Toronto Star

O’Leary pitched sidekick role for Bernier on Parliament Hill

But after nixing Tory bid, reality TV star looks ahead to ‘finish the task I started’

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— Kevin O’Leary may be gone from the Conservati­ve leadership race, but he doesn’t intend to let himself be forgotten.

Instead, the reality TV star and businessma­n said merger talks were held Thursday between his campaign and Maxime Bernier’s to solidify a plan for the pair to work together between now and May 27, when the new leader is chosen.

O’Leary dropped a bombshell into the leadership race Wednesday when he declared he was giving up his candidacy because he didn’t see a path to victory in Quebec and would instead throw his support behind Bernier, a longtime Quebec MP.

Though, he told The Canadian Press in an interview Thursday morning from New York, he tried to make it happen the other way.

“I certainly said ‘Max, I’m killing you in the polls everywhere, let’s look at it. You’re not going to win the lead- ership,’ and he’d say, ‘you’re not going to win 30 seats (in Quebec),’ ” O’Leary said.

Discussion­s included the idea of Bernier being given a position akin to a deputy prime minister, O’Leary said, but ultimately, he accepted Bernier’s argument that such an arrangemen­t wouldn’t persuade Quebec voters to back O’Leary. “We went around and around and around,” O’Leary said. “The thing is, I deal in reality. He’s right.”

O’Leary, known for his stints on the reality business shows Dragons’ Den and Shark Tank, remains a popular TV personalit­y in the U.S. and dabbles in dozens of companies. None of that mattered in Quebec though, because there they don’t see him on TV, he said, and the fact he was born in the province didn’t count for much.

His decision to drop out wasn’t motivated by a desire to protect his personal brand from being tarnished by a loss, he added. He said he’ll prove that by campaignin­g for the Conservati­ves from now until the next election to fulfil his original promise to unseat the Trudeau Liberals.

“I need to finish the task I started,” he said.

O’Leary said while he has respect for other candidates’ campaigns — he mentioned Lisa Raitt and Kellie Leitch — he feels neither can achieve electoral success in 2019 because they don’t speak French.

The fact O’Leary dropped out is an important lesson for everyone, candidate Michael Chong said in a speech to the Empire Club in Toronto on Thursday.

“He couldn’t win because he can’t speak French,” Chong said, according to a text of his remarks.

“And what that means is that any candidate in this race who can’t speak French can’t win.”

O’Leary said until he was really into the campaign, he didn’t grasp the complexity of the country’s regional dynamics.

He said that if the campaign with Bernier goes well, he hasn’t ruled out a run for Parliament in the 2019 election. He said he and his wife are going to continue learning French, aiming to immerse themselves for two weeks at a time, in places such as Geneva, France or Quebec City. “I have the bug, I really do,” he said. “I loved it, but it also broke my heart at the same time.”

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Kevin O’Leary said discussion­s with Maxime Bernier included giving him a role akin to deputy prime minister.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Kevin O’Leary said discussion­s with Maxime Bernier included giving him a role akin to deputy prime minister.

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