Toronto Star

O’Toole makes Tory party his own

- Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservati­ve strategist. He is a freelance contributi­ng columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @jaimewatt Jaime Watt

The ejection of the lamentable Derek Sloan from the Conservati­ve caucus this week marks Erin O’Toole’s most important and consequent­ial moment since his election as party leader. It is the precise moment O’Toole made the party his own.

Think of it as his very own Sister Souljah moment — a deliberate­ly engineered decision that served as a proof point for the rejection of the extremist portions of his party.

For those not familiar with the reference, the phrase originated in 1992, when Bill Clinton seized on remarks by hip hop artist Sister Souljah as a pretense to distance himself from an increasing­ly radical Jesse Jackson Jr. and affirm his bona fides as a moderate, centrist Democrat.

Forgive the U.S. reference, but it seems especially apt, because O’Toole’s current problems are also American in origin. Ever since the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the Capitol, Canadian leftists have worked hard to smear O’Toole and the Conservati­ve Party with the same fascist brush.

This, of course, is patently ridiculous. There is a world of difference between Trump and O’Toole. But the Liberals have run this playbook before, with regrettabl­y devastatin­g success.

However, O’Toole is smarter than all that. He knows he can’t win with just the fringes, no matter how enthusiast­ic; the math simply doesn’t work.

So, seeking to head off a long-term image problem, O’Toole released an unusual statement on Jan. 17, declaring

there is “no place for the far right” in the Conservati­ve Party, which was to be “modern, pragmatic (and) mainstream.” The challenge for O’Toole was that pledge amounted to no more than words on a page.

Then, as fast as you could say “the luck of the Irish,” O’Toole had a now-familiar opportunit­y fall into his lap.

As first reported by the leftist media outfit Press Progress, Sloan had accepted a $131 donation from avowed white supremacis­t Paul Fromm. Even though the donation was made under another name (Frederick P. Fromm), and was processed by the Conservati­ve Party, O’Toole leapt. First, Sloan was banned from standing for the Conservati­ves in

the next election, and by mid-week, he had been formally ejected from caucus.

Press Progress likely thought it was being clever by releasing this informatio­n now. After all, the Conservati­ves had been under fire post-insurrecti­on, and the attacks were accumulati­ng thanks to the party’s long-running inability to disavow Trump. Then, by twist of fate, here at last was a chance to rebuke the far right in a clear and decisive way, beyond what any written statement could accomplish.

Had the far more sophistica­ted Liberal PMO strategist­s been in charge of the timing, no doubt they would have preferred to release this in the middle of an election campaign, when O’Toole would have a much harder time distancing himself from a problemati­c candidate such as Sloan.

However, as with Clinton’s Sister Souljah moment, there is an element of risk at play for O’Toole. Just as AfricanAme­ricans are a core constituen­cy of the Democratic Party, social conservati­ves are central to the electoral fortunes of the Conservati­ve Party.

But again, this is where O’Toole was clever. Sloan was not ejected from the party for his socially conservati­ve views. Were that the case, any one of his previous odious remarks would have been grounds for removal. And so, once again, just like in his leadership campaign where he did not attract one caucus endorsemen­t, Sloan stands alone. Other prominent social conservati­ves, including most notably Leslyn Lewis, O’Toole’s great leadership rival, have not raised much fuss about his ejection. After all, with Sloan gone, Lewis is more important than ever.

On his way to remake the party in his own image, there may well have been more that O’Toole could have done to distance himself and the party from Trump sooner. Although no one could have predicted exactly how disastrous­ly the Trump administra­tion would end, those videos of O’Toole refusing to disavow Trump won’t be helpful in the pursuit of a “modern, pragmatic (and) mainstream” party.

Sloan’s expulsion is a gift in that regard.

What’s more, the whole sorry episode has demonstrat­ed that, most important of all, O’Toole knows how to be a leader.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole’s ejection of MP Derek Sloan shows he knows how to be a leader, and sends a clear rebuke to the far right, Jaime Watt writes.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole’s ejection of MP Derek Sloan shows he knows how to be a leader, and sends a clear rebuke to the far right, Jaime Watt writes.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada