Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Conservatives Considering Leadership Bid Take Stock At Party's Convention

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 May, 2016 11:28 AM
    VANCOUVER — As former Tory cabinet minister Peter MacKay stood at the entrance to his party's policy convention in Vancouver on Saturday, a fellow party member ambled past.
     
    "Good to see you Peter," he said, "we're waiting for you!"
     
    MacKay laughed but didn't answer — a response not uncommon in Vancouver these last few days as those considering a run for the Conservative leadership were pressed again and again on when they might make up their minds to run or not.
     
    By the rules of the race, they have until the end of February to formally file the papers but the party is trying to force the issue.
     
    Leadership debates organized by the party were supposed to begin in the fall, but some are pushing to hold them sooner in order to prompt candidates to make up their mind.
     
    One of the factors for the party executive is money.
     
    The party needs to amp up its fundraising machine as it begins preparations for the 2019 election, and leadership candidates each pay a $50,000 entrance fee. They'll also sign up thousands of new members for at least $15 a piece.
     
    But at the same time, leadership candidates are fundraising from the same pool of donors as the party itself, making the fight for dollars competitive.
     
    Making a decision on whether to run is a combination of having enough money, enough volunteers and the ear of the party's grassroots, said Lisa Raitt, an MP currently thinking about making a bid.
     
    "You have got to get out of Ottawa to truly understand whether or not the brand you put forward is something that Canadians and your membership is interested in," she said.
     
     
    "So far, so good."
     
    The more than 2,000 delegates to the convention had multiple chances over the course of the 2 1/2 day convention to see the declared candidates and the maybes in action, from formal onstage panels to hospitality suites in hotels and pubs across the city's downtown.
     
    Hundreds crowded into a suite of rooms at Vancouver's Terminal City club Friday night to hobnob with Jason Kenney, the longtime Conservative MP considering a bid for either the federal leadership or potentially making a play in Alberta to unite the right there.
     
    He says he'll make up his mind in the coming months. The take-away from the convention for leadership hopefuls is the mood of the party, he said.
     
    "I and some others were expecting this to be a bit of a wake, a funeral reception, and it doesn't feel like that at all," he said.
     
    Kenney's was one of the names bandied about when social conservatives in the party were asked during the convention who'd they support, though that could be in doubt after it emerged he backed a motion to drop the party's policy defining marriage as being between one man and one woman.
     
    All three of the declared candidates — Kellie Leitch, Michael Chong and Maxime Bernier — supported the motion as well, with Bernier going so far as to speak up from the convention floor in its defence.
     
    Saskatchewan MP Brad Trost told some reporters at the convention that Kenney's decision to support the motion means Trost himself is now not ruling out his own leadership bid.
     
     
    But one person whose name was tossed around a lot at the convention is officially out of the race.
     
    A motion to change the rules to allow interim leader Rona Ambrose to run was soundly defeated, to the relief of at least one person.
     
    Ambrose's partner, J.P. Veitch, was spotted on the convention floor Saturday wearing a T-shirt reading "No, she's not running."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quotes About The Prime Minister And His Apology Over His Behaviour In The House

    Quotes About The Prime Minister And His Apology Over His Behaviour In The House
    OTTAWA — Some of what was said Thursday as Parliament debated Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's controversial behaviour the night before in the House of Commons:

    Quotes About The Prime Minister And His Apology Over His Behaviour In The House

    Drug Overdose Survivors More Likely To Die Of Subsequent Overdose: Study

    Scientists at the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV-AIDS revealed those who have recently survived a non-fatal overdose are more likely to die from a subsequent overdose.

    Drug Overdose Survivors More Likely To Die Of Subsequent Overdose: Study

    CPP Investment Board Posts Weakest Annual Rate Of Return Since 2009 Fiscal Year

    CPP Investment Board Posts Weakest Annual Rate Of Return Since 2009 Fiscal Year
    TORONTO — The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board's annual rate of return dropped to 3.4 per cent last year, the lowest since the Great Recession, the CPPIB said Thursday in its annual report.

    CPP Investment Board Posts Weakest Annual Rate Of Return Since 2009 Fiscal Year

    Conrad Black Fights Liens For Unpaid Taxes Placed On Toronto Mansion

    The former media mogul filed a notice of application Wednesday with the Federal Court for a judicial review of the liens.

    Conrad Black Fights Liens For Unpaid Taxes Placed On Toronto Mansion

    'Lack Of Affordable Housing, Public Transit Hinder Vancouver'

    'Lack Of Affordable Housing, Public Transit Hinder Vancouver'
    The Greater Vancouver Board of Trade released a scorecard Wednesday prepared by the Conference Board of Canada that rates the city ninth among big international cities in terms of key economic and social indicators.

    'Lack Of Affordable Housing, Public Transit Hinder Vancouver'

    B.C. Premier Says Climate Change Is Sparking Need For National Forest Fire Plan

    B.C. Premier Says Climate Change Is Sparking Need For National Forest Fire Plan
    Climate change is leading to more wildfires and the country needs a national forest firefighting strategy, says B.C. Premier Christy Clark.

    B.C. Premier Says Climate Change Is Sparking Need For National Forest Fire Plan