Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - September 17, 2020, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A10
A 10 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2020 ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COMNEWS I CANADA
O TTAWA — As he contem-plates a failed Conservative leadership campaign that put
the cart before the horse — trying to
win a federal election instead of first
securing his party — Peter MacKay is
reminded of an age-old cliche: “Nice
guys finish last.”
And while the longtime Tory leader-
in-waiting has few regrets, he does
worry that the ever-growing influ-
ence of social conservatives within
the movement could lead to more dis-
appointment at the polls if victor Erin
O’Toole can’t keep them in check.
In a long and wide-ranging interview
with The Canadian Press, MacKay said
the examination of his second-place fin-
ish in the contest is still underway, but
several factors are evident.
The pause forced by the COVID-19
pandemic stopped MacKay’s early mo-
mentum, and a decision by party organ-
izers to extend the deadline for mem-
bership sales gave his rivals time to
catch up. He also cited “ring rust” from
being out of politics for five years and
the immense reach of social media in
amplifying minor errors.
But he also acknowledges that the
premise upon which he ran his cam-
paign was flawed.
“The plan was in retrospect too
much focused on the next steps and not
enough on winning the party,” MacKay
said.
That plan: don’t bother with negative
attacks on other Conservatives or even
the Liberals. Instead, present a new vi-
sion for the country. That also meant
sidestepping issues dear to some of the
most powerful grassroots members of
the party: social conservatives.
“When you open the door to a crack
of daylight on these social issues it be-
comes very, very difficult to win the
country, to present the party as mod-
ern, inclusive, as a party that is com-
mitted to focusing more on the econ-
omy than debating the past and I just
made that very clear to my team from
the beginning,” he said.
“It was exploited to the max, that this
was disrespectful, that it wasn’t inclu-
sive to social conservatives. Not true,
it was the same approach as Stephen
Harper.”
MacKay believed that clinching the
win required what would be needed to
win a general election.
So his team focused on selling mem-
berships to disaffected Liberals and
to lapsed Tories in ridings where the
party hasn’t been strong before. In
some areas, this paid off: membership
growth was strong in the Atlantic prov-
inces and in some urban centres.
But the party uses a points system to
choose a leader. Each of the 338 ridings
in the country is worth 100 points. How
many points a candidate gets is based
on their percentage share of the vote.
In ridings with tiny member counts,
many of which are in Quebec, a handful
of members can have an outsized influ-
ence on the results.
MacKay’s campaign thought it had
a lock on Quebec, racing against the
clock — and against O’Toole — to mount
a massive get-out-the-vote effort in the
final days. His team’s projections, how-
ever, didn’t match up against reality,
MacKay admitted, and he has asked
his team pointed questions to figure out
why.
That team was a mix of loyalists from
his days with the PCs, newer recruits
to the cause under Harper’s leadership
and a handful of slick campaign opera-
tives credited with delivering victor-
ies for conservatives elsewhere in the
country.
Tensions within the team led to some
missteps, MacKay acknowledged. He
downplayed those errors, though they
were seized upon by his rivals, like one
where in an email he used a derogatory
term for a transgender-rights bill.
But he said what really upended
things was the COVID-19 pandemic.
MacKay, with his history as leader of
the former Progressive Conservative
party has always been something of a
celebrity among Tories: his presence at
any event is guaranteed to bring people
in, and his ability to rally a crowd
comes naturally. His team had plotted a
national cross-country tour that would
get him in front of big groups he’d woo
with rah-rah speeches on his vision for
the country. Making an appearance at
the general meetings for the provincial
conservative parties was also a prior-
ity; ahead of the shutdown MacKay
attended both the Nova Scotia and On-
tario PC events, though some grumbled
he didn’t put in enough facetime with at-
tendees. He chalked his truncated time
in Nova Scotia up to weather-related
flight delays, and says he did work the
circuit well into the wee hours of the
morning in Ontario. But the full stop
put to those in-person opportunities by
the pandemic meant MacKay was in-
stead stuck in his basement, doing as
many as six virtual meet-and-greets a
day with hyper-engaged local partisans
who wanted to pick over policies. Still,
that his campaign managed to raise $3
million — though does have a debt of
about $1 million — is proof that he suc-
ceeded on some fronts, he said.
But.
Of the three other candidates, two —
Derek Sloan and Leslyn Lewis — came
from the well-organized, well-funded
and highly motivated social conserva-
tive wing of the party.
Even before the race had begun,
MacKay was on the outs with that fac-
tion after describing social conserva-
tive issues as a “stinking albatross”
around the party’s neck in last fall’s
election campaign.
During the race itself, he was also
captured on video telling social con-
servatives to “park” their concerns.
Meanwhile, O’Toole, though he was
publicly in support of LGBTTQ+ rights
and a woman’s right to choose to termin-
ate a pregnancy, made direct pitches to
Sloan and Lewis supporters, saying he’d
always respect their points of view.
