one rival they accuse of driving disunity in the race.

The loudest applause in the Edmonton Convention Centre, packed with more than 1,000 people, repeatedly went to longtime MP Pierre Poilievre, who said his vision for the country is about giving people “freedom to take back control of their lives.”

A major part of his pitch is about fighting inflation. During the debate, he took specific aim at Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem, saying he would fire him because Canada’s inflation rate is the highest it’s been in decades. “The Bank of Canada governor has allowed himself to become the ATM machine of this government. And so I would replace him with a new governor who would reinstate our low-inflation mandate, protect the purchasing power of our dollar and honour the working people who earn those dollars,” Poilievre said.

Jean Charest, Quebec’s former premier, responded by saying the MP’s remarks were irresponsi­ble and sowed distrust, saying “Conservati­ves do not do that.”

Leslyn Lewis, a social conservati­ve who placed third in the party’s 2020 leadership race before being elected as an Ontario MP in last year’s federal election, said after the debate she found the comment concerning, saying it “undermines credibilit­y in our economic system. … I don’t agree that Members of Parliament should be meddling in the Bank of Canada.”

Poilievre was the only candidate not to speak to reporters following the debate.

The popular Conservati­ve, who has at times drawn crowds by the thousands at campaign events across the country, was repeatedly targeted by different candidates on topics including his stance on abortion and embrace of the cryptocurr­ency Bitcoin.

Charest, along with Lewis, accused Poilievre of encouragin­g Canadians to invest in the risky digital currency.

Patrick Brown, mayor of Brampton, Ont., said “magic internet money” fluctuates wildly and Poilievre shouldn’t be encouragin­g Canada’s vulnerable investors to gamble it.

In response, Poilievre said he did not encourage people to invest in Bitcoin, but does not want to see it banned because investors deserve the right to choose how to spend their money.

Poilievre also stated a government led by him wouldn’t pass or introduce legislatio­n restrictin­g access to abortion. Charest, who said he supports abortion rights, called that answer insufficie­nt, saying that Canadian women deserved to know where he stood.

“Every candidate in this race needs to tell the women of Canada where they stand, whether they’re pro or against,” said Charest.

Poilievre later said he believes in freedom of choice and would allow free votes from his caucus on the topic. He also laid into Charest’s own record on the issue.

“You’re the only one on this stage who actually voted for a law that would recriminal­ize abortion when you were part of the Mulroney government. You did,” said Poilievre.

“And you can take a moment now to renounce your earlier vote if you’ve changed your mind, but that was your position. You seem to have forgotten. You’ve forgotten a lot of things about your record.”

In 1990, Charest voted in favour of Bill C43, which Brian Mulroney’s government

brought in after a 1988 Supreme Court ruling decriminal­ized abortion. The bill would have recriminal­ized the procedure except when a woman’s health was at risk, but it died in a tie vote in the Senate.

Without mentioning Poilievre’s name, Brown also used his opening statement to take a shot at the longtime Conservati­ve’s bombastic political style, saying it’s not what the party needs to grow in suburbs and areas like the Greater Toronto Area.

“The choice before the party is clear,” Brown said.

“Do we want an unelectabl­e party leader who drives voters away, walk straight into Liberal traps, giving unclear answers on divisible issues like abortion, and wedges Conservati­ves against each other?”

Most of the six candidates directly referenced COVID-19 vaccine mandates as one of the key reasons for what they see as division in the country, with Lewis saying she believes Canada needs to become a beacon of life again because people are “traumatize­d” from pandemic-related health rules.

Charest was a notable exception, as he pointed to disagreeme­nts over oil and gas between the eastern and western parts of the country as the cause of the conflict.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Leslyn Lewis, left, Roman Baber, Jean Charest, Scott Aitchison, Patrick Brown, and Pierre Poilievre debate at the Conservati­ve Party’s leadership debate in Edmonton, Wednesday.
The Associated Press Leslyn Lewis, left, Roman Baber, Jean Charest, Scott Aitchison, Patrick Brown, and Pierre Poilievre debate at the Conservati­ve Party’s leadership debate in Edmonton, Wednesday.

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