CanadaPolitics

Former Conservative leader Erin O’Toole not seeking re-election, leaving this spring

OTTAWA — Former Conservative leader Erin O’Toole says he will not seek re-election and plans to resign his seat this spring.

The Ontario MP led the Conservatives and served as official Opposition leader from August 2020 until February 2022, when a majority of his caucus voted to remove him from the post.

“I am a proud Conservative and had the unique privilege to lead our party amid a challenging time for our country,” he said in a statement shared on social media Friday morning.   

“The Conservative party is the party of Confederation and I know it will return to government offering the hope and ideas our country so desperately needs.” 

His ousting followed months of tensions over O’Toole’s management of caucus and attempts to moderate the party’s image. Those efforts led to concerns that he flip-flopped on key policy positions, including on carbon pricing and gun control.

The ultimate shove came while the protesters of the “Freedom Convoy” descended on downtown Ottawa, honking their vehicles and decrying COVID-19 health restrictions — many of them using expletive-laden flags critical of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that O’Toole said in a late 2022 blog post he hoped to see fewer of going forward.

In that same post, he warned of growing polarization in Canadian politics and suggested that symbols like the anti-Trudeau flags were “slowly normalizing rage and damaging our democracy.”

Besides taking up more writing, the MP has kept a low profile on Parliament Hill since his time as leader.

In interviews he has given since, O’Toole has reflected on the difficulties of leading the party during the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic and in the face of suspected Chinese election meddling, which the party alleges targeted several Conservative-held ridings as O’Toole struck a hawkish stand against the regime. 

The military veteran was first elected in a 2012 byelection. He served as parliamentary secretary to the minister for international trade, then veterans affairs minister during the final year of Stephen Harper’s Conservative government before it lost power in 2015. 

O’Toole took a first crack at running for the party leadership in the crowded 2017 race to replace Harper. He finished third. 

He successfully ran for a second time in 2020, beating out his chief opponent, former cabinet minister Peter MacKay.

“I have been fortunate to have the opportunity to advance issues that I believe are critically important — from veterans’ mental health, to military preparedness, nuclear energy, Arctic sovereignty and a range of other important issues,” O’Toole said in Friday’s statement. 

“I will continue to advance these interests and serve my constituents until the end of this session.”

Fellow Conservative MPs Scott Aitchison and Michelle Rempel Garner sent O’Toole, his wife and two kids well wishes on social media Friday.

O’Toole said in his statement that he first broke the decision to his Durham constituency during a speech to a local trade board. 


This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 31, 2023. 

Stephanie Taylor, The Canadian Press

LATEST

ENGLISH

STORIES

LATEST

ENGLISH STORIES

AIR INDIA SP ENGLISH
Forgotten Canadians:  The Victims...
Family Business
Filipino Vs. Disapora
SEE ALL ENGLISH CONTENT
  • PORTUGUESE ARABIC PORTUGUESE
  • ARABIC ITALIAN ARABIC ITALIAN
  • ENGLISH MANDARIN ENGLISH MANDARIN
  • MANDARIN FILIPINO MANDARIN FILIPINO

ABOUT


OMNI


TELEVISION


OMNI Television is Canada’s only multilingual and multicultural television broadcaster.

OMNI offers a wide range of locally produced and acquired programming in more than 40 languages, including news, current affairs and entertainment content in Arabic, Cantonese, Filipino, Italian, Mandarin, Portuguese, and Punjabi.

ABOUT US