The party uses a ranked ballot, and in
the end, when Sloan dropped off, most
of his support went to Lewis. When
she dropped off, most of hers went to
O’Toole, and that handed him the win.
Social-conservative groups wasted
little time claiming responsibility for
his victory, while Conservatives’ oppon-
ents in turn wasted little time warning
that an O’Toole government would roll
back rights.
Social conservatives are on their way
to making up a majority of the party’s
base, MacKay said, and whether and
how the party can evade or redirect
the line of attack that ultimately sank
former leader Andrew Scheer rests on
O’Toole.
“The next election, if it comes soon,
this is a penetrating statement of the
obvious, but there isn’t going to be a
lot of time to nuance or address these
issues that you raise: modernization,
inclusivity, contrasting in a way that
doesn’t scare the masses who are not
card-carrying members of any party,”
he said.
MacKay claims no bitterness at his
loss, but it seeps into his voice when he
talks about how his rivals painted him
as “Liberal-lite.”
“Liberal-lite, come on, Liberal-lite
on what? Foreign policy? Defence? Na-
tional security? Policing? Mandatory
minimum penalties?” he said.
“From an objective perspective,
which I cannot be, that is beyond insult-
ing.”
He used similar language to de-
scribe a claim from the O’Toole camp
that MacKay operatives hacked into
O’Toole’s database and used material
from there to leak videos. Disinforma-
tion that was circulated about MacKay’s
wife was also hurtful, he said. Modern
campaigns rely too heavily on stoking
fear and anger, with candidates too
often promoting themselves as stand-
ing in a crowd with “a pitchfork and
a flaming torch,” MacKay said. That
makes some people disengage entirely
from politics, he said. That’s in part
why, MacKay said, he sought to frame
his efforts in a more positive light.
“But what’s that saying about nice
guys?” he said.
They finish last.
So, he and his family have moved
back to Nova Scotia, where he had in-
tended to go to run for a seat as party
leader. He’s not ruling out a run again
anyway, he said, and has met with the
riding association in Central Nova al-
ready. But MacKay said he’s had a good
run in politics, and if that’s not where
he returns, he’s comfortable with that
choice.
“Being labelled a nice guy is not a bad
thing.”
— The Canadian Press
MacKay pins loss on failure to broaden base
STEPHANIE LEVITZ
Conservative leadership hopeful weighs in on why he lost and what it means for the party
FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Conservative Party of Canada leadership candidate Peter MacKay, right, was on the outs with social conservatives early in the campaign, while rival and eventual winner Erin O’Toole, left, made direct pitches to those voters.
OTTAWA — Canada’s former ambassa-
dor to the United States has been cited
by the federal ethics watchdog for im-
proper lobbying after he left office, and
barred from contact with senior minis-
ters and political officials.
David MacNaughton was Prime Min-
ister Justin Trudeau’s point man in
Washington for 3 ½ years before he left
one year ago.
After leaving office, he arranged
multiple meetings over March, April
and May of this year between senior
government officials, ministers and
Palantir Technologies Canada.
Among those in the meetings were
Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Free-
land, Industry Minister Navdeep Bains
and chief of defence staff Gen. Jona-
than Vance. In all, nine ministers, aides
and top public servants were involved.
Ethics commissioner Mario Dion
says none of those officials can have of-
ficial dealings with MacNaughton for
a period of one year as a result of im-
proper lobbying.
Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel
founded the data-analytics company in
2003, where MacNaughton now works.
The company is set to go public next
week. Palantir amasses vast quantities
of data and hunts for patterns in it, sell-
ing access to companies and govern-
ments, including security agencies.
The meetings MacNaughton ar-
ranged came as governments were
looking for ways to track COVID-19
cases.
Dion said in a ruling that MacNaugh-
ton opened doors for the company to
key Liberal government players as part
of an offer for pro bono help in the gov-
ernment’s pandemic response.
In all, there were 17 meetings or com-
munications cited by Dion as troubling.
Dion says none of the meetings re-
sulted in a contract for Palantir. The
company did land a contract with the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention to help the agency better
stay on top on the spread of the novel
coronavirus and the disease it causes.
Federal ethics rules prohibit former
holders of public offices from using
their previous posts to improperly open
government doors, and Dion writes that
MacNaughton realizes now his actions
ran afoul of the law.
“Mr. MacNaughton has acknow-
ledged, with the benefit of hindsight,
that these communications and meet-
ings, to the extent they could have fur-
thered the interests of Palantir, were
contrary” to the ethics law, Dion writes.
— The Canadian Press
Federal ethics watchdog critical of ex-ambassador to U.S.
JORDAN PRESS
A_14_Sep-17-20_FP_01.indd A10 9/16/20 7:56 PM
;