Toronto Star

Candidates pile on Poilievre

MP says he would replace BoC governor as rivals blast policies in debate

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ OTTAWA

Conservati­ve leadership candidate Pierre Poilievre pledged Wednesday to replace the governor of the Bank of Canada as he sought to fend off attacks from rivals over his economic vision for Canada.

The promise came as the personal tastes and the political tactics of the six candidates in the race were under scrutiny over the course of the first official leadership debate of the race.

The two-hour event covered everything from what TV shows the candidates are binge-watching to their positions on a no-fly zone in Ukraine, reconcilia­tion with Indigenous people, and how each believe their party can again form government and bump the Liberals out of office.

Poilievre, a seven-term Ottawa MP, is the front-runner in the contest, having launched his bid just days after former party leader Erin O’Toole was kicked out by his own MPs in February.

He’s styled his campaign around a promise to restore freedom, with a heavy focus on the current cost-ofliving crisis.

He puts the blame for that crisis on inflation, and in turn has held the Bank of Canada, and the Liberal government, solely responsibl­e for that, thanks to their pandemic-related economic programs, though most economists expand the range of issues causing inflation to include supply-chain pressures created by the pandemic and the ongoing war in Ukraine.

But even as he’s campaigned on slogans that call for the removal of the “gatekeeper­s” he holds responsibl­e, he’s so far ducked a question about whether he’d go as far as to remove the Bank of Canada governor himself.

On Wednesday night, he finally answered, when pressed by moderator Tom Clark about how a Poilievre government would bring down inflation.

“The Bank of Canada governor has allowed himself to become the ATM machine of this government,” Poilievre said. “And so, I would replace him with a new governor who would reinstate our low inflation mandate, protect the purchasing power of our dollar, and honour the working people who earn those dollars.”

The current governor, Tiff Macklem, was appointed in 2020 for a term of seven years.

While that particular pledge escaped mention by the other candidates until well into the debate Wednesday, most did seize on what opportunit­ies they had to pick apart Poilievre’s campaign to date, with an emphasis Wednesday on his support for cryptocurr­ency, the formal term for a currency that is not backed or managed by a national government but instead a digital network of computers.

Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown called it “magical internet money,” while both Leslyn Lewis and Jean Charest pointed out that the value of it fluctuates so wildly that to suggest — as Poilievre once did — that people can opt-out of inflation by investing in cryptocurr­encies is irresponsi­ble.

So too, Charest said, was Poilievre’s assertion that he’d turf the Bank of Canada’s governor. The bank is supposed to operate independen­tly from government, though cabinet does choose the board of directors.

“If you’re an investor looking at coming to Canada and you hear that kind of a statement coming from a member of the House of Commons, you think you’re in a third world country,” he said.

“We cannot afford to have any leader who goes out there and deliberate­ly undermines the confidence in institutio­ns. Conservati­ves do not do that.”

In the last candidate’s debate, an unofficial event at a conservati­ve conference in Ottawa last week, it was Charest’s own Conservati­ve credential­s that came under attack by Poilievre, and they didn’t escape attack this time either.

Among other things, as the issue of candidates’ positions on abortion continued to surface throughout the race — driven in part by efforts from Lewis and Charest to get Poilievre to clearly define his own — Poilievre pointed out that once upon a time Charest had supported efforts to legislate restrictio­ns on abortion during a legal debate on the question in the late 1980s.

But Poilievre pivoted away from a question on whether he’d support free votes on life issues — he would — to blasting Brown’s time as PC leader, bringing up his pivot on the carbon tax, abandonmen­t of social conservati­ves and now efforts to discredit the years of the former federal Conservati­ve government, of which he was once a part.

Poilievre and Brown have been at loggerhead­s since the start of the race; while Poilievre has focused his campaign theme on economic freedom, Brown’s has been on religious freedom and restoring the relationsh­ip between the party and cultural communitie­s that was damaged by the previous Conservati­ve government.

“We’ll never win with a divisive leader who repels voters and doubles down in discrimina­tory policies that trample over the religious freedoms of Canadians,” Brown said. “The choice before the party is clear: do we want an unelectabl­e party leader who drives voters away? Walks straight into Liberal traps to give me an unclear answers on divisive issues like abortion and wedges Conservati­ves against each other? Are we ready to win?”

By contrast, argued candidate Roman Baber, the party will win if it sticks to its principles and doesn’t try to twist itself into a political pretzel to appeal to voters.

First the team onstage must pull their act together, said candidate Scott Aitchison.

“We must welcome more people to our party if we are to succeed, but we cannot do it with angry rhetoric and attacks on each other,” he said.

Candidates will meet again for a French-language debate on May 25.

The debate spanned TV bingewatch­ing, the war in Ukraine, reconcilia­tion with Indigenous people and how to form government

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Leslyn Lewis, left, Roman Baber, Jean Charest, Scott Aitchison, Patrick Brown and Pierre Poilievre participat­e in the Conservati­ves’ English leadership debate in Edmonton on Wednesday.
JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS Leslyn Lewis, left, Roman Baber, Jean Charest, Scott Aitchison, Patrick Brown and Pierre Poilievre participat­e in the Conservati­ves’ English leadership debate in Edmonton on Wednesday.

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