Thursday, December 12, 2019

Scheer Resigns

From the BBC:
“Andrew Scheer: Canadian Conservative leader resigns”

Canada's Conservative leader Andrew Scheer has announced he will step down.  "I will be resigning as the leader of the Conservative Party of Canada," Mr Scheer said in the House of Commons, calling it "one one of the most difficult decisions I have ever made".  Mr Scheer has faced intense pressure from within his party to resign since losing October's federal election to Justin Trudeau's Liberals.  He was named party leader in 2017 in a razor thin victory against 12 rivals.  Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau thanked Mr Scheer for "his dedication and service" and said he understood the many sacrifices made by the families of politicians. "I wish him all the very, very best in his next steps." Making the announcement on Thursday, Mr Scheer spoke about the sacrifices made by his wife and five children for his career in federal politics, which began in 2004.  The decision to resign was not one made lightly, he said. "But in order to chart the course ahead, this party, this movement needs someone who can give 100 per cent to the efforts. And after some conversations with my kids and my wife and loved ones, I felt it was time to put my family first." His resignation comes amid revelations, first reported by Global News, that the Conservative Party had helped cover the cost of private school for Mr Scheer's children. Conservative Party Executive Director Dustin van Vugt said in a statement the party had offered to reimburse some of the costs associated with being party leader and relocating Mr Scheer's family to Canada's capital, "as is the normal practice for political parties".  "Shortly after Mr Scheer was elected leader," Mr van Vugt said, "we had a meeting where I made a standard offer to cover costs associated with moving his family from Regina to Ottawa.  "This includes a differential in schooling costs between Regina and Ottawa. All proper procedures were followed and signed off on by the appropriate people." Mr van Vught's office insisted that Mr Scheer's resignation was not related to the reimbursements.  Mr Scheer will remain on as a member of Parliament. He said the Conservative Party will now begin steps towards electing a new leader.  Conservatives gather in Toronto for the biennial convention in April. Until today, most believed Mr Scheer would hang on until then and defend his leadership.  On Thursday, Mr Scheer called for party unity and vowed the next leader would have his full support.  "The party that we've all built together is far too important for one individual. Our party is not a cult of personality, it's not shaped by whoever's name is on the masthead but by the hundreds of thousands of Conservatives who pound in lawn signs, sit on their riding associations and donate a few dollars every month." In the October election, Mr Scheer led his Conservatives to a 24-seat bump in the House of Commons and edged out the Liberals in the popular vote. Just days before the election, some polls projected the Conservatives would win the most seats. Mr Scheer faced a disappointing loss to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in October's federal election  But the leader remained dogged by questions about his position on progressive issues like abortion rights and same-sex marriage, which are popular in Canada. Critics of Mr Scheer say he failed to capitalise on the prime minister's stumbles while in office and on the trail, namely the SNC-Lavalin scandal, and pictures of Mr Trudeau in blackface.  Still, the party picked up seats in New Brunswick, Ontario and British Columbia and swept the prairies, leaving Mr Trudeau without any party members from Canada's oil-producing provinces Alberta and Saskatchewan. 

^ Hopefully the Conservative Party will now pick a new leader that will do what Scheer was not able to do and should have done in the last election. The Conservatives should have easily won especially with all of Trudeau’s scandals (blackface pictures, being found unethical in two different rulings, etc.) but Scheer wasn’t the right leader to combat that. That is a major problem in the Parliamentary System – voters can’t vote for the candidate they actually want. They have to vote for the Party they want and hope their candidate wins.  ^

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50762474

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