Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Harper Has Role To Play In Conservative Party's Renewal, Ex-PM Mulroney Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Nov, 2015 11:06 AM
  • Harper Has Role To Play In Conservative Party's Renewal, Ex-PM Mulroney Says
TORONTO — Former prime minister Stephen Harper has a role to play in helping renew a damaged Conservative party so that it can one day return to government, one of his predecessors said Thursday.
 
In a well-received hour-long speech to the Albany Club, Brian Mulroney said the rebuilding will have to include policies that appeal to a wide spectrum of voters.
 
"Canada's vibrant democracy is advanced by the collision of great ideas and the articulation of competing visions for our country," Mulroney said.
 
"It may surprise some but this actually can be done effectively without the politics of personal destruction."
 
Only if Conservatives band together, he said, will Canadians invite them back into government.
 
"Change will one day come, but only when Canadians feel that we are worthy of their trust, that we reflect their values, and that we offer them a vision of Canada that is grand, generous and true," he said.
 
"There should be no ideological impediments to our welcome, no narrowness of view, or vindictiveness of spirit as we review, renew and rebuild."
 
Mulroney reminded his audience of the Tory party's long, painful climb back to political respectability after its crushing defeat at the hands of the Liberals in 1993 that followed his two terms as prime minister.
 
Liberals then governed for 13 uninterrupted years.
 
"I will leave in silence tonight the reasons for those victories and the roles of those who split the Conservative vote down the middle," Mulroney said.
 
"No more magnificent gift has ever been handed over from one opposing party to another in the long and turbulent political history of Canada."
 
In the end, he said, people finally came to realize the party had split into two unelectable wings that served only to guarantee successive Liberal victories.
 
"We do not need to learn this lesson again," he told the crowd of several hundred, who gave him a prolonged, standing ovation.
 
To change that dynamic, he said, unity was needed and he praised both Harper and Progressive Conservative stalwart Peter MacKay, who introduced him as speaker, for ensuring that happened.
 
Now as then, the party still needs Harper, who had rendered "important service" to Canada, to help in the rebuilding, he said.
 
While Harper was frequently criticized for centralizing power and decision-making in his office, Mulroney stressed the importance of a party's caucus as a "microcosm of Canada, replete with challenges and achievements, tensions and dreams."
 
Harmonizing the differences into coherent national policy, he said, exemplified the "very essence of Parliamentary democracy."
 
Important public policy, he added, requires powerful debate and stirs necessary dissent.
 
He urged the party to take the time to choose a new leader with care — it chose Rona Ambrose as interim leader Thursday. The party, he said, must articulate a vision and policies with a voice that "eschews harshness" and celebrates the essential goodness of Canadians.
 
Mulroney also paid brief tribute to rookie Liberal prime minister, Justin Trudeau, saying there has now been a generational change in Canada.
 
"Our new prime minister is 43 years old, sparkling with promise and passion," Mulroney said. "I know that we, and all Canadians, wish him well."

MORE National ARTICLES

Gordon Stuckless Doesn't Meet Dangerous Offender Status: Psychiatric Assessment

The 38-page report on Gordon Stuckless was compiled by Dr. Mark Pearce, a forensic psychiatrist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.

Gordon Stuckless Doesn't Meet Dangerous Offender Status: Psychiatric Assessment

Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert

Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert
You must be punctual. You must own your own car. You will be emailing and calling seven days a week at all hours.

Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert

Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling
Saskatchewan has fixed a law that the Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional because it prevented some public-sector employees from striking.

Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime

Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime
Sgt. Brian Wentzell of Halifax testified today that he arrived in Saint John, N.B., on July 11 and began to examine the scene.

Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime

Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship
 An Ottawa man jailed for his part in a terrorist conspiracy says a federal move to strip him of Canadian citizenship violates several constitutional guarantees, including his right to vote.

Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report

Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report
An outside review of the tribunal Canadians turn to when denied social security benefits appears to have been short-staffed from its inception, leading to a backlog of new cases and stressed-out, error-prone employees.

Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report