Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Rona Ambrose Calls For Party Unity As Tories Gather In Halifax To Lay Out Priorities

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Sep, 2016 11:08 AM
    HALIFAX — Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose said it's critical her party remain united as it gears up for a leadership race that became more of an open contest after perceived frontrunner Peter MacKay decided to bow out.
     
    Ambrose made the comments Tuesday at the party's caucus summer retreat in Halifax, where senators and MPs will lay out the party's priorities for the coming parliamentary session while managing the behind-the-scenes manoeuvring of leadership hopefuls.
     
    "We all understand the importance of speaking with one united voice," she told Tories. "We know that drama drives ratings, that those outside our party will do everything they can to separate us into separate camps.
     
    "We've been there before, a long, long time ago, and we have no intention of going back there."
     
    Her appeal came a day after MacKay, a Nova Scotia native and frontrunner, announced he would not run for leader. In a statement Monday, the former cabinet minister said he wanted to spend more time with his young family and carry on with his career at a Toronto law firm.
     
    Caucus members heading into the meeting praised MacKay, saying they were sad he was not entering the race.
     
    "It's a bit of a loss because he would have been an outstanding candidate and I think he would have had a very good chance to win," Ontario MP Peter Van Loan said.
     
    Ambrose's call for unity comes amid controversy around leadership hopeful Kellie Leitch's proposal that the federal government screen potential immigrants and refugees for their views on what she is calling "Canadian values."
     
     
     
    The idea ignited an otherwise sleepy contest earlier this month, prompting some of her rivals now assembled in Halifax to denounce it.
     
    Ontario MP Erin O'Toole, who is considering a leadership bid, said caucus members will be discussing the issue of immigration with provincial Progressive Conservative leaders from the region, which has a chronic problem with outmigration.
     
    "We're going to have a debate on a lot of these. People need to know there's already screening for our immigration program and security is a key part of that," he said going into the meeting. "If people want to have some debates on whether that should go further ... that's what a race is all about."
     
    When asked about Leitch's comments, Ontario MP Tony Clement would only say, "I think it's great when we debate issues in our party, but we will have to come together once the leadership race is over."
     
    Ontario MP Michael Chong, who is running for the leadership himself, has accused Leitch of engaging in "dog-whistle politics."
     
    Even Ambrose distanced herself from the idea, sparking a rebuke from Leitch.
     
    As she headed into the two-day meeting, Leitch said she was simply interested in talking to Canadians about values, but again offered no specifics on how her proposal would work.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mural Festival Brings Bright, Massive Paintings To Vancouver Streets

    Mural Festival Brings Bright, Massive Paintings To Vancouver Streets
    VANCOUVER — An east Vancouver neighbourhood has gotten increasingly colourful lately, but the people behind dozens of new murals in the area say the art is about more than beautifying empty walls.

    Mural Festival Brings Bright, Massive Paintings To Vancouver Streets

    B.C. Opts Not To Hike Carbon Tax In New Climate Plan, Won't Adjust Target Dates

    B.C. Opts Not To Hike Carbon Tax In New Climate Plan, Won't Adjust Target Dates
    Premier Christy Clark said Friday that the government needs to keep the province economically competitive to protect jobs in the battle against climate change as she highlighted 21 measures the province is taking to cut emissions.

    B.C. Opts Not To Hike Carbon Tax In New Climate Plan, Won't Adjust Target Dates

    Victoria Workers Try To Coax Shy Snake From Drain With Heat, Food

    Victoria Workers Try To Coax Shy Snake From Drain With Heat, Food
    The creature, believed to be a corn snake up to 1.8 metres in length, was spotted Wednesday as crews used a remote camera to probe the drain for a possible sinkhole.

    Victoria Workers Try To Coax Shy Snake From Drain With Heat, Food

    Vancouver's Insite Safe Injection Clinic Adds Hours To Help Cut Deadly Overdoses

    Vancouver's Insite Safe Injection Clinic Adds Hours To Help Cut Deadly Overdoses
    Vancouver Coastal Health, which operates Insite, says a pilot project begins next Wednesday and will continue for up to six months.

    Vancouver's Insite Safe Injection Clinic Adds Hours To Help Cut Deadly Overdoses

    Quebecer Makes It Far In International Public-Speaking Competition

    Quebecer Makes It Far In International Public-Speaking Competition
    MONTREAL — Raymond Brisebois's 16-year-old daughter was struck and killed by a train in 2012 but he was never able to tell her one last time he loved her because he kept putting off the phone call.

    Quebecer Makes It Far In International Public-Speaking Competition

    Judge Grants Bail To Saskatchewan Farmer Charged With Murder Of First Nations Man

    Judge Grants Bail To Saskatchewan Farmer Charged With Murder Of First Nations Man
    The decision, which was released as the court was closing Friday in Battleford, said Gerald Stanley is to be freed on $10,000 bail.

    Judge Grants Bail To Saskatchewan Farmer Charged With Murder Of First Nations Man