Times Colonist

Former Tory leadership candidate O’Toole ready for new run

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA — Former Conservati­ve leadership candidate Erin O’Toole held a five-hour meeting in the Toronto area Monday to suss out a plan to make another bid for the party’s top job.

About 20 people from across the country gathered to present O’Toole with a plan to win the upcoming contest, the Canadian Press has learned.

O’Toole placed third in the 2017 leadership race that ended with Andrew Scheer beating Maxime Bernier by a hair.

But Scheer announced this month he’s resigning, a move that came after weeks of intense criticism of how he handled the October election.

Fred DeLorey, a veteran conservati­ve organizer, said an accomplish­ed group is ready to help O’Toole lead the party to victory in the next one.

“These are people who understand that we need Erin to keep our conservati­ve coalition united and know he can win a leadership and ultimately defeat Justin Trudeau in a general election,” DeLorey said.

DeLorey ran O’Toole’s 2017 campaign, and has helped run several others, including get-outthe-vote efforts for Ontario Premier Doug Ford.

O’Toole’s ability to communicat­e in French and the fact he has “real life” experience were key themes in the meeting, one source in the room said.

O’Toole served in the Royal Canadian Air Force, and went on to become a corporate lawyer. He entered politics in a 2012 byelection for the seat in the Torontoare­a riding of Durham. He went on to serve in cabinet in the last Conservati­ve government.

O’Toole effectivel­y handed Scheer his win in the 2017 race. Bernier had been in the lead until O’Toole’s name dropped off the ballot after the 11th round of voting. More of O’Toole’s supporters had selected Scheer as their next choice, so he won the race by less than a percentage point.

While a preferenti­al ballot will again be used for the upcoming leadership vote, other key elements have yet to be determined, including when it will be held.

A committee charged with figuring out the logistics around the race was only put together late last week. The leadership election organizing committee, as it is known, is being run by Lisa Raitt, another former leadership candidate and Conservati­ve MP, and Dan Nowlan, who ran the 2017 contest.

Among the issues they’re wrestling with are the requiremen­ts to enter the contest.

In 2017, candidate had to pay $100,000 and get signatures from 300 party members from at least 30 electoral districts in at least seven different provinces and territorie­s. Thirteen people met those requiremen­ts and debate is ongoing about whether setting the bar — financial or otherwise — higher would make for a smaller field, something many party members are hoping to see.

The timing of the race is also up in the air. A Conservati­ve party policy convention scheduled for April has been pushed back to November.

 ??  ?? Erin O'Toole in the House of Commons.
Erin O'Toole in the House of Commons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada