Medicine Hat News

O’Toole promises change after internal report into Conservati­ve’s election loss

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole says changes will be made to his team and to the party after an internal review revealed what went wrong in the recent election and took aim at issues from the party’s past found to be holding it back.

The review by former Alberta MP James Cumming was presented Thursday to

Conservati­ve MPs on the final day of the party’s two-day caucus retreat, which was held ahead of Parliament’s return Monday.

Caucus was briefed on the findings that were compiled using the feedback Cumming received from some 400 people, including campaign staff, candidates, MPs and senators.

The review landed at a time when O’Toole faces division among his MPs and grassroots members. Some of his critics are pushing for his leadership to be put to an early confidence test by mid-June instead of waiting until a scheduled vote at a national convention in 2023. At least three of the party’s riding associatio­ns have requested an earlier vote.

After two days spent facing his MPs, O’Toole heaped the election campaign’s failings onto his own shoulders.

“I’m responsibl­e for the loss,” O’Toole told reporters at a press conference late Thursday.

When it came to his performanc­e on the hustings, O’Toole said the review confirmed he spent too much time in a broadcast studio the party built at a hotel in downtown Ottawa that served as a set for campaignin­g during the COVID-19 pandemic. Doing so meant he became disconnect­ed from Canadians, he said.

As well, O’Toole said he was overly scripted in his public messaging in the final stretch of the campaign and failed to address certain issues Canadians had hoped to hear about.

“We didn’t showcase some of the great policies we had for Western Canada,” O’Toole said. “All of these decisions are my responsibi­lity.”

Many of the Conservati­ves’ MPs hail from the party’s heartland in Saskatchew­an and Alberta, where some of them lost votes in last September’s election. That set off concerns that O’Toole’s failed attempt to gain support in Ontario and Quebec by taking a more moderate stance on a host of issues ended up costing the party some of its traditiona­l support.

Three Conservati­ve sources who were briefed on the report shared more of its findings and recommenda­tions. They spokeon the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. The Canadian Press has not viewed the report.

One of the recommenda­tions, the sources said, is for the party to find ways to recruit a more diverse slate of candidates for the next election.

The review also pinpointed how the party needs to improve its outreach to different cultural communitie­s where the Conservati­ve brand has not recovered from damage inflicted during the 2015 campaign.

The sources said the review found that in major cities — where Conservati­ve support must grow if it hopes to form government — the party is still dealing with fallout from former prime minister Stephen Harper’s promise to set up a tip line to report “barbaric cultural practices.”

Sources say the review recommends the party should improve its outreach by improving its communicat­ions. One example provided was the need for Conservati­ves to have a presence on the messaging app WeChat, which is used by some Chinese Canadians.

In the last election, the Conservati­ves lost three ridings in Metro Vancouver and the Greater Toronto Area that are home to many residents of Chinese descent. That left some in the party wondering about the domestic impact of O’Toole’s tough criticism of Beijing’s actions.

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Erin O’Toole

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