Quotulatiousness

May 29, 2017

Who the heck is Andrew Scheer?

I admit, I wasn’t really paying attention to the federal Conservative leadership race … I’d blithely assumed that Mad Max would win … so I didn’t pay much attention to the other candidates (other than my local MP, who was eliminated on the 12th ballot). So who is this new guy? Tom Flanagan thinks he’s the Tory version of our current “sunny ways” Prime Minister, god help us:

Andrew Scheer is the new Conservative leader, beating Maxime Bernier by the narrowest of margins, 51 per cent to 49 per cent. Mr. Bernier campaigned on an adventurous platform of economic libertarianism, including an end to supply management and corporate subsidies, and new approaches to equalization and to health-care funding. Mr. Scheer, in contrast, stressed continuity with past party policy. He positioned himself as the consensus candidate, the leading second or third choice.

Mr. Scheer is 38 years old, young for a political leader but not impossibly so. (Joe Clark became leader of the Progressive Conservatives at 37 and went on to beat Pierre Trudeau in the next election.) Though young, Mr. Scheer already has a lot of political experience. He has represented Regina-Qu’Appelle for 13 years and won five consecutive elections in his riding. He has also been Speaker of the House of Commons and House Leader of the Conservative Party under Rona Ambrose.

Mr. Scheer’s political roots are in Reform and the Canadian Alliance, but he followed Stephen Harper in abandoning the sorts of libertarian policies still favoured by Maxime Bernier. As leader, Mr. Scheer will continue to pursue Mr. Harper’s goals of lower taxes, balanced budgets, and closer cooperation with Canada’s international allies – things that all Conservatives agree on. Like Brad Wall, premier of his home province of Saskatchewan, he is vociferously opposed to the Liberals’ carbon tax and has promised to repeal it, though that may prove difficult to accomplish if and when he finally comes to office.

Oh, goody! He still supports market-distorting supply management and crony capitalist subsidies for “friends of the PM”. I’m sure he’ll fit in just fine in Ottawa — they’ll make room for him at the trough. Yay!

4 Comments

  1. Sadly for the CPC this is reality, Canada is around 60% socialists. The CPC only has a chance with a very weak centre right stance. I would have liked to see Bernier as the leader but the Quebec supply management folks don’t like him. I would say the only comparable between Trudeau and Scheer are age. Scheer is a 13 year veteran of the house of Commons having spent time as the speaker, not am inconsequential position. I am sure all the usual media suspects are working on their hit pieces. Must frame the CPC leader before he frames himself.

    Comment by Dwayne — May 29, 2017 @ 11:09

  2. I don’t think the Canadian populace is all that socialistic. I’d suggest around 40-45%, otherwise the CPC and its provincial counterparts would get a sniff of power every 20 years or so…

    As for the hit pieces, they’ve been written and filed since the last federal election, with just the name of the new Emmanuel Goldstein needing to be filled in.

    Comment by Nicholas — May 29, 2017 @ 15:09

  3. And, right on schedule, this just popped up on my FB feed from one of my Progressive friends.

    Comment by Nicholas — May 29, 2017 @ 20:59

  4. It seems to me the baseline CPC vote hovers around 40% consistently. It is the NDP/LPC/Green party splits help the conservatives. This past election the NDP failed to strip votes from the little potato. Next election I think the mushy NDP vote goes orange or green. It will be interesting to see how many disillusioned lpc voters will move too. And that graphic, scare monger 101.

    Comment by Dwayne — May 29, 2017 @ 22:01

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