MacKay deliberating leadership bid
NEW GLASGOW, N.S. — This time of year, people often spend time with family, reflecting on the past and thinking about the future, says Peter MacKay.
That’s something MacKay says he will be doing a lot of this holiday season — especially given the recent job posting for Canada’s Conservative Party leader.
According to polls, MacKay is someone many Canadians would like to see lead the Conservatives. But will he go for it?
“It’s obviously too soon to make a decision of this magnitude,” MacKay said on Dec. 13, the day following the announcement that Andrew Scheer would step down as leader once a successor is chosen.
But, as usual, he’s not closing any doors, and said he’ll be giving it some thought and talking to family and advisors.
When he left politics in 2015, MacKay said it was to spend more time with family, and that’s still a priority for him. He and his wife Nazanin now have three children, aged 6, 4 and 1.
While he didn’t give a date of when he would make the decision by, he said for the sake of the party and others considering running, he won’t drag it out.
MacKay said he wasn’t completely surprised by Scheer’s decision to step down, but offered praise for Scheer’s accomplishments as leader including: leading the Conservatives as they reduced Trudeau’s Liberals to a minority government, gaining seats and winning the popular vote in the Oct. 21 election. He describes Scheer as a decent and hardworking man who has a long career left in politics.
“I think Andrew deserves a lot of credit for where he’s led the party,” he said.
Whether or not he is in the running for the top spot, MacKay said he hopes to see the party continue to unite people of varying backgrounds.
MacKay will be home in Pictou County for the holidays, the place where he was MP for 18 years. During his time as MP, MacKay held several significant cabinet positions, including minister of justice and attorney general (2013-15), minister of national defence (2007-13) and minister of foreign affairs (2006-07).
He announced on May 29, 2015, that he would not be seeking re-election in fall election.
Since then, he has been working at the Baker McKenzie law firm in Toronto, but has remained active on the political scene, attending many Conservative Party events and assisting Conservative candidates in the most recent election.