Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Conservatives Cool Their Heels, Eye 2017 Leadership Vote

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Nov, 2015 01:55 PM
    OTTAWA — Familiar, experienced Conservatives will take their places on the opposition benches this week in the Commons, but behind them is a party that is exhausted, in organizational limbo, and only slowly beginning to plan for a leadership race.
     
    A consensus has begun to emerge inside the caucus that the party should take time to regroup and put off a leadership vote until early 2017. Recent signals that Ontario MP Kellie Leitch was on the verge of announcing her candidacy went over poorly among weary colleagues and party members, insiders say.
     
    "People are just tired and nobody wants it to start now," said one longtime Conservative activist who has ties to a potential contestant but was not authorized to speak publicly.
     
    That's not to say that leadership interests won't play out over the year to come.
     
    The party has decided to proceed with its regular convention this May in Vancouver and the principal task there will be to elect new party officials, including a president.
     
    It will also be the first Conservative convention since its inaugural policy gathering in 2005 where Stephen Harper and his team will not be pulling the levers — a power vacuum the ambitious will look to fill.
     
    The convention and its internal elections have the potential to become a surrogate fight between contestants for control of the party, or at the very least, a showcase for them.
     
    "It will be the battle of the hospitality suites," said one Ontario Conservative who requested anonymity due to the early stage of the process.
     
    The party's current national council meets this week to decide the membership of the all-important leadership organizing committee, which will set the rules for the race. Currently, only the party president, vice-president and secretary sit on the committee and it needs to be expanded.
     
    Committee members are supposed to be neutral, but there will be scrutiny of who is appointed and any perceived loyalties they might have. Former Harper aide Tom Flanagan has chronicled the battles the campaign waged with the inaugural leadership committee during the 2004 race, on everything from levies on donations to the window of time for voting. Flanagan wrote that draft rules "reinforced our suspicion that the [committee] was being influenced by advisers hostile to Harper."
     
    The Conservative apparatus will also need to deal with the sticky issue of post-election debt.
     
    Although Elections Canada will be sending millions of dollars in rebates to parties for money spent during the election, raising funds after a loss and under an interim leader is not easy.
     
    Meanwhile, Rona Ambrose has the task of having to rebuild from scratch a leader's office that was virtually deserted after the federal election as the people around Harper scattered.
     
    Veteran Parliament Hill hand Garry Keller was appointed her chief of staff and Ambrose has also selected a shadow cabinet with ample experience in the Commons, including potential leadership candidates such as Lisa Raitt, Tony Clement and Michelle Rempel.
     
    Still, many Conservative staffers have no experience in opposition, and they will have to get used to doing their own research on policy, writing speeches for the Commons and digging up dirt on the government — often by using the access to information system that they often tried to hobble while in power.
     
    Former cabinet minister Chuck Strahl, who left federal politics in 2011, has been recruited to help train rookie MPs.
     
    Ambrose's first hurdle, winning the interim leadership, may turn out to the easiest part.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crown To Decide If It Will Pursue Assault Case Against Former MP Julian Fantino

    TORONTO — The Crown attorney has intervened in the case of private assault charges laid against former federal cabinet minister Julian Fantino stemming from an incident that allegedly occurred more than 40 years ago.

    Crown To Decide If It Will Pursue Assault Case Against Former MP Julian Fantino

    Justin Trudeau Meets Kathleen Wynne Tuesday In Premier's Office

    Justin Trudeau Meets Kathleen Wynne Tuesday In Premier's Office
    Justin Trudeau is showing how dramatically the federal government's relationship with Ontario has changed, making his first meeting with a premier since last week's Liberal election victory in Kathleen Wynne's office.

    Justin Trudeau Meets Kathleen Wynne Tuesday In Premier's Office

    City Of Laval Seeks To Recoup Cash From Ex-Mayor Accused Of Corruption

    City Of Laval Seeks To Recoup Cash From Ex-Mayor Accused Of Corruption
    A Quebec municipality is suing a number of former officials and business partners in an effort to recoup $12.8 million it claims was lost due to inflated public contracts.

    City Of Laval Seeks To Recoup Cash From Ex-Mayor Accused Of Corruption

    Tom Mulcair Says Niqab Position Was A Defining Moment Of Political Career

    In his first post-election interview Mulcair says maintaining a principled approach on the issue was one of the defining moments of his political career.

    Tom Mulcair Says Niqab Position Was A Defining Moment Of Political Career

    Digital Move For Public Service Commission To Data Centre Plagued By Problems

    Digital Move For Public Service Commission To Data Centre Plagued By Problems
    A digital move for the Public Service Commission that was supposed to save time and money as part of a larger government plan appears to have actually cost time and effort after services failed.

    Digital Move For Public Service Commission To Data Centre Plagued By Problems

    Case Of Murdered Dalhousie University Student To Return To Court Next Month

    Case Of Murdered Dalhousie University Student To Return To Court Next Month
    Sandeson was denied bail last week, but Tan said he may still request a bail review in three months or go directly to trial.

    Case Of Murdered Dalhousie University Student To Return To Court Next Month