Big crowds turning out for Poilievre suggest a very different kind of Conservative leadership race

 

In the last two Conservative leadership races, the supposed front-runners stumbled before reaching the finish line. This time, however, the front-runner is only showing signs of gaining ground.

Swelling crowd counts and MP endorsements aren’t ironclad guarantees of success, but they certainly don’t hurt. And Pierre Poilievre — with his populist appeals to frustration with government “gatekeepers” and calls to make Canada “the freest country on earth” — is doing well on both those measures.

The CBC has tacitly declared Poilievre’s support to be “white supremacist” by describing his campaign as the “Trumpification” of Canadian politics based on one or two twitter comments by fellow travelers. “Trumpification” is the liberal left dog whistle for their racism toward white people.

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Patrick Brown vows in video to end Canada’s ‘terrorist’ designation for Tamil Tigers

OTTAWA—Conservative leadership candidate Patrick Brown says he will “lift the ban” on a designated terrorist organization known as the Tamil Tigers, open up immigration to “any Tamil family that wants to come to Canada” and, as prime minister, would apologize for Canada’s failure to help Tamil refugees as it has Ukrainians or the Vietnamese boat people.

In a short video viewed by the Star, the Brampton mayor appeals to Tamil community representatives, telling them that he needs their “help” in order to win the leadership of the federal Conservative party, because the people he has to beat “are the same people who put the ban on” the Tamil Tigers.

What a slime.

HMA

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Charest gets a hate-on for Poilievre

Charest condemns leadership rival Poilievre’s convoy, crypto, climate policies

Doubling down on his condemnation of his Conservative leadership rival, Jean Charest says that Pierre Poilievre should be disqualified from becoming leader of the federal Conservative party over his support of the “Freedom Convoy.”

“Everyone knows that Pierre Poilievre supported the blockade,” Charest said in an interview on CTV’s Question Period. “If you say to Canadians: ‘I want to be the leader of the Conservative Party and I want to be the chief legislator of the country, but I don’t have to obey the laws,’ I’m sorry. That’s not just a failure in leadership. It disqualifies you, as far as I’m concerned, as being someone who thinks or aspires to be a leader of a party.”

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Pierre Poilievre draws huge crowds, but which candidate will have the memberships?

With 10 days left for candidates to enter the Conservative party leadership race — and 20 before $300,000 worth in fees are due — what’s capturing the attention of those watching as of late are the crowds.

More specifically, who’s drawing them in and who isn’t.

Pierre Poilievre would fall into the first category, as the longtime Ottawa-area MP has been consistently appearing before massive groups of people at rallies across the country.

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Desperate sounding Charest blasts Poilievre for supporting Freedom Convoy

Conservative leadership hopeful Jean Charest is turning up the heat against perceived frontrunner Pierre Poilievre, taking him to task for his support of the trucker protests that took over downtown Ottawa and led to blockades at border crossings.

“I have a competitor by the name of Mr. Poilievre who supported, as you know, the blockade,” Charest told CTV Morning Live on Friday. “And if you want to be a leader in this country and a legislator, you can’t make laws and break laws.

“Laws are not a buffet table, if you’re a legislator, from which you choose what you want. Because what you’re really saying to people is I’m above the law,” Charest added in a separate interview with CTV News.

Poilievre seems to have gained the momentum.

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‘This is a new thing’: Is Pierre Poilievre’s campaign attracting a different type of Conservative?

OTTAWA—As Pierre Poilievre and his team watch thousands of people jam into his Conservative leadership campaign events, they say they are seeing a new political movement take shape.

Gesturing to all the young people at an event in North York last week, Conservative MP Adam Chambers called it proof Poilievre is reaching a different demographic.

“This is a new thing for the Conservative party,” he said.

But Poilevre’s campaign also knows that a movement alone isn’t going to win him the leadership.

