Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

As Liberals set up leadership race, members differ on how the leader should be picked

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2025 02:28 PM
  • As Liberals set up leadership race, members differ on how the leader should be picked

As the Liberal party begins charting a course for an expedited race to replace Justin Trudeau, some former party advisers are split on just how swift that race should be, and who exactly should pick the next leader.

Some are also warning about the potential for bad actors to try and influence the outcome or take over the party.

Trudeau said Monday he will step aside as soon as a new leader is chosen, capitulating to the growing number of voices in his own caucus who no longer think he is the best person to lead them into the next campaign.

Party officials are expected to meet this week to work out the ground rules for the leadership race, which will include everything from the race's timeline to financial provisions.

Gov. Gen. Mary Simon did agree Monday to prorogue Parliament until March 24. Trudeau himself said Monday he anticipates an immediate series of confidence votes on government spending, which have to happen before the end of March. With leaders of the main opposition parties all saying they will bring down the government the next chance they get, a new leader could have very little time to lead before the government falls and an election begins.

"It's the reality of the situation right where we have an upcoming election that may now occur earlier," said Zita Astravas, vice-president at Wellington Advocacy and a former adviser to Trudeau.

"But the situation requires a quicker timeline and I'm sure that is one of the big considerations that the party executive is considering right now. I was happy to see the prime minister and, frankly, the president of the party both say that they wanted a national competitive leadership campaign to take place, because I think that's really important for the grassroots and the health of the party."

Astravas said those stepping up to run should be revealing themselves fairly quickly.

"They don't have the luxury of time to really kick the tires for weeks on end for those who haven't started already," she said.

"The phones are pretty busy of Liberals calling other Liberals. Either encouraging certain individuals to run, or they're soliciting support from others."

Charles Bird, a principal at Earnscliffe Strategies and former adviser to several Liberal cabinet ministers, said a quick race leaves less time for party members to get to know the candidates.

He said a longer race is needed in order to give leadership contenders enough time to become better known among registered Liberals and party activists.

"That lends itself to all-candidates meetings, which presumably would happen in various places across the country. That goes to the ability of Liberal leadership contenders to communicate directly and repeatedly with registered Liberals. These are the kinds of things that will take a little bit of time to sort out," Bird told The Canadian Press.

"Can we do a full-blown leadership contest with registered Liberals voting within 41 days? I think that's a fairly tall order."

Bird said having an extended leadership race presents its own set of challenges.

"One of the key concerns that is out there is that the party could be prone to something approaching a takeover, or could be prone to a lot of people who don't give a hoot about the Liberal party who might be termed single-interest activists signing up and having a very real impact on the selection of our next leader," he said.

The party's constitution says anyone who has been a registered Liberal for 41 days prior to the leadership vote can cast a ballot. The provisions also don't require that voting members be Canadian citizens, but they must reside regularly in Canada.

"You don't have to go much further than the politics of the Middle East and the kinds of demonstrations we've seen in large urban centres to wonder if an organized effort on the part of these kinds of activists could actually make a serious dent in the Liberal leadership process," Bird said.

Asked if the party is in trouble, Bird said that would be an understatement.

"I think the timing of the prime minister's resignation presents a host of problems for the party and Justin Trudeau's successor as Liberal leader," he said.

"The kind of planning that generally takes many, many months — if not years — will have to be condensed to a very, very tight time frame. None of it bodes terribly well, and it's left a lot of Liberals wishing the prime minister had made this move six months ago or a year ago."

Eddie Goldenberg, who was former prime minister Jean Chrétien's chief of staff, said he also would like to see an accelerated leadership selection. But rather than holding a national race to choose the next leader — and prime minister, until the next election — Goldenberg said the next leader should be chosen by the caucus.

He said the party executive should only be asking what it can do to ensure the new leader is in the best position to win the next election.

"My own belief is that the faster they put a new prime minister in place, the better the chances of winning the next election," Goldenberg told The Canadian Press.

He said the party should find a way within its constitution to do it, rather than seeking what he called "constitutional purity."

"If the new leader wins the election, nobody is going to say, 'Well, you know, (the constitution) wasn't followed to the letter,'" he said. "And if they lose the election, nobody is going to say, 'Oh, if you know, you did a great job. You followed the constitution to the letter.'

"It would be a bit like the doctor saying that your operation was a complete success, except that the patient died. So you don't want the patient to die. So do what you can to make sure that the patient survives and flourishes."

MORE National ARTICLES

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation
Mounties in Burnaby say four people have been arrested and large amounts of drugs and cash have been seized following a four-month interprovincial drug trafficking investigation. They say officers executed two search warrants on properties in Coquitlam and Surrey and seized more than 95-hundred Hydromorphone pills believed to be diverted prescription pills, as well as other substances including more than a kilogram of suspected cocaine.

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation

Freeland finds safety in numbers on digital sales tax

Freeland finds safety in numbers on digital sales tax
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland isn’t showing signs of worry that the U.S. can now launch a trade challenge against the Liberal government's controversial digital services tax. The Liberals are slapping a three-per-cent tax on the Canadian revenues of digital giants, which will affect major U.S. tech companies such as Google and Apple.

Freeland finds safety in numbers on digital sales tax

Lab confirms Canada's first case of avian flu infection in humans in B.C.

Lab confirms Canada's first case of avian flu infection in humans in B.C.
Canada's Public Health Agency has confirmed that a British Columbia teenager hospitalized last Friday is the country's first ever human case of domestically acquired avian flu. The agency said in a statement Wednesday that testing at Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg confirms the teen did contract the H5N1 avian flu, the same strain related to viruses found in B.C. flocks in an ongoing outbreak at poultry farms.

Lab confirms Canada's first case of avian flu infection in humans in B.C.

Tributes to John Horgan as B.C. New Democrat members are sworn in

Tributes to John Horgan as B.C. New Democrat members are sworn in
Former British Columbia premier John Horgan loomed large over the swearing-in ceremony Wednesday for 47 New Democrat members of the legislature, a day after his death. Dick said Horgan was a "friend of the people," while Legislature Clerk Kate Ryan-Lloyd paid tribute to Horgan for his service to the people of B.C.

Tributes to John Horgan as B.C. New Democrat members are sworn in

Build vaccine stockpile, use wastewater testing for H5N1 bird flu, experts urge

Build vaccine stockpile, use wastewater testing for H5N1 bird flu, experts urge
Health Canada has authorized three influenza vaccines that could be used if bird flu became a pandemic, the agency says.  The federal government also has an agreement with vaccine manufacturer GSK for domestic vaccine production that could be accelerated if needed, the Public Health Agency of Canada told The Canadian Press in an email. 

Build vaccine stockpile, use wastewater testing for H5N1 bird flu, experts urge

Vancouver officer sexually assaulted colleague, but police group chat targeted victim

Vancouver officer sexually assaulted colleague, but police group chat targeted victim
The decision against Narinder Dosanjh, obtained by The Canadian Press, includes the running commentary on the woman's testimony — apparently written by someone inside the courtroom — that calls her a "bad drunk" and says there was "no way" her case would be proved.

Vancouver officer sexually assaulted colleague, but police group chat targeted victim