Vancouver Sun

IN LEWIS, A ‘MODEL’ FOR PARTY FUTURE

Newcomer earns ‘remarkable showing’ in vote

- TYLER DAWSON

EDMONTON • As Erin O’Toole ponders the future of the Conservati­ve Party of Canada under his new leadership, he would be wise to give some serious thought to a role for Leslyn Lewis, the socially conservati­ve lawyer from Toronto who rose from obscurity to prominence in conservati­ve circles, seemingly overnight.

Lewis, a commercial lawyer with a PhD, entered the leadership race as a virtually unknown political rookie. She had run for office once before, in 2015, and dabbled in provincial politics in Ontario. But she came out of Sunday night’s leadership voting results as a strong contender in the federal Conservati­ve party, a woman of colour who can lend the party some diversity that it lacked. And Lewis, and her policies, resonated — especially in Western Canada.

On the second round, she led in all four western provinces — Alberta, B.C., Manitoba and Saskatchew­an, and was second in Ontario, Nova Scotia, and P.E.I. In the final count, she placed second — behind O’Toole — in Alberta, and second — this time behind Peter MacKay — in the territorie­s and the Maritimes. She was first in Saskatchew­an. She doesn’t speak French and so was a non-starter in Quebec.

On Monday, after the votes had been counted, Lewis received accolades from some prominent conservati­ves.

“Diversity of voices is important in politics,” said Michelle Rempel Garner, a Calgary Conservati­ve member of Parliament. “She has a very impressive CV and I think it’s exciting we’re attracting candidates of her calibre to the party.”

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, who backed O’Toole, tweeted early Monday morning a photo of himself with Lewis, congratula­ting her on her “remarkable showing” in the race.

“Leslyn has broken through many barriers to become a significan­t voice in Canadian political life,” Kenney wrote.

Lewis — and for that matter, Derek Sloan, another rookie candidate — both performed well in the West. Both candidates also represente­d the social-conservati­ve vote.

“I don’t think anyone would disagree that the Conservati­ves have that stodgy old white-guy problem,” says Ben Woodfinden, a McGill University doctoral student who has written about the role of social conservati­sm within the Conservati­ve party. “(Lewis is) young, she’s a woman, she’s an immigrant, she’s fairly religious, she’s a model of the kind of person they need to attract.”

Even minutes after the votes came in, Conservati­ves past and present were pointing to the fact that Lewis, a Black woman who immigrated to Canada from Jamaica when she was five, could nearly rise to the leadership of the party.

“There’s a lot of optimism about me, because I represent the part of the party that they may not have seen before,” Lewis told the National Post in March. “I think that the Conservati­ve party has to do better in reaching diverse communitie­s ... people see the party as too white and too male, and they don’t see diverse representa­tion.”

Alberta and Saskatchew­an can be reliably counted upon to vote Tory: Albertans elected Conservati­ves in every single riding but one in the 2019 federal election. In Saskatchew­an, voters sent 14 Conservati­ves — every single seat — to Parliament, turfing longtime Liberal stalwart Ralph Goodale.

Rempel Garner says her read on why Lewis did so well in the West has to do with some of the earliest support she managed to find among establishe­d Conservati­ves.

“The caucus members that she picked up the support of were really good organizers and had a particular­ly motivated base within their own supporter constituen­cy — motivated social conservati­ve voters,” Rempel Garner told the Post Monday afternoon. “She had a message that resonated with those groups and they were able to sell membership­s for her.”

But it wasn’t just the West, and it wasn’t just among social conservati­ves where Lewis made her mark. She had managed to quietly build a base of supporters that put her in a respectabl­e third place showing behind O’Toole and Peter MacKay in a major political party leadership campaign.

As yet, it’s unclear what role, if any, Lewis might have in the Conservati­ve party.

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Leslyn Lewis

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