What appears to be drawing them are his calls for freedom: from vaccine mandates, from regulations that make it hard to build affordable homes, from taxes that make it expensive to drive a car, and as a whole from a government he says has too much control over their lives.

HMA

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Conservative leadership candidates jockey for position on the carbon tax

As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government prepares to hike the federal carbon tax another ten dollars per tonne of emissions on Friday, the leading Conservative leadership candidates all agree on one thing — it’s the wrong move.

But that’s where their consensus ends. Questions about what Canada should do with carbon pricing, financial offsets to consumers and the broader fight against climate change are still very much up for debate among Conservative leadership candidates. In many cases, the candidates’ master plans are still being written.

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Poilievre vows to ban oil from ‘polluting dictatorships,’ double production in Newfoundland

Conservative leadership candidate Pierre Poilievre promised Friday a government led by him would take a hard line on what he calls “polluting dictatorships” by dramatically curbing foreign oil imports from countries like Saudi Arabia while boosting Canadian production to make up the shortfall.

Oil imports have moved to the forefront of the political agenda since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his invasion of Ukraine last month. In response to that violent incursion, many Western democracies have signalled they’ll boycott Russian energy products to cut off a crucial source of foreign currency for Putin and his regime.

How about declaring energy a matter of national security and building pipelines?

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How the Liberal-NDP deal could impact Conservative leadership race strategy

The possibility of having the next Conservative leader serve up to three years on the opposition benches before the next general election presents opportunities as well as challenges for leadership hopefuls, according to strategists.

With a Liberal-NDP deal in place until 2025, Conservative leadership contenders Pierre Poilievre and Jean Charest, in particular, might want to think twice before claiming they are “running for prime minister” or that they are “built to win” a majority government.

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Welcome to Jean Charest’s world: the backstory on the Conservative Party’s would-be messiah that he’d really rather you not know.

Providing services to Huawei’s Meng Wanzhou. Guiding Xi Jinping’s “national champion” telecom through Canada’s national-security roadblocks. Supplying megaphone services for Beijing’s disinfo ops. . .

It’s official. After a long hiatus from the internecine comings and goings at the jet-setting apex of Canada’s political class, Jean Charest is already being touted as the frontrunner in the race for the leadership of the Conservative Party of Canada.

It was only on Thursday evening that Charest officially launched his candidacy for Erin O’Toole’s old job, and straight away he demonstrated something rather less than forthrightness, you could say, about what he’s been up to all this time.

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Liberal pollster describes ideal Conservative party to LPC media minion

Three in 10 Canadians say they would never vote Conservative: Nanos survey

Recent polling from Nanos Research shows Canadians believe a more socially progressive and economically centrist Conservative Party would make it more appealing.

According to the latest poll, commissioned by CTV News, when asked what would be the best path forward for the Conservative Party to make it a more appealing voting choice, 29 per cent of respondents said “be socially progressive and more centrist on economic issues.”

Meanwhile, 30 per cent said they would never vote Conservative.

It would appear the CPC braintrust is ahead of the curve in their quest to be the Liberal party.

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Rex Murphy: Poilievre would be the first serious Conservative leader since Stephen Harper

It is not given to the mind of mortal man to understand the internal dynamics of the Conservative party. It is a monster of its own peculiar logic, and as to its nature or purpose in any given period, well, that is as elusive as the mysteries and paradoxes of quantum mechanics, and as unsearchable as the continued airing of television’s “The View.”

Despite the evident inclination by the usual suspects to favour Charest Poilievre really isn’t much different, certainly not different than the last two CPC leaders. It will be the CPC 2.0 regardless of who wins.

He’s a great wingman.

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Former police chief Mark Saunders to run for PCs in Don Valley West

Former Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders will run as a Progressive Conservative candidate in the upcoming provincial election.

The party announced Saunders as its candidate for Don Valley West in a news release issued on Tuesday morning.

The riding is currently represented by Liberal Kathleen Wynne, however the former premier will not be seeking re-election in June.

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