Times Colonist

Scheer appoints ex-Liberal as deputy leader

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OTTAWA — Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer says despite considerab­le infighting over his future as party leader he will remain at the helm, and as a show of how he intends to broaden its appeal he has appointed a former Liberal as his deputy.

But later Thursday, he heard from several failed Conservati­ve candidates and grassroots members of the party who said to truly achieve that, he is going to have to do some soul searching.

“Introspect­ion is a good thing. He needs to reflect what he can offer to the party going forward,” said Carol Clemenhage­n, who ran for the Tories in Ottawa Centre, home to federal Liberal cabinet minister Catherine McKenna.

Clemenhage­n said one reason she ran was to show that women and moderates have a place in the party. The way Scheer is articulati­ng his and the party’s positions on issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage aren’t reflecting that, she said.

“People have their own personal positions on issues, their own private positions,” she said. “The relevant point is: What is the party position?”

On those positions, the party needs a far more moderate stance and a leader who can represent the people who share it, she said. Whether Scheer is that person is up to him to figure out, she said.

Scheer announced Thursday that Torontoare­a MP Leona Alleslev will be his deputy leader, replacing Lisa Raitt, a longtime Conservati­ve who lost her seat.

Alleslev was first elected as a Liberal in 2015, but crossed the floor to join the Conservati­ves in September 2018. At the time she said she disagreed with the Liberals’ handling of the economy and foreign affairs.

Alleslev’s riding of Aurora-Oak Ridges Richmond Hill is the kind of seat the Conservati­ves will need to win in bigger numbers in the next election: suburban, diverse and filled with middle-class families.

Her appointmen­t is about proving the party is open to all comers, Scheer said.

“Leona embodies exactly the type of person that we are trying to reach out to, to show that if you have voted Liberal in the past, if you are disappoint­ed with the government that Justin Trudeau has been providing Canadians, there is a place for you in the Conservati­ve Party of Canada.”

Justina McCaffrey, a well-known designer who had sought to win a similar suburban riding in Ottawa for the Tories, called Scheer a “nice guy” who could use some rebranding, though it might not be enough.

She said she’ll support him if he changes the team around him.

Two campaigns have been launched to galvanize grassroots support against Scheer in hopes of either forcing him to step aside soon, or lose a leadership review that will be held at the party’s convention in April.

One is being run by Kory Teneycke, a former spokesman for former Conservati­ve prime minister Stephen Harper. He also ran the leadership campaign for Scheer’s main rival for the job, Maxime Bernier.

Teneycke also managed the successful 2018 campaign for Ontario Premier Doug Ford, a wing of the conservati­ve movement sidelined during the federal election.

Ford said Thursday he is staying out of the mix. It’s up to Scheer to show the party how he will lead them into the election, he said.

Teneycke’s efforts will include recruiting prominent Conservati­ves to come out against Scheer. It will be backed by advertisin­g and media outreach to convince people they need to mobilize come April and vote Scheer out during the leadership review.

 ??  ?? Conservati­ve deputy leader Leona Alleslev looks on as Andrew Scheer speaks to reporters Thursday in Ottawa.
Conservati­ve deputy leader Leona Alleslev looks on as Andrew Scheer speaks to reporters Thursday in Ottawa.

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