The Standard (St. Catharines)

ANTI-SCHEER MOVEMENT

Some Conservati­ve MPs and party activists are working to oust leader: report

- ALEX BOUTILIER AND ROBERT BENZIE TORONTO STAR

OTTAWA— As federal Conservati­ves prepare for a Wednesday caucus meeting that could trigger a leadership review, some Conservati­ve MPs and party activists are working to oust Andrew Scheer, the Star has learned.

Scheer’s team, which has been tracking the leader’s level of support in caucus, believes he has the numbers to hang on, one senior Conservati­ve source told the Star.

However, one of those working against him believes there is enough anger about Scheer’s leadership that the caucus might adopt a new rule that would allow it to trigger an immediate review. “It’s not around a (leadership) candidate, it’s an anti-Scheer movement,” said the party source. “There’s people from all over the Conservati­ve family.”

Another source said while there’s talk of defenestra­ting Scheer — including among MPs — nobody is actually yet moving to do so.

Under the Reform Act, MPs must hold a recorded vote in their first caucus meeting after an election on new rules that would give them the power to force a leadership vote.

If Conservati­ve MPs opt to so empower themselves, it would take just 20 per cent of caucus — 25 MPs — to then formally trigger a secret-ballot vote on Scheer’s leadership. Should more than half of caucus vote to oust him, the party would be plunged into its second leadership contest in four years.

The 1 p.m. caucus meeting will be chaired by veteran Tory MP Scott Reid (Lanark-Frontenac-Kingston).

“It could be tight,” said a worried Tory insider who is loyal to the leader.

Scheer has faced intense criticism since the Conservati­ves lost to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberals in the Oct. 21 election, in which the party gained seats but lost ground in the crucial provinces of Ontario and Quebec.

According to one of the sources, conversati­ons among those gunning for the Conservati­ve leader began on election night.

While that criticism has moved from anonymous comments to open sniping, “Andrew hasn’t given them a head on a spike,” said one loyalist, noting that Scheer has made no moves to blame any advisers or campaign officials for the failed election campaign.

A Conservati­ve source said Scheer’s team expects a “good” result on the Reform Act vote, meaning the caucus will not give itself the power to force a leadership review.

“The calls have been positive,” the source, granted anonymity to discuss caucus matters, said of efforts to gauge internal support for Scheer.

Scheer’s message to caucus will be “two-pronged,” according to the source, who has direct knowledge of his comments. He will acknowledg­e that while the Conservati­ves did “make gains” on Oct. 21, the overall results were not what Scheer and his campaign team expected. He will also address the campaign’s successes and failures.

Second, Scheer will deliver a “strong message on staying focused.”

“It’s a minority parliament. We’ve proven, I think, that Justin Trudeau’s beatable, he’s weak, but we have to stay focused on opposing Trudeau,” the source said. “We have to stay focused on fundraisin­g, and nominating candidates, and building the organizati­on, and making sure we’re electionre­ady as soon as we can. We can’t be focused on the internal stuff. We have a job to do.”

A number of Conservati­ve MPs who spoke to the Star on Tuesday were doubtful that the caucus would force a leadership review Wednesday.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Andrew Scheer’s leadership faces a crucial test at his first caucus meeting after the election.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Andrew Scheer’s leadership faces a crucial test at his first caucus meeting after the election.